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Alberta regulator settles insider trading case

Stockhouse Editorial
0 Comments| March 16, 2012

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The Alberta Securities Commission has concluded a settlement with James Roger Douglas, an insurance agent from Medicine Hat, Alberta. Under the settlement agreement, Douglas agreed to cease trading in all securities and exchange contracts for five years, and has paid the ASC $60,000 plus $10,000 in costs.

In the settlement agreement, Douglas acknowledged that he failed to take sufficient steps to ensure that trades made through his brokerage account by John Herbert (Bert) Holtby and Richard Kowalchuk were in compliance with Alberta securities laws. At the time, Bert Holtby was a director of Eveready Inc. and Kowalchuk was an investment advisor with CIBC Wood Gundy in Medicine Hat. Eveready was an Edmonton-based company that operated in the industrial and oilfield services sectors in North America.

Douglas acknowledged that his account was to be used by Holtby and Kowalchuk as an "investment club" for the benefit of himself, Holtby and Kowalchuk. Douglas also admitted that, using his account, Holtby and Kowalchuk were able to secretly trade in shares of Eveready. Twenty-eight thousand Eveready shares were purchased through the account in March and April 2009, at prices between $2.50 and $3.50 per share. On April 29, 2009, Eveready announced it was being taken over by Clean Harbors Inc. and subsequently shares of Eveready jumped to over $10 per share. Douglas admits that, as a result of the way the investment club was set up, he profited in the amount of $40,000.

To view the rest of this article, please click on the link:

https://www.newswire.ca/en/story/938715/asc-settles-with-medicine-hat-insurance-agent-regarding-allegations-of-illegal-insider-trading-in-the-holtby-case



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