Jonathan Vincent Glenn, 55, of Greenwich, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Robert N. Chatigny in Hartford to 21 months of imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release, for defrauding investment clients through a “cherry-picking” securities scheme. Glenn also must serve the first six months of his supervised release in home confinement.
“Cherry-picking” is a fraudulent securities trading practice in which the responsible individual executes trades without assigning those trades to a particular trading account until the individual determines whether or not the trade has become profitable or suffered losses.
The responsible individual then allocates the profitable trades to favoured accounts – often the individual’s own accounts – and assigns unprofitable trades to disfavored client accounts.
According to court documents and statements made in court, Glenn owned Glenn Capital LLC, also known as GlennCap LLC, an investment advisory firm headquartered in Greenwich. Through Glenn Capital, Glenn provided clients with portfolio management services, including asset selection and asset allocation.
Glenn managed all of Glenn Capital’s advisory clients’ accounts and was authorised to make trading decisions on each client’s behalf without seeking approval for each trade. Glenn placed trades on behalf of advisory clients, himself, or family members by trading directly in the relevant individual account or by placing block trades in Glenn Capital’s omnibus account and allocating the block trades among the relevant individual accounts.
Glenn Capital’s Code of Ethics required Glenn to determine and document the specific allocation of each block trade prior to the execution and to allocate block trades to individual accounts at an average price.
Glenn defrauded clients by retroactively allocating profitable omnibus-account trades to favoured clients, family, and personal accounts and unprofitable omnibus-account trades to non-favoured-client accounts. Notwithstanding the requirements set forth in the Code of Ethics, Glenn did not determine the allocation of block trades until after they were executed when he knew if the trades were profitable in the hours following the execution.
When a block purchase of an equity security increased in value in the hours after the purchase, Glenn generally realized the profits by selling the security.
He then allocated those profits to favoured clients, families, firms, and personal accounts. When a block purchase of an equity security decreased in value, Glenn generally allocated those block purchases to the non-favoured-client accounts. Glenn did not inform his clients that he was “cherry-picking.”
Instead, he gave the false impression that he allocated trades fairly and according to a pre-determined allocation methodology.
Through this scheme, Glenn defrauded more than 45 clients of a total of more than $2.7 million. He is required to make full restitution.
On October 5, 2023, Glenn pleaded guilty to securities fraud.
Glenn, who is released on bond, is required to report to prison on December 2.
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