SEC Issues Report on the Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crowdfunding through Cryptocurrency

On July 25, 2017, the Securities and Exchange Commission issued a Report following their investigation of The DAO.  The DAO is an unincorporated organization that is just one example of a “Decentralized Autonomous Organization” –  a virtual organization embodied in computer code and executed on a distributed ledger or blockchain.

The DAO was formed in 2015 as unique form of crowdfunding whereby participants would vote on proposals and be entitled to rewards.  Between April and May of 2016, The DAO offered and sold approximately 1.15 billion DAO Tokens in exchange for approximately 12 million Ether.  Ether is a form of virtual currency.  These DAO Tokens gave the holder certain voting and ownership rights.

Token holders could vote on predetermined proposals deciding where The DAO invested its money, with each token holder’s vote weighted according to how many DAO Tokens he or she held.  On June 17th, 2016, an unknown individual or group attacked The DAO and appropriated approximately 1/3 of the total funds.  Although the funds were eventually recovered by The DAO, the SEC began investigating the attack and The DAO.  Ultimately, the SEC determined that an Enforcement Action was not necessary, however it issued a report laying out how the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act applies to The DAO and similar entities.

Section 5 of the Securities Act prohibits entities not registered with the SEC from engaging in the offer or sale of securities in interstate commerce.  Upon investigation of the circumstances surrounding The DAO, the SEC stated that The DAO qualifies as an “issuer” and thus must register as such with the SEC in order to sell DAO Tokens – which the SEC considers to be securities – in compliance with federal securities laws.  Given the SEC’s flexible interpretation and application of the Act, this Report is a caution to virtual entities that the federal securities laws are applicable and that the SEC intends to pursue enforcement of these laws in the field of virtual currencies and securities.

Pastore & Dailey Closes Sale of Assets and Heads Bloomberg’s Webinar on CyberSecurity

Pastore & Dailey is pleased to announce that its transactional team completed a sale of assets for a national credit risk research and surveillance application resident on the Bloomberg web portal.  And, separately, Pastore & Dailey’s securities regulatory group conducted a webinar for Bloomberg concerning the new regulations of Cybersecurity compliance implemented by the NY Department of Financial Services. 

IRS Seeks Leave from Court to Serve Sweeping Summons on Bitcoin Exchange

In an ex parte Application for Leave to Serve John Doe Summonses dated November 17, 2016, the Internal Revenue Service requested of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California the authority to obtain the records of Coinbase, Inc. a bitcoin exchange located in San Francisco.

By its own terms, the request is speculative, relying on an undefined “likelihood” that the resulting summons will yield information identifying persons who have not properly filed or paid taxes due the United States. The only defined term upon which the request is based is IRS Notice 2014-21, which described the Services views on virtual currencies and offered the position that bitcoin (and similar devices) are not “currency” but, rather, are property under 26 U.S.C. §1221. Although the Notice reached this conclusion without analysis or authority, it is probably correct, at least for the moment. Only because bitcoins neither circulate nor are they customarily used and accepted as money in the country in which they are issued, they do not meet the definition of currency in the Bank Secrecy Act. 31 CFR 1010.100(m). Presumably, Treasury adopts this definition for tax purposes.

The request has alarmed the cryptocurrency community because it comes in the wake of absolutely nothing. No criminal case, claims of interviews with only three taxpayers who said they has used virtual currencies as a means of evading taxes, and not even a named suspect in the summons request. The report of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration dated September 21, 2016 observes three critical issues:

  1. The IRS has no strategy concerning virtual currency;
  2. The Criminal Investigation unit of the IRS has undertaken no effort to inquire in matters concerning the improper reporting of bitcoin; and
  3. Notice 2014-21, so far the IRS’s only formal articulation of its position regarding bitcoin, characterizes bitcoin as property, not as currency, although the device is commonly accepted as currency by over 100 major organizations including Subway, Microsoft, Reddit, and Expedia. Many users of bitcoin are likely unaware of the Notice or uncertain of its arcane meaning.

