Investment Fund CIO Pleads Guilty to Securities Fraud

Joshua Goltry ‘lied about nearly every aspect’ of his fund’s operations and performance, according to federal prosecutors and the SEC.




The founder and CIO of advisory firm JAG Capital Advisors LLC and investment fund JAG Cap LLC has pleaded guilty to securities fraud related to a three-year scam that bilked investors in purported “diversified tech opportunities” of at least $3 million.

According to court documents, from 2020 to 2023, Joshua Goltry solicited investments in JAG Capital by making material misrepresentations and omissions and “lied about nearly every aspect” of the fund’s operations, including its performance, investment activity and risk protocols.

For example, prosecutors said Goltry sent potential investors marketing materials in late 2020 that falsely claimed his firm earned positive returns during nearly every quarter from 2018 through mid-2020, with three of those quarters purportedly producing returns greater than 50%.

Goltry allegedly used the ill-gotten funds from the fraud on personal expenses and to repay previous investors. He used at least $1.1 million on travel, jewelry, personal credit card bills and rent for his Manhattan apartment, and he lost more than $1.7 million in high-risk trading and speculative investments.

Never miss a story — sign up for CIO newsletters to stay up-to-date on the latest institutional investment industry news.

The Department of Justice acknowledged that Goltry used some of the funds to make investments; however, they did not match the type of investments he represented to investors, and he eventually lost the funds on unsuccessful trades and investments.

“Joshua Goltry admitted making outlandish claims in falsifying the achievements of his purported investment fund,” said Philip Sellinger, U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, in a statement. “In doing so, he duped investors out of millions of dollars, money they thought they were investing carefully, but which, in reality, this defendant was using to repay other investors or spending on his own bills.”

Goltry pleaded guilty to one count of securities fraud, which carries a maximum potential sentence of 20 years in prison and a fine of the greater of $250,000 or twice the gain or loss resulting from the offense. He is scheduled to be sentenced on October 19.

In a parallel action, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged Goltry and JAG Advisors with violating anti-fraud provisions of federal securities laws, charges he agreed to settle.

“As alleged in the complaint, Goltry and JAG Advisors repeatedly lied to investors to lure them into investing in the JAG Fund and then lost their money or stole it to pay for lavish personal expenses,” said Nicholas Grippo, regional director of the SEC’s Philadelphia office, in a statement. “We will continue to diligently hold accountable those who exploit investors’ trust for personal gain.”

Related Stories:

Former Allianz Global Investors CIO Pleads Guilty to Fraud

Glen Point CIO, Founder Charged With FX Manipulation, Fraud

CIO Pleads Guilty to Role in $100 Million Fraud

Tags: , , , , ,

Kansas Construction Pension Fund Receives $43.1M PBGC Grant

The funding will keep the plan solvent through 2051.



The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation approved a $43.1 million grant on Friday for the Kansas Construction Trades Open End Pension Trust Fund, a pension fund for construction workers based in Topeka, Kansas. The pension plan covers 8,145 participants and had been in critical status.

According to the plan’s Form 5500 from the end of 2022, the plan had 757 active participants, 2,298 participants that are retired and receiving benefits, 4,026 that are entitled to benefits in the future and 434 beneficiaries of deceased participants. The plan was 36.35% funded.

The special financial assistance provision of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 allows for PBGC funding for severely underfunded multiemployer pension plans. Grants are calculated to ensure plan solvency through 2051. The SFA program has paid out about $60.4 billion in grants.

Pension funds that receive assistance must monitor the interest resulting from the grant money as separate from other sources of funding. The PBGC requires that at least two-thirds of the money it provides be invested in “high-quality fixed income investments.” The Final Rule on Special Financial Assistance, issued in July 2022, states that the other third can be invested in “return-seeking investments,” such as stocks and stock funds.

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

Tags: ,

«