skip to content
Link to United States Department of Justice Home Page
United States Department of Justice Seal of the United States Department of Justice displayed against a background image of the U.S. flag
Victim Notification System

Case Updates: U.S. v. James M. Davis

United States v. James M. Davis - Court Docket Number: H 09- 335

This case is assigned to the Honorable David Hittner, United States District Court Judge for the Southern District Texas, United States Courthouse, 515 Rusk Avenue, Houston, Texas. Arraignment was held on July 13, 2009 before Magistrate Judge Calvin Botley, who released Davis on a $500,000 bond, with a $5,000 cash deposit.

On August 27, 2009, James M. Davis, former chief financial officer for Stanford International Bank, Ltd (SIBL) and its parent company, Stanford Financial Group (SFG), and former member of SIBL’s Investment Committee, pleaded guilty to a three count information, filed on June 18, 2009, charging him with one count of conspiracy to commit wire, mail and securities fraud, one count of mail fraud and one count of conspiracy to obstruct a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) investigation stemming from a $7 billion investment scheme. Davis has agreed to cooperate with the ongoing investigation and has also agreed to the entry of a preliminary order of forfeiture of fraud proceeds in the amount of $1 billion. . Davis' sentencing, which had been scheduled for November 20, 2009, has been cancelled.

According to the plea documents, Davis admitted that as part of the scheme, he and his co-conspirators defrauded investors who purchased approximately $7 billion in certificates of deposit (CDs) administered by SIBL, an offshore bank located on the island of Antigua. Davis further admitted that he and his co-conspirators misused and misappropriated most of those investor assets, including by diverting more than $1.6 billion into undisclosed personal loans to a co-conspirator, while misrepresenting to investors SIBL’s financial condition, its investment strategy and the extent of its regulatory oversight by Antiguan authorities.

According to the plea documents, Davis and his co-conspirators began in 1990 to make false entries into the general ledgers of SIBL relating to revenues and revenue balances. Despite this false reporting, Davis and his co-conspirators promoted SIBL’s investments as being “well managed, safe and secure” and touted in SIBL’s annual reports false year-by-year percentage and dollar increases in the purported value of SIBL’s earnings, revenue and assets.

Davis further admitted in the plea documents that he and his co-conspirators used bogus revenue numbers for each year to generate the desired “Return on Investment” that was reported to investors. These “reverse engineered” numbers were developed using a secret instruction sheet that Davis admitted was provided to employees in SFG’s accounting group with instructions on to how to make changes to the spreadsheets to generate the false adjusted revenue figures.

Davis also admitted in the plea documents that in order to effectuate the scheme, misrepresentations were made to investors about who managed SIBL’s entire non-cash portfolio of assets. Specifically, Davis admitted that 80 percent of SIBL’s portfolio, internally referred to as “Tier III,” was not managed by global money managers, as was represented to investors, but was actually made up of illiquid investments. These included at least $2 billion in personal loans to a co-conspirator, which were disguised as investments, and overvalued real and personal property, including interests in real estate that SIBL had acquired in 2008 for approximately $65 million, but was ultimately valued on SIBL’s books at $3.2 billion. Davis admitted that none of these facts were disclosed to investors.

According to the plea documents, Davis admitted that he and his co-conspirators promoted the sale of SIBL CDs by representing to SIBL CD investors that SIBL’s operations and financial condition were being scrutinized by Antigua’s bank regulator, the Financial Services Regulatory Commission (FSRC). Davis also admitted that he knew these statements to be false, because he and his co-conspirators had funneled bribe payments to a bank regulator, who is also an accused co-conspirator, in order to ensure that Antiguan regulators would not properly examine the financial statements of SIBL.

Also according to the plea documents, from 2005 through February of 2009, Davis admitted that he and his co-conspirators made a number of misrepresentations to the SEC in order to impair and impede the SEC’s investigation.

** If you believe you were a victim in U.S. v. James M. Davis, you have a right to submit a Victim Impact Statement in the form of a letter before sentencing to explain how the crimes affected you and/or your family. Victim Impact includes physical, emotional and/or financial loss. If you elect to make a submission, please complete the Victim Impact Statement Form and mail it to: Pamela Washington, Attn: James M. Davis case, U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Fraud Section, 10th and Constitution Avenue N.W., Bond Building, Room 4216, Washington, DC 20530, no later than October 20, 2009.



Contact Us   |   Accessibility   |   A-Z Index   |   Site Map  |   Archive   |   Privacy Policy  |   Legal Policies and Disclaimers
FOIA   |   For DOJ Employees   |   Other Government Resources   |   Office of the Inspector General   |   USA.gov   |   No FEAR Act