David P. Weber

David Paul Weber is an American criminalist, and a former Assistant Inspector General for Investigations at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).[1] Weber was a whistleblower who reported allegations about foreign espionage against the stock exchanges, and misconduct in the Bernard L. Madoff and R. Allen Stanford Ponzi scheme investigations. He was terminated months later for supposedly unrelated reasons.[2][3][4] He sued the SEC, claiming wrongful termination and retaliation against him for coming forward as a whistleblower. In June 2013, the SEC settled with Weber his whistleblower protection and U.S. District Court lawsuits by reinstating him and paying him $580,000, one of the largest federal employee whistleblower settlements ever.[5][6] In 2014, author and blogger Larry Doyle named Weber as one of his "top 5 whistleblowers".[7] On July 30, 2015, Weber was recognized by six United States Senators and one member of the House of Representatives at the First Congressional Celebration of National Whistleblower Appreciation Day.[8] Weber is now a forensic accounting professor at a Maryland state university.[9]

David P. Weber
Born
David Paul Weber
Alma mater
OccupationAttorney, Accounting Professor, private investigator, certified fraud examiner, forensic accountant
EmployerSalisbury University
Known forformer Assistant Inspector General for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission; whistleblower; revealed compromise and hacking of U.S. stock exchanges by foreign power(s).
Spouse(s)Julie Goodwin Weber
Websitegoodwinweberlaw.com/attorneys/david-p-weber/

Education

Weber graduated from Syracuse University (Criminal Justice; cum laude, 1995), and Syracuse University College of Law (J.D., magna cum laude, 1998).[1][10] He was admitted to the New York State bar in 1999, the District of Columbia Bar in 2000, the Maryland Bar in 2013, and the Virginia Bar in 2017.[11] He is a licensed private investigator, with firearms authority, in the Commonwealth of Virginia, certified by the Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services.

Career

Early career

After graduation from law school, Weber became a law clerk to New York United States District Judge Neal P. McCurn working on criminal and civil cases. When his judge sat by designation on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, Weber assisted with criminal and civil appeals in 1998 and 1999.[1][10] Subsequently, Weber was Special Counsel for Enforcement for more than ten years at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, at the United States Department of the Treasury.[1][10] He followed that up by practicing as Supervisory Counsel and Chief of Enforcement Unit I for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), responsible for overseeing all banking enforcement activities and investigations involving state chartered banks and bank failures for the western half of the United States.[1][10] Weber served as the FDIC's signatory on the $1 billion settlement eliminating the refund anticipation loans product from the nation's banking system.[12]

Securities and Exchange Commission

In January 2012, Weber was promoted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Assistant Inspector General for Investigations at the Office of Inspector General, directing all criminal, civil and administrative investigations into fraud, waste and abuse in SEC programs and operations, and supervising the Office's investigative staff. In this role, he served as the SEC's chief investigator for internal affairs.[1][10] At the end of that same month, H. David Kotz, SEC Inspector General during the previous four years, resigned and returned to the private sector as managing director of Gryphon Strategies.[13] His resignation came in the midst of questions as to his conduct, as then-current and former SEC employees had complained that Kotz initiated investigations without credible evidence and unnecessarily tainted people's reputations.[13][14]

Madoff accusations, cyber compromise, and retaliatory paid leave

In March 2012, Weber alleged improper conduct by Kotz, asserting that Kotz may have had personal relationships that tainted SEC investigations of the Bernard Madoff and R. Allen Stanford Ponzi schemes.[18] Kotz said Weber's accusations were "completely and utterly ludicrous and untrue."[19][20] [21] Despite Kotz's protestations, further investigation proved the allegations were indeed true.[22][23]

Weber also reported potential "national security" concerns and "possible espionage" by "foreign nationals" related to a case Weber was investigating that "involved unencrypted computer hard drives that contained sensitive stock exchange information."[23] Nevertheless, in May 2012, Weber was placed on administrative paid leave after fellow staff complained that he purportedly spoke openly about wanting to carry a concealed gun at work, and brought a bullet-proof vest to work.[27] He was also banned from entering SEC headquarters.[19] Weber denied those allegations.[28] U.S. Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) sent a letter to SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro, asking for a copy of the "security threat evaluation" on the basis of which Weber was banned from the SEC's offices.[29][30] The SEC refused to provide the supposed threat evaluation against Weber to Congress. Later, it was revealed that the supposed threat evaluation found that Weber was not a threat, and could return to work.[31] The SEC, however, did not return him to work.[31][32]

