Stanford suing U.S. SEC, prosecutors for $7.2 bln

HOUSTON, (Reuters) – Jailed financier Allen  Stanford, accused of running a massive Ponzi scheme, filed a  $7.2 billion lawsuit accusing federal prosecutors and  regulators of depriving him of his constitutional rights.
The government agents “undertook illegal tactics” to  prosecute Stanford and “engaged in unfair, abusive law  enforcement methods and tactics” that left him broke and unable  to properly defend himself, according to the lawsuit filed in  federal court in Houston late yesterday.
The lawsuit seeking return of his assets comes two years  after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil  charges against the former jet-setting Texas financier.

Allen Stanford
Allen Stanford

Stanford is accused of running a $7 billion Ponzi scheme  centred on fraudulent certificates of deposit issued by  Stanford International Bank in Antigua. He has pleaded not  guilty to all charges in a 21-count indictment.
“Mr. Stanford was literally left with only the suit he was  wearing at the time of the SEC Agents and U.S. Marshals seizure  of property …” the lawsuit said.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney in Houston declined to  comment on the lawsuit, as did a spokesman for the U.S.  Securities and Exchange Commission.
U.S. District Judge David Hittner, who ruled that Stanford  is incompetent to stand trial in his current mental state, has  also declared the former billionaire indigent.
Stanford, 60, is in the process of being transferred to a  prison hospital for treatment of addiction to a powerful  anti-anxiety medication he was prescribed while jailed.
The Bureau of Prisons website lists his current location as  a federal transfer center in Oklahoma.
He may end up at a U.S. prison hospital in Butner, North  Carolina. That is the same federal facility where Bernie Madoff  is serving a 150-year sentence for conducting the largest  financial fraud in history.
The case is R. Allen Stanford v Stephen Korotosh et al,  U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, No.  11-00582.