SEC Charges Cyberkey and CEO James Plant for
Promoting Stock Offering with Phony Homeland Security
Deal
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2007-47
Washington, D.C., March 20, 2007 — The
Securities and Exchange Commission today announced a
civil injunctive action alleging that a Utah-based
corporation and its Chief Executive Officer made at
least $1.5 million selling shares to investors while
disseminating false claims of a lucrative purchase order
from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
In its complaint, filed today in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania,
the Commission alleged that Cyberkey Solutions, Inc. of
St. George, Utah, and its CEO James E. Plant, between
November 2005 and the present, have engaged in an
ongoing unregistered offering of Cyberkey shares,
promoted with a series of false press releases
describing a putative purchase order worth in excess of
$24 million from DHS to buy Cyberkey’s flash memory
drives. In fact, the Commission’s complaint alleges,
Cyberkey had no business relationship at all with DHS.
Additionally, according to the complaint, Cyberkey and
Plant made other false statements to unsuspecting
investors, including statements claiming Cyberkey had
shipped products to DHS and received payments pursuant
to the phony purchase order, and that Cyberkey was in
the process of preparing and releasing audited
financials.
Linda Chatman Thomsen, the Director of the
Commission’s Enforcement Division, said, "The
perpetrators of this scheme carried out an extensive
fraud and even went so far as to make false claims about
the Department of Homeland Security – an Agency whose
mission is critical to all Americans. Our response to
this kind of conduct will always be swift and firm."
Commission Enforcement Division Associate Director
Cheryl Scarboro noted, “CyberKey and its CEO
orchestrated an intense fraud campaign that clearly
duped investors – in the three months leading up to the
first of CyberKey’s alleged multiple false press
releases, CyberKey trading volume was just over 550,000
shares per day – but once the scheme began, daily
trading volume swelled dramatically to between 10
million and 80 million shares per day.”
The Commission’s complaint further alleges, that, as
a result of their scheme, the defendants violated
Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of
1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and seeks as relief
permanent injunctions against future violations of these
provisions by the defendants, and disgorgement of all
the defendants’ ill-gotten gains, including prejudgment
interest and civil penalties.
In a related criminal action, Plant was arrested on
March 13, 2007, in St. George, Utah, by agents of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Philadelphia Economic
Crimes Squad on charges of securities fraud and aiding
and abetting securities fraud.
The Commission acknowledges the assistance and
cooperation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
Office of the United States Attorney for the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania and the National Association of
Securities Dealers in the investigation of this matter.