Williams report

Weber's allegations against Kotz led the SEC to bring in Inspector General David Williams of the U.S. Postal Service to conduct an independent, outside review.[15][23] The 2012 Williams report concluded that Kotz had in fact violated ethics rules by overseeing investigations that involved people with whom Kotz had “personal relationships.”[2][13][15]

In addition, the Williams report looked at separate allegations that Weber had created a hostile work environment at the SEC. It did not find any evidence that Weber's conduct was improper or triggered security concerns.[4][13][17] The report made clear that the allegations of the bullet proof vest were false; the vest belonged to the SEC and was donned as “a joke after Weber’s colleagues placed smiley-face stickers on it.”[4] SEC OIG staff also previously carried firearms; the USPS OIG report found that without law enforcement and weapons authority, the SEC OIG was unable to protect the rights of witnesses or complainants. The sole discussion of weapons at the SEC was in the context of re-certifying special agents to carry weapons after SEC OIG's certification had lapsed, prior to Weber being hired.[4] The Williams report also documented that the SEC's own supposed threat evaluation of Weber was false, and cleared him to return to work (though it failed to do so).[32] Finally, the Williams report found that Weber’s reports concerning deficient SEC computer security had merit.[4][23]

Whistleblower allegations

Weber claimed the retaliation was intended to reprise against him for revealing misconduct within the SEC in the Madoff and Stanford investigations, perjury by Chairman Mary Schapiro in testimony before the United States Senate and House of Representatives, and to delay the filing of reports to Congress on the gross misconduct of William J. Fagan (Chief of Security Services for the SEC), Jeff Heslop (Chief Operating Officer of the SEC), and Weber's investigation into the SEC for exposing potential vulnerabilities of the NYSE and NASDAQ Stock Exchange.[2]

According to Weber, Heslop was the target of at least two OIG investigations, including whether Heslop had improperly steered work to Booz Allen Hamilton.[2] The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee probed the allegations. Chairman Darrell Issa noted in a Thomson Reuters' report that the House investigation about the suspicious and wasteful hiring of the Booz Allen consultants was "broadly compatible" with the Weber lawsuit allegations.[2][33]

According to Weber, Fagan was engaged in pay to play schemes in hiring private security contractors, as well as substantial nepotism in the hiring of security staff. Weber also alleged that Fagan engaged in a cover up of multiple sexual assaults of guard staff and a female visitor to the SEC who was assaulted on a late night due to insufficient security at the SEC's Union Station headquarters.[2] Fagan then used the same private security contractor hired under the pay to play scheme to supposedly investigate Weber, a direct conflict of interest.[2] The US Postal Service OIG, in their 2012 report, found that Fagan's misconduct violated a number of laws and regulations, including the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Executive Department employees.[32][34] A subsequent SEC OIG report also found that Fagan engaged in a coverup of sexual assaults and failures to properly screen employees and contractors of the SEC for criminal convictions.[35]

The investigation into the SEC computer security lapses was detailed in an August 30 report by Interim Inspector General Jon Rymer.[36] His report stated that while there were 28 laptops in question, the outside firm conducted forensic testing only on "several select laptops" to determine if a breach occurred. In response, NYSE Euronext hired former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff to make sure sensitive exchange data were not breached after U.S. securities regulators left their computers unencrypted.[37] “Everything was on those laptops,” said one exchange official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “You could find the system architecture and technology maps of both the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq, information about their key data centers, their emergency plans. It’s virtually everything you need to know if you were a terrorist looking to sabotage the U.S. capital markets." An SEC spokesman later confirmed that the security lapses identified by Weber did occur.[38]

