Go to navigation Go to content
Phone: (516) 487-8207

Recent Events in the News

Jury Awards $15.7 Million in Fraud Case Against Bank


Posted on Feb 08, 2006

Jury Awards $15.7 Million in Fraud Case Against Bank; Coastal Banc Found Liable in Case Involving Confessed Scam Artist PRNewswire HOUSTON, Feb. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- A Harris County jury says Houston-based Coastal Banc SSB should pay $15.7 million for its role in a stock fraud scheme that cost investors millions. The verdict handed down today follows four days of trial in Judge Joseph "Tad" Halbach Jr.'s 333rd Judicial District Court. "In essence, the jury said to the bank, 'You had a responsibility as a financial institution and you failed,'" says attorney Randy McClanahan of Houston's McClanahan & Clearman, who represented Robert Ketchand of Boyer & Ketchand, the court-appointed receiver for the investment funds that lost money in the fraud scheme. "Banks have a job to do and when they don't do it, people can get hurt." Coastal Banc was one of a number of entities implicated in a securities fraud scheme perpetrated by Chris A. Slaga of Houston. Mr. Slaga currently is serving a 48-month sentence in federal prison in Beaumont. He pleaded guilty in 2002 to federal wire fraud charges, and has been ordered to pay $19.6 million in restitution. As president of Slaga Fund Management, LLC, Mr. Slaga solicited approximately $21 million in investment money from a group of investors. However, he later admitted converting much of the money for personal use, depositing approximately $15 million into his own investment accounts, as well as purchasing a home, a grand piano and several expensive automobiles. In the civil case against Coastal Banc, Mr. McClanahan and other attorneys representing the receiver argued that Coastal Banc knew Mr. Slaga was a private money manager for third parties, and yet still allowed the transfer of millions of dollars from investment partnership bank accounts into Mr. Slaga's personal accounts. Coastal Banc once maintained 44 branch banks across Texas. It has since been acquired by Hibernia Bank.

Read More About Jury Awards $15.7 Million in Fraud Case Against Bank...

back to top