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686 KB

Extraction Summary

6
People
2
Organizations
0
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal filing / court document (government sentencing memorandum or response)
File Size: 686 KB
Summary

This document is a page from a legal filing (Case 1:09-cr-00581-WHP) filed on March 18, 2013, concerning the sentencing of David Parse. The text argues that Parse was instrumental in backdating financial transactions for clients (Aronoff, Toporek, Blair, Coleman) in 2000 and 2001 to facilitate tax shelters involving J&G attorneys. It strongly criticizes Parse for attempting to blame his sales assistant, Carrie Yackee, for executing these trades.

People (6)

Name Role Context
David Parse Defendant / Investment Broker
Accused of being key to the success of backdated transactions; attempted to blame his assistant.
Carrie Yackee Sales Assistant
David Parse's subordinate whom he attempted to blame for executing the backdated trades.
Michael Toporek Client
Client involved in backdated transactions in tax year 2001.
Greg Blair Client
Client involved in backdated transactions in tax year 2001.
Matthew Coleman Client
Client involved in backdated transactions in tax year 2001.
Aronoff family members Clients
Clients involved in backdated transactions in tax year 2000.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
J&G
Law firm (likely Jenkens & Gilchrist); their attorneys worked with Parse on the transactions.
DOJ
Department of Justice (indicated by footer DOJ-OGR).

Timeline (2 events)

2000
Backdating of transactions for Aronoff family members.
Unknown
2001
Backdating of transactions for Toporek, Blair, and Coleman.
Unknown

Relationships (2)

David Parse Employer/Subordinate Carrie Yackee
Carrie Yackee, his sales assistant... shameless attempt by Parse to throw his subordinate under the bus
David Parse Co-conspirators/Business Associates J&G attorneys
without his agreement and participation, the J&G attorneys were powerless to correct the mistakes

Key Quotes (4)

"Parse was the key to the success of the backdated transactions — without his agreement and participation, the J&G attorneys were powerless to correct the mistakes"
Source
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Quote #1
"This statement is not only a shameless attempt by Parse to throw his subordinate under the bus, but also a testament as to just how perverted these tax shelters were"
Source
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Quote #2
"the corrections needed for the Aronoff transactions are reflected in David Parse’s own handwriting on GX 401-99"
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Quote #3
"He gave no investment advice, and the trades were executed by his assistant."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,181 characters)

Case 1:20-cv-00388-AJN Document 646-3 Filed 08/24/22 Page 118 of 171
A-6081
Case 1:09-cr-00581-WHP Document 605 Filed 03/18/13 Page 8 of 41
the amount or nature of the tax loss.
The facts concerning all of the backdating will not be repeated at length herein. It is useful
to note, however, the following facts as they relate to Parse: (i) Parse was the key to the success of
the backdated transactions — without his agreement and participation, the J&G attorneys were
powerless to correct the mistakes; (ii) the corrections needed for the Aronoff transactions are
reflected in David Parse’s own handwriting on GX 401-99 (reflecting the original transaction) and
GX 401-100 (reflecting the revised transaction), showing that he fully understood the nature of the
backdating; (iii) the correction of the transactions required a complex series of steps, including
reversals of transfers of assets between accounts, reversals of already-completed stock and foreign
currency transactions, and execution of new “as of” foreign currency and stock trades; and (iv) the
backdating occurred with not just one client, but several and occurred in two different tax years —
tax year 2000 for the Aronoff family members, and tax year 2001 for Michael Toporek, Greg Blair,
and Matthew Coleman.
In his sentencing memorandum, Parse attempts to excuse the backdating by claiming, “He
gave no investment advice, and the trades were executed by his assistant.” (Parse Sent. Mem. at 12).
This statement is not only a shameless attempt by Parse to throw his subordinate under the bus, but
also a testament as to just how perverted these tax shelters were that the investment broker, who
otherwise touts his treatment of his long-time clients, (id. at 4 “As a broker, David had 30 to 40 long-
term customers, and his goal was to assist them to invest their money wisely.”), now attempts to
make much of the fact that he was not giving investment advice to the backdating clients (or, as the
evidence showed, to any of the other tax shelter clients). As to Parse’s suggestion that the
backdating transactions were done not by Parse, but by Carrie Yackee, his sales assistant (Parse
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DOJ-OGR-00010211

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