Dismissal and lawsuit

Weber worked at the SEC until October 31, 2012, when, months after becoming a whistleblower accusing the SEC of significant misconduct in the Madoff and Stanford investigations, cyber compromise of NASDAQ, as well as SEC's most senior management misconduct, he was fired for supposedly unrelated reasons.[40] He sued the SEC in federal court in Washington, D.C., in November 2012, saying he was wrongfully terminated and retaliated against for trying to investigate misconduct at the SEC and for coming forward as a whistleblower.[2] Less than two weeks after Weber's suits were filed, the Chairman of the SEC resigned, followed in short order by the resignations or firing of each senior management official of the SEC, including Heslop, Fagan, and the SEC's General Counsel, Mark Cahn.[41][42]

Kotz responded to the civil lawsuit saying that: "for some inexplicable reason, my name has been dragged through the mud in the most ludicrous and unbelievable allegations."[28][2] The SEC said it would "vigorously contest" the lawsuit.[43] Yet, the allegations against Kotz were proven to be true, and the SEC did not contest the lawsuit, or even file an answer.[25] Instead of vigorously contesting the lawsuit as promised, in June 2013, the SEC settled the lawsuits with Weber by paying him $580,000, reinstating him from the date of his dismissal, and clearing his personnel and security records.[5][6] Weber purportedly received the third largest federal employee whistleblower payment to date.[44] Despite being reinstated, Weber decided not to return to his former position, instead becoming a university faculty member, and growing his forensic investigations practice.[4] In 2014, blogger Larry Doyle named Weber as one of his "top 5 whistleblowers."[7] On July 30, 2015, Weber was recognized by six United States Senators and one member of the House of Representatives at the First Congressional Celebration of National Whistleblower Appreciation Day.[8] In October 2015, the Syracuse University College of Law named Weber as the one of the first recipients of the new "Syracuse Law Alumni Honors" award for "distinguished achievements."[45]

Post-SEC, Military Service, Law Practice, Publications, and University Teaching

Post SEC. As of July 2014, Weber and his wife Julie Goodwin Weber were principals in Goodwin Weber PLLC.[46] In addition to practicing law, Weber is a forensic accountant, certified fraud examiner and a private investigator.[1][10] He was a lecturer and the academic director of fraud management programs at Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, College Park.[47] At the university, Weber directed the American Bankers Association - Smith School Fraud and Anti-Money Laundering Management Program and taught in the school's executive MBA and online MBA programs.[48] He also taught in the master's accounting program,[49] the graduate certificate in risk, compliance and law,[50] and undergraduate classes. In 2017, Weber taught a course on organized crime involvement in white collar crimes and collaborated with Bernard Madoff on Maryland's fraud curriculum.[51][52] After teaching at UMD, Weber became a faculty member at the University of Maryland Global Campus, continuing to teach forensic accounting. In 2020, Weber became a faculty member at Salisbury University, which is the only University System of Maryland school with a program in fraud and forensic accounting.[53]

Military Service. Until 2016, Weber was a Lieutenant Colonel and the appeals officer for the 70th Regiment of the Maryland Army National Guard,[54] and member of the Judge Advocate Corps of the Maryland State Guard.[55]

Journalism and Writing. In 2015-2016, as a financial expert for the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Weber analyzed a number of loan agreements included among the Panama Papers, a project awarded the Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting in 2017.[56][57] A book was later written about the Panama Papers, Secrecy World, in which Weber was featured.[58] In 2019, Secrecy World was made into a major motion picture, The Laundromat, for which Weber served as the technical consultant, and played a small cameo.[59] In Fall 2020, Weber assisted the Associated Press in their investigation into how the Venezuelan government avoided US and global sanctions through Asia.[60] The AP's investigative report was published by more than 300 national and international media outlets including the Washington Post.[61] Since fall 2020, Weber has served as a regular contributor to Pursuit Magazine, a leading e-zine for professional investigators. Since joining pursuit, he was written columns on the origins of fraud,[62] open source intelligence,[63] fraud in the COVID-19 pandemic,[64] and the activities of the federal Inspectors General in responding to the pandemic.[65] He has also hosted webinars and virtual lectures on pandemic fraud.[66] In January 2021, Weber assisted the AP with review of the Congress override of the veto on the National Defense Authorization Act, which contained major money laundering changes to US law.[67]

