Jeffrey Plotkin
USA Guide 2024
Band 2 : Litigation: White-Collar Crime & Government Investigations
Band 2
About
Provided by Jeffrey Plotkin
Practice Areas
SEC Investigations & Examinations;
White-Collar Defense;
Complex Civil Litigation;
Internal Investigations;
Investment Adviser & Broker-Dealer Registration and Compliance
Career
Previous:
Partner, Day Pitney LLP;
Associate, Morvillo, Abramowitz, Grand, Iason & Silberberg, P.C.;
Assistant Regional Administrator, Division of Broker-Dealer Enforcement, Securities and Exchange Commission, New York Regional Office.
Professional Memberships
State Court Admissions: Connecticut and New York
Federal Court Admissions: United States Supreme Court; United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit: United States District Courts for the District of Connecticut, Southern District of New York, and Eastern District of New York.
Chairman, Connecticut Legal Services, Inc.
New York State Bar Association, White Collar Criminal Litigation Committee, Commercial and Federal Litigation Section (Former Co-Chair, Securities Subcommittee)
Connecticut Bar Association, Federal Practice Section
American Bar Association, Business Law Section
Publications
"BlackBerry: The FINRA Compliant Smartphone," February 2011 (White Paper commissioned by Research in Motion Limited)
"Criminal Prosecutorial Discretion in Insider Trading Cases: Let's Look at the Numbers," NYLitigator, Fall 2010 (principal author)
"Confidential Commercial Documents in the SEC's Investigative Files: Caution to the Complacent," Securities Regulation Law Journal, Fall 2010 (co-author)
"SEC v. Bank of America: Back to the Drawing Board," ABA Criminal LitigationNewsletter, Winter 2010 (co-author)
"The Designated Third Party Requirement: The Final Frontier of SEC Rule 17a-4(f)," November 2009 (White Paper commissioned by Iron Mountain) (republished February 2012)
"Responding To SRO Market Surveillance Inquiries Into Potential Insider Trading," The Metropolitan Corporate Counsel, October 2007 (co-author)
"Securities Class Action Settlements - How Corporate Governance Reform Has Played a Role in the Process," New York Law Journal, September 20, 2007 (co-author)
"Reaping the Benefits of Electronic Message Surveillance," 2006 (report of broker-dealer survey conducted with Fortiva, Inc.) (co-author)
"The Act-Of-Production Privilege in SEC Proceedings," The Review of Securities & Commodities Regulation, Vol. 39, No. 1, January 4, 2006 (co-author)
"SEC Enforcement Actions: Show Me the Money," New York Law Journal, December 19, 2005
"The Tipper Benefit Test Under the Misappropriation Theory," New York Law Journal, August 15, 2003
"Broker-Dealer Regulations Concerning E-Mail," New York Law Journal, December 4, 2002
Work Highlights
Jeff concentrates his legal practice on securities enforcement defense, internal corporate investigations, complex private securities litigation and arbitration, and white collar criminal defense. He represents broker-dealers, investment advisers, financial services professionals, public companies and their officers and directors, auditors, attorneys, and institutional investors in a wide variety of regulatory, criminal, and civil litigation matters nationwide.
Jeff started his career in the SEC's Division of Enforcement, New York Regional Office, where he served as Staff Attorney; Chief of the Branch of Broker-Dealer Enforcement and Interpretations; and Assistant Regional Administrator. At the SEC, Jeff handled investigations and enforcement actions involving investment fund fraud, underwriting fraud, unregistered securities distributions, market manipulation, and violations of the broker-dealer net capital and customer reserve rules. He was the lead SEC trial attorney in the successful federal court action to enjoin the fraudulent sales practices of ten penny stock brokers at J.T. Moran & Co., Inc. (the basis for the fictional J.T. Marlin brokerage firm in the movie “Boiler Room”), and one of the SEC trial attorneys in the successful federal court action to enjoin the largest “free riding” margin scheme in history.
After the SEC, Jeff was an associate of the Morvillo Abramowitz law firm, a white collar criminal defense boutique in New York City, where he represented entities and individuals in criminal and regulatory investigations and conducted internal corporate investigations. Immediately prior to joining Finn Dixon in 2012, Jeff was a partner of Day Pitney LLP in its New York City and Stamford, CT offices, and was Chair of that firm’s Government Investigations practice group and Broker-Dealer and Investment Advisers practice group.
Jeff has enjoyed considerable success during the “Wells Notice” process in persuading the Staff of the SEC, FINRA and the securities exchanges to reverse their preliminary determinations to recommend enforcement actions against his clients. Among other successes, Jeff’s Wells Submissions and further advocacy on behalf of his clients have successfully terminated investigations against his clients without enforcement action in the following matters:
• An SEC investigation of a mortgage-backed securities salesman at a major broker-dealer for allegedly making material misrepresentations to hedge fund counterparties during trade negotiations;
• An SEC insider trading investigation of a securities analyst for allegedly tipping institutional clients of an impending ratings change on a stock;
• An SEC investigation of a portfolio manager to a mutual fund for alleged disclosure failures by the mutual fund in its SEC filings;
• A FINRA insider trading investigation of a securities analyst based on alleged “URL guessing” of web pages where a public company was loading its quarterly earnings statements in advance of public announcement;
• A FINRA investigation of a branch manager of a broker-dealer subsidiary of an insurance company for allegedly failing to supervise several brokers who participated in a Ponzi scheme; and
• A stock exchange investigation of a broker-dealer and its electronic communications network (ECN) for alleged violations of the “trade-through” rule of SEC Regulation NMS.
Over the years, Jeff has been appointed to undertake a variety of independent regulatory projects, including serving as the:
• Court-appointed Distribution Agent for a $65 million Fair Fund;
• SEC-appointed Plan Administrator for a $50 million Fair Fund;
• Designated Independent Consultant for a NYSE specialist firm pursuant to settlements with the SEC and NYSE in the so-called "Specialist Case" (which involved allegations that NYSE specialists inter-positioned and traded ahead of customer orders on the NYSE). In that role, he conducted a review of all the specialist's policies, procedures and systems for handling customer order flow on the NYSE, and recommended amendments and revisions to the specialist's policies, procedures and systems to ensure compliance with SEC and NYSE rules; and
• Independent Third Party Auditor for a NYSE specialist firm pursuant to former NYSE Rule 104(h). In that role, he conducted reviews of all specialist algorithms and systems to ensure they operated in accordance with SEC and NYSE rules.
Jeff has been an adjunct professor for New York Law School’s LLM program for Financial Services Law, was a guest lecturer at the Columbia Business School for over ten years on insider trading law for securities analysts, and has served as a panelist at numerous seminars and conferences concerning securities regulation and arbitration.
Jeff is the former co-Chair of the Securities Subcommittee of the New York State Bar Association’s White Collar Criminal Litigation Committee, and the principal author of that Committee’s published report on criminal prosecutorial discretion in insider trading cases.
Jeff currently is the Chairman of Connecticut Legal Services, Inc., the largest legal aid society in Connecticut.
Education
New York Law School
J.D., cum laude
1983 - 1986
University of Arizona
B.A.
1977 - 1981
Chambers Review
USA
Jeffrey Plotkin has a wide-ranging securities regulatory practice which sees him regularly engaged by senior executives and public companies in SEC matters.