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HeraldTribune.com – An attorney representing newsletter writer Don Rowe, who strongly recommended Arthur G. Nadel’s hedge funds to some investors, is seeking to have a civil fraud suit against his client dismissed.
In an Aug. 3 filing in circuit court in Sarasota County, Tampa attorney Edward O. Savitz claims that Rowe was not the ultimate cause of the investors’ losses: He did not sell or offer any securities and some of the plaintiff’s claims are barred because too much time has passed.
Sarasota attorney Drew Clayton is representing 11 investors in Nadel’s failed hedge funds and seeking damages of $5.4 million. All his clients were subscribers to one of the publications Rowe published from Sarasota: ”Wall Street Digest” or ”Carnegie Asset Management Inc. Reports.”
Herald Tribune – At a bail hearing in which Arthur G. Nadel was sent back to his cell to come up with better co-signers, a federal judge heard from the receiver in the case about a previously unknown multimillion-dollar hedge fund account controlled by Nadel in the Cayman Islands.
Receiver Burton Wiand, a Tampa lawyer, testified that he had discovered a hedge fund in the Caymans that at one point contained $15 million. He was able to follow $5 million back to one of the six funds at Nadel’s Scoop Management in Sarasota. The whereabouts of the remaining $10 million is unclear.
New York Times – In the rarefied world of hedge funds, he is one of the greats — a stock-picker who managed to make money, bull market or bear, for more than two decades.
But on Wednesday, Arthur J. Samberg told his investors that his long, successful run was over. Mr. Samberg, 68, said he had reached a “painful conclusion” to wind down his $3 billion investment firm, Pequot Capital Management, because a long-simmering investigation into insider trading at the fund was heating up once again.
Herald Tribune – Partners of failed hedge fund trader Arthur Nadel said they were shocked to learn after Nadel disappeared on Jan. 14 that the six hedge funds for which he did the trading had been emptied of their purported $300 million in assets.
But what seems mysterious to them raised red flags in 2005 for the founders of HedgeCo.Net, a West Palm Beach hedge fund database site. HedgeCo dropped three funds run by Nadel’s Scoop Management Inc. — Valhalla Investment Partners LP, Viking Fund LLC and Viking IRA LLC. The concerns were: reported returns that were considerably higher than normal, no outside firm to verify the numbers and no outside administrator to monitor the accounts and send out statements to investors.
Herald Tribune – As Arthur G. Nadel made his way to New York Thursday under the watchful eye of U.S. marshals, the clock ticked away on the 30-day time limit faced by prosecutors to indict the man accused of a hedge fund swindle before they would have to set him free.
Nadel, accused of looting tens of millions of dollars from six hedge funds he operated from downtown Sarasota, has been ordered to stand trial in New York on one count of securities fraud and one count of wire fraud.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – Hedge fund manager Arthur Nadel is scheduled for a bail hearing in federal court in Tampa this afternoon.
Nadel faces a federal charge of securities and wire fraud after using “manipulative and deceptive devices” to bilk investors out of hundreds of millions. Shortly after the infamous arrest of Bernard Madoff, Nadel’s family reported him missing on January 14.
The day Nadel disappeared, he was expected to disburse $50 million in redemptions to investors from the six total funds he managed. Nadel reportedly wrote a letter to his wife before he missing.
According to the criminal complaint, Nadel’s fraud dates back to at least 2003 and has affected over 100 victims nationwide. There is also a civil complaint filed against Nadel by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, who alleges that he transferred $1.25 million into secret bank accounts.
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Sarasota Herald-Tribune – When he first invested $100,000 in Arthur G. Nadel’s Viking Fund, David Walters was elated with a 7.77 percent return in just the first three months.
After the Sarasota-based fund delivered a 22 percent profit in 2004, Walters pumped in another $200,000 and watched the hedge fund soar — more than 20 percent in 2005, 14.07 percent in 2006 and 15.17 percent in 2007.
PR Inside – Federal regulators on Wednesday charged a missing hedge fund manager with fraud, saying he misled investors and overstated the value of investments in the six funds by about $300 million.
The Securities and Exchange Commission won a court order freezing the assets of Arthur G. Nadel, of Sarasota, Florida, and other defendants in the case.
Arlington Heights Daily Herald – A missing hedge fund manager who owed investors a $50 million payout told his wife in a note he felt guilty about mismanaging people’s money, and threatened to kill himself, according to a sheriff’s report released Tuesday.
However, the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office said it believes Arthur G. Nadel planned his disappearance and that it was ending its search for him.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation will continue to investigate complaints from investors who were expecting Nadel to deliver the $50 million redemption on Jan. 15, the day after he disappeared.
MSN MoneyCentral – Mace Security International Inc. said Tuesday it has only received $1 million of a little more than $3.2 million owed it by a hedge fund managed by missing Florida money manager Arthur Nadel.
The Horsham, Pa., maker of personal defense and electronic security products said the Victory Fund Ltd. didn’t pay Mace the roughly $2.2 million it was due Jan. 15.
“We have already filed a report with the authorities, and we intend to take all possible legal action against the Victory Fund,” Dennis Raefield, Mace’s CEO and president, said in a statement. “Mace continues to have a solid balance sheet, cash in the bank and strong business fundamentals.”