University Teaching. Weber has been a faculty member within the University System of Maryland since 2009, and is now an assistant professor of accounting at Perdue School of Business, Salisbury University.[68] In May 2016, Weber was awarded the Distinguished Teaching Award[69] at the University of Maryland, College Park,[70] and the teaching recognition award by University of Maryland Global Campus, both for undergraduate teaching.[71] In 2017, Weber was nominated for the American Accounting Association's Forensic Accounting Section best teaching innovation award.[72] Weber was also twice nominated for the Stanley J. Drazek Teaching Excellence Award. In addition to teaching, Weber is a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow of the Council of Independent Colleges.[73]

See also

References

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  2. Matt Taibbi (November 19, 2012). "SEC Rocked By Lurid Sex-and-Corruption Lawsuit". Rolling Stone. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  3. Kane, Alex (November 20, 2012). "Matt Taibbi: Lurid Sex and Corruption Scandal at SEC". Alternet. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  4. Hicks, Josh (June 12, 2013). "SEC settles whistleblower case with $580,000". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  5. Schmidt, Robert (June 10, 2013). "SEC Pays $580,000 Over Ex-Investigator's Firing Claims". Bloomberg. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  6. Holzer, Jessica (June 10, 2013). "Accord Reached Over SEC Firing". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  7. Doyle, Larry (July 31, 2014). "Sense on Cents - Top 5 Whistleblowers". Sense on Cents. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  8. "Senators Honor Whistleblowers at First Congressional Celebration of National Whistleblower Day | Whistleblower Protection Blog". Whistleblower Protection Blog. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
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  12. "a50100954ex10_1.htm". sec.gov.
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  27. [2][13][16][19][20][24][25][26]
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  40. [2][16][25][39]
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  45. https://news.syr.edu/2015/10/college-of-law-to-honor-five-distinguished-alumni-faculty-13295/
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  47. "ABA - Robert H. Smith Financial Crimes Management Program". Archived from the original on September 27, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  48. "David P. Weber | Online MBA UMD". onlinemba.umd.edu. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  49. "University of Maryland". rhsmith.umd.edu/faculty-research/teaching-excellence/top-15-awards/past-winners. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  50. "University of Maryland Graduate Certificate Programs".
  51. Schmidtt, Jeff. "Poets & Quants". Poets & Quants Magazine. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
  52. "Mailing Madoff: What Fraud Examiners Can Learn From Talking to Fraudsters". Retrieved May 13, 2017.
  53. University, Salisbury. "Upper-Division Certificate in Fraud and Forensic Accounting". Salisbury University. Retrieved November 30, 2020.
  54. http://www.aba.com/Training/Schools/Pages/FMP-faculty.aspx
  55. "Financial Crimes Management Program - Faculty List". ABA. February 2, 2016. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
  56. "SD - Putin's Rich Friends". April 6, 2016. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
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  58. Naim, Moises. "Review | Inside the secret world where oligarchs and criminals hide their money". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
  59. Soderbergh, Steven (September 27, 2019), The Laundromat (Comedy, Crime, Drama, History), Gary Oldman, Antonio Banderas, A. J. Meijer, Arsenio Castellanos, Anonymous Content, Grey Matter Productions, Netflix, retrieved October 21, 2020
  60. Goodman | AP, Joshua. "To dodge sanctions Venezuela turns to Asia asphalt giant". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
  61. University, Salisbury. "SU Celebrates Recent Faculty, Staff Successes". Salisbury University. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
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  66. "Video: SBA Inspector General Hannibal Ware Discusses Covid Relief Fraud". Pursuit Magazine. Retrieved November 27, 2020.
  67. "New law cracks down on shell companies to combat corruption". AP NEWS. January 10, 2021. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  68. University, Salisbury. "David P. Weber". Salisbury University. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
  69. "Distinguished Teaching Awards". Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland. Retrieved September 21, 2016.
  70. "Winners". Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland. Retrieved September 21, 2016.
  71. Mahoney, Carole (June 13, 2016). "UMUC Honors Faculty Worldwide for Teaching Excellence". UMGC Global Media Center. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
  72. "AAA > Education > Awards". aaahq.org. Retrieved November 23, 2020.
  73. "David P. Weber". www.cic.edu. Archived from the original on July 26, 2014. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
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