When a U.S. District Court judge criticizes the SEC for its “overreaching, self-serving interpretation” of evidence and reliance on evidence that the judge called “implausible,” it’s fair to assume that the defendant’s case was solid and his lawyer expert enough to annihilate the other side’s case.

Ross A. Albert, a partner in Morris, Manning & Martin’s corporate and commercial litigation practice who led the defense, said that “while it’s unusual to have a bench trial rather than a jury trial, what was rare was the 44-page written opinion that carefully considered and rejected every factual contention put forth by the SEC.”

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