Thus, for the IRS to use as its opening salvo into the matter of virtual currency what is described by its target as a “sweeping fishing expedition” gives every participant in a cutting edge technology pause to consider if the IRS should be able to leverage that enterprise to make up ground in its own investigative dilemmas. In short, should Coinbase become an involuntary source of data for the government absent more evidence supporting a wholesale compromise of the privacy of their customers’ information?

Pastore & Dailey Retained in Significant Ratings Agency Case

We have recently been retained to defend a ratings agency corporate executive in case of substantial importance to the United States financial industry involving shareholder breach of fiduciary duty claims relating to credit ratings given to mortgage backed securities.   This action is pending in state court in New York, and the damages sought are in the billions.

 

Pastore & Dailey LLC Secures Over $60 Million for Clients

Pastore & Dailey LLC is pleased to announce that the Firm has, to date, secured over $60 Million in grants and low-interest loans for Connecticut businesses through various programs with the State of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development.

Through the work of Attorney Susan Bysiewicz, a former Secretary of the State of Connecticut and former candidate for the United States Senate, the Firm has enabled Connecticut business owners to create over 425 private-sector jobs in manufacturing, precision engineering, green and renewable energy, and many other industries.

Pastore & Dailey LLC credits these successes to the Firm’s client-centered approach and comprehensive application process. To date, all clients that have applied for assistance through these programs have received funding. Assistance packages range from $60,000 to $48 Million. Loan packages include various levels of loan-forgiveness and carry interest rates as low as 2%.

For more information, contact Atty. Susan Bysiewicz in the Firm’s Glastonbury office: 860.266.6870 or by email, sbysiewicz@psdlaw.net.

Venture Capital Fund Formation

Pastore & Dailey announces the successful creation of an “angel investor” fund for a Venture Capital client.  The 5 Million dollar fund was formed in South Carolina and focuses on investments in small East Coast companies.  Pastore & Dailey helped prepare all corporate documentation and performed all necessary and pertinent regulatory filings and work related to both U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and South Carolina requirements.

$3MM DECD Approval

Pastore & Dailey’s transactional team successfully concluded a $3 million loan financing transaction on behalf of client NewOak Capital, a specialized financial advisory firm based in New York City that provides consulting, analysis, and technology services to global banks, insurance companies, asset owners, and regulators.  The financing was provided by the State of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD) in connection with NewOak’s $13 million relocation project which established its credit services division, NewOak Credit Services, now located in the Matrix Corporate Center in Danbury, Connecticut.  Under the terms of the loan, the company plans to create up to 50 jobs during its first year and up to 100 jobs within three years.

 

Former Dissident Shareholder Becomes Qualstar’s Interim CEO

Former Dissident Shareholder Becomes Qualstar’s Interim CEO

Steven Bronson, the investor who took control of Qualstar Corp. after a proxy fight, has been named its interim chief executive and president, the company announced Monday.

Bronson, a member of Qualstar’s board, was appointed to replace Larry Firestone, who became chief executive of the Simi Valley data tape storage and power supply manufacturer in June 2012.

Bronson immediately closed a Qualstar office that Firestone opened in Denver and is terminating the executives working there. The move will result in a savings of about $1 million, according to the company.

In June, Bronson and four other candidates were elected to the Qualstar board after longstanding complaints that the money-losing company was underperforming. Bronson and BKF Capital Group Inc., his Boca Raton, Fla.-based investment firm, are the second largest investors in the company, with an 18 percent stake.

For there to be a successful turnaround of the company, Bronson said expenses need to be controlled and reduced.

“The board (of directors) will continue to take the appropriate actions to right-size Qualstar, support its current and future business, build a solid foundation and preserve its liquidity base,” Bronson said, in a prepared statement.

Bronson also is chief executive of Interlink Electronics Inc., a Camarillo manufacturer of touch pads and mouses for computers and other electronic equipment used in industrial and consumer applications.

Shares closed up 1 cent, or a fraction of percent, to $1.41 on the Nasdaq.

Los Angeles Business Journal

By Business Journal Staff Monday, July 15, 2013