Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
efta-efta00756049DOJ Data Set 9Other

From: "Dr. Henry Jarecki" ‹

Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 9
Reference
efta-efta00756049
Pages
3
Persons
0
Integrity

Summary

Ask AI About This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From: "Dr. Henry Jarecki" ‹ > To: 'Jeffrey Epstein' <jeeracationgginail.com> Subject: FW: AIG Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 21:47:30 +0000 From: Fred Tarter [mailto Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 1:07 AM To: Dr. Henry Jarecki Subject: AIG The fact that settlements will soon be regulated by the SEC -- see below -- is good for the AIG deal, they conform to all of the regulations being discussed, once this asset class is recognized as a security it will be much easier to sell groups of them as bonds.... did you connect with Jeffrey? Fred +++ Life Settlement Investments Need to be Regulated Should sales of life settlements be regulated as sales of securities? After eighteen months of a comprehensive review, the SEC's Life Settlements Task Force thinks so, and has asked the SEC to urge Congress amend the federal securities laws to bring this about, according to a September 12 InvestmentNews article called "Point/Counterpoint: Are life settlements essentially securities?" A life settlement is a contract in which an insurance policyholder sells the insurance policy to someone else, who then assumes responsibility for paying the premiums. From the policyholder's point of view, the purpose of the transaction is to allow a policyholder to cash out of the policy for an amount greater than the cash surrender value but less than the death benefit. From the purchaser's point of view, it is an investment in the promise of a death benefit payout, similar to a zero coupon bond with an uncertain "maturity" date, and the key is not to pay too much for it. Proponents of amending the federal securities laws to define a life settlement as a security point to the following benefits: EFTA00756049 • It would allow the SEC to monitor brokers to determine whether appropriate standards of conduct are being met. • It would facilitate the creation of a secondary market for life policies by giving participants confidence that it is not a "rigged game," which the present lack of uniform regulation and abusive industry practices are preventing. • While courts and regulators have found investments in life settlements to be securities, a clear statutory definition and regulatory scheme would close legal loopholes that are being exploited by unscrupulous promoters. According to the article: "Registering equities hasn't prevented the stock markets from becoming efficient. In fact, the presence of securities laws has been a major force in making equity markets more efficient and reliable over time." (Anti-regulation hawks should ponder that.) Opponents argue that: • The SEC already has the authority to treat life settlements as securities in "appropriate situations." • It will "increase significantly transaction costs and diminish investor interest in the asset class." • The law is already settled that "fractionalized interests" — sales of a policy to more than one investor — are securities. In the last fourteen years, "every court since, whether state or federal, has concluded that fractionalized interests in life settlements are securities." • The sale of one policy to a single investor should be looked at differently than sales of fractionalized interests. The one-policy-one-investor situation should be analyzed under existing law pertaining to "investment contracts," which is known as the "catch-all" portion of federal definition of a security. Whether an investment is an "investment contract" and, thus a security, depends (and ought to depend) on a number of factors, including whether the investor is sophisticated (many investors are "institutional," therefore, sophisticated, according to opponents), and whether the investor expects to receive profits solely from the efforts of others. It will be interesting to see whether the SEC adopts or rejects the recommendation of its Task Force in making recommendation to Congress about possible amendments to the securities laws. Fred B. Tarter THE LAKESIDE GROUP OF COMPANIES 210 East 39th Street New York, NY 10016 EFTA00756050 EFTA00756051

Technical Artifacts (1)

View in Artifacts Browser

Email addresses, URLs, phone numbers, and other technical indicators extracted from this document.

Domainjeeracationgginail.com

Related Documents (6)

Court UnsealedJan 26, 2015

ExhibitF Journal (Black Book)

.4 (213,7 2004 .M 2005? Abby 079?$4 574 202 Abousteiman. Joanna 0503, 333 mad: . A }cannachevailer@hounasi.c Adam, Nick 19 Rue D7 Pans on 331 538 no 331 401500815 00 33 an? 341 98 p} Agag Aiejandro no 44 730 5033 Emmi: aagag?asimvestmenis.oom Agwew, Marie Ciaire 8; JO :1 51 Eaton Square London SW OQY 0207-235 ?589 (h 020? 621 0011 (w Azzedine 00 331 4272 1919 Aligiermarfe, Rufus a 521 62?? Age 13} Ruins 53H his mist} A?dridga Saffron 4? Ladbmke Rd Landon W11

92p
Court UnsealedDec 23, 2025

Epstein Will

1, JEFFREY E. EPSTEIN, of Little St. James Island, United States Virgin Islands, declare this to be my last will and testament. FIRST I hereby revoke all my prior wills and codicils. SECOND I give all my property to the Trustees of The Jeffrey E. Epstein 2001 Trust One created pursuant to an agreement dated November 8, 2001, by JEFFREY E. EPSTEIN, as Grantor, and JEFFREY E. EPSTEIN and JEFFREY A. SCHANTZ, as Trustees, to be added to the principal thereof and disposed of as provided there

24p
DOJ Data Set 10OtherUnknown

EFTA01830873

1p
OtherUnknown

Messages

DOJ EFTA Data Set 10 document EFTA01304453

4p
DOJ Data Set 8CorrespondenceUnknown

EFTA00016841

0p
DOJ Data Set 9OtherUnknown

Subject: RE: WSJ article on Deutsche Bank and Epstein charity

From: Subject: RE: WSJ article on Deutsche Bank and Epstein charity Date: Sun, 15 Sep 2019 00:32:47 +0000 Attachments: Exhibit - Timeline of Payments to Potential Co-Conspirators (002).pdf; 2019-09- — 7 09,_Epstem_Finances_-_news_articles_stimmaries.docx Following up on the below from earlier this week, this seems like as good a hook as any to provide an update on the financial side of the investigation. Our review of financial information has been extensive and robust, but ultimately it hasn't resulted in anything actionable from a charging perspective; still, so you know what we've done, we wanted to provide a rundown. Broadly speaking, we are aware of many, many financial holdings, transactions, and relationships undertaken by Epstein and various associates, including, for example, the Gratitude America entity described below. Essentially all of what the WSJ article covered had been previously reported, with the exception of the information that Gratitude America had an

3p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.