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Quebec Case A Painful Win For Investors

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  • Quebec Case A Painful Win For Investors

    QUEBEC CASE A PAINFUL WIN FOR INVESTORS

    Canada.com, Canada
    Financial Post
    Nov 2 2007

    Judge criticizes CIBC for failing to protect clients

    Jonathan Chevreau, Financial Post
    Published: Friday, November 02, 2007

    Documents for a landmark legal case hailed a year ago as a "great
    victory" for investors but publicized mostly in the Quebec media are
    now available in English. Securities industry watchdog Robert Kyle
    has just added court-approved translations of French court rulings
    to his Web site at www.investorvoice.ca.

    Go to "Cases" and "Investor Cases in provincial courts," then
    "Markarian vs. CIBC World Markets Inc."

    The Markarians were a retired Canadian couple of Armenian descent
    defrauded of $1-million in the 1990s by fellow Armenian financial
    advisor Harry Migirdic.

    In June, 2006, Montreal Superior Court Judge Jean-Pierre Senecal
    awarded more than $3-million, including $1.5-million in punitive
    damages, to Haroutioun and Alice Markarian. As Kyle explains, the
    couple unwittingly guaranteed the trading losses of people they didn't
    know at the behest of Migirdic, then a broker with CIBC Wood Gundy.

    The brokerage invoked the guarantees to seize $1.4-million from
    the Markarians in 2001, leaving almost nothing in their accounts --
    even though Migirdic admitted to CIBC prior to his 2001 termination
    that the Markarians were the subject of his fraud and that they were
    totally unaware.

    Judge Senecal called CIBC's conduct "reprehensible," saying it
    "cruelly failed" in its duty to protect its clients and supervise
    its employee. In August, 2006, the bank settled out of court with at
    least six other former clients of Migirdic. Terms were not disclosed
    and CIBC spokesman Rob McLeod declared "the matter is closed."

    Closed and forgotten, if indeed investors in English Canada even knew
    of the case in the first place. Few outside Quebec are, because until
    now the court decision and related documents were available only in
    French. The only prominent English-language coverage of the case was
    by Montreal Gazette reporter Paul Delean.

    In reading judge Senecal's decision, I was struck by how Migirdic was
    able to exploit the trust his clients had in him for more than five
    years. Some of this stemmed from the impressive "vice-president and
    director" title conferred on him soon after the Markarians became
    clients.

    Year after year, when Haroutioun questioned the annual disclosure
    of the mysterious "guarantee," Migirdic dismissed the query with a
    simple statement it was "a mistake" he'd soon fix.

    One thinks of the Peanuts cartoon strip, where the hapless Charlie
    Brown forever takes another run at the football Lucy always yanks away.

    The case raises broader questions about compliance procedures at the
    big brokerages and their oversight by self-regulated organizations.

    Reviewing Migirdic's "numerous faults over the years," judge Senecal
    says many were repeated. "It is incredible that, despite their size,
    none of the faults were discovered by the Compliance Department or
    anyone else at CIBC."

    The other troublesome aspect is why the IDA or Quebec Securities
    Commission took no action against CIBC or those behind the fraud.

    Judge Senecal notes that in February, 2001, Migirdic admitted his
    fraud to CIBC Wood Gundy president Tom Monahan.

    Kyle says Monahan was also on the IDA's board of directors from June,
    2003, to June, 2005, and chair of the IDA's Retail Sales Committee.

    Two years later, in April, 2004, the IDA found Migirdic guilty of 24
    counts, including forgery, 11 of them related to the Markarian case,
    and prohibitied him from membership. It also fined him $305,000. (He
    never paid).

    However, judge Senecal added, "no criminal charges were ever laid
    against him. Moreover, there was never any complaint or sanction
    against CIBC." Judge Senecal said CIBC persisted in refusing the
    acceptance of fraud contrary to the facts and all common sense, seizing
    the Markarian's assets and forcing a five-year court proceeding.

    At one point a CIBC compliance officer suggested it should absorb
    the Markarians' losses but this was never implemented. Judge Senecal
    concluded "CIBC thus became the accomplice in Migirdic's fraud and
    did everything in its power to benefit from it directly."

    Kyle's site poses the question whether the IDA and QSC felt their
    supervisory roles were exercised properly. When he raised this at
    last week's Investor Forum in Toronto he says he was told in private
    the IDA is now investigating the case.
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