Tullett Prebon Wins Unlawful Conspiracy Claim Against BGC, Shaun Lynn and Tony Verrier

By Tullett Prebon, PRNE
Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Tullett Prebon plc v BGC Brokers LP and BGC Brokers GP Limited ("BGC"), Anthony Neil Verrier ("Tony Verrier"), Shaun Carl Edgar Lynn ("Shaun Lynn"), and others.

LONDON, NEW YORK, HONG KONG and SINGAPORE, March 18, 2010 -

    - Mr Justice Jack held that:

    - There was a conspiracy between BGC, Tony Verrier and Shaun Lynn to
      poach Tullett Prebon employees.

    - The injunction preventing BGC from recruiting Tullett Prebon staff must
      continue until BGC has absorbed the Court's judgment exposing BGC's
      unlawful conduct.

    - Evidence was destroyed and deleted from BGC's computer system.

    - Tony Verrier's 'gambit' was to 'lose' BlackBerrys which might contain
      inconvenient material and Tony Verrier's instructions were the cause of
      at least some of the Defendants' phones and BlackBerrys being lost.

    - The brokers' claims that they were entitled to walk out on their
      contracts with Tullett Prebon were dismissed.

    - Tullett Prebon was and is entitled to injunctions as well
      as financial remedies.

    - BGC lost its counter-claim against Tullett Prebon, which the
      Judge dismissed.

As the Judge set out at paragraph 3 of his Judgment: At this trial,
Tullett sought to continue by way of injunction the effect of undertakings
given in April 2009 and to establish its right to damages. The Defendants in
the main denied any wrongdoing and claimed that Tullett was not entitled to
any further injunction or to damages. BGC also brought a counter-claim.

The Judge found in Tullett's favour, granting further
injunctions and that Tullett also had the right to claim damages. BGC's
counter-claim failed.

The Court found that it should only be necessary to extend the
injunction against BGC, Mr Lynn and Mr Verrier until 2 April 2010 because the
Judgment exposed BGC's unlawful conduct. Mr Justice Jack found: "The Court
must assume that the exposure of BGC's conduct as set out in the judgment
will curb unlawful recruitment in the future."

Terry Smith commented: "In order to operate successfully businesses need
to be able to rely upon a framework of law in which contracts are respected
and when it is necessary to resort to proceedings, witnesses are truthful and
evidence is preserved and disclosed rather than concealed or destroyed. It is
clear that BGC, Mr Verrier and Mr Lynn had other designs. However, we trust
that Mr Justice Jack' s Judgment and findings will be respected by them and
help to take us back to the sort of legal framework which all businesses
require.

Key Findings

The Judge's findings included the following:

    - "I did not find Mr Lynn a reliable witness. I have to ask
      why he wished to distance himself from Mr Verrier and the answer must
      be that he knew that some of Mr Verrier's conduct was unlawful."

    - "I am satisfied that it was Mr Verrier's gambit to 'lose'
      BlackBerrys whenever he thought they might contain inconvenient
      material, and that his instructions were the cause of at least some of
      the mobiles being lost. I am satisfied that the inaccessibility of the
      contents of his last BlackBerry due to a missing password was a
      deliberate ploy."

    - "It was Mr Verrier's intention formed long before 2 January
      2009 to recruit primarily from Tullett. There were two reasons. One was
      that it was the company which he knew and where he was known and where
      he had friends. Second, recruiting from Tullett was a way of getting
      his own back on Mr Smith."

    - "Mr Verrier intended to use desk heads to assist him in the
      recruitment of their desks as and when that would best achieve his aim
      and in so far as they were willing to do so. That included the
      provision of financial information."

    - "I found that in his evidence Mr Verrier stuck to the truth
      where he was able to, but departed from it with equanimity and
      adroitness where the truth was inconvenient."

    - "In an affidavit sworn on 7 April 2009 Mr Verrier had stated
      that Mr Hall had not provided him with any confidential information
      after 1 January 2009. That was not so."

    - "The conclusion to be drawn from what actually happened,
      from the oral evidence and from the documents is that Mr Verrier
      decided that, come what may, that is, whether or not the recruits and
      each of them had good grounds, weak grounds, or no grounds, to claim
      constructive dismissal, within a short period of their signing with
      BGC he would instruct his recruits to leave Tullett en masse."

    - "...on 15 December BGC disclosed a copy of a report headed
      'Project Toscana'. The single copy had been found filed in BGC's legal
      department - R 6954. No other copies were located. It would have been
      typed by Ms Howell from Mr Verrier's manuscript. There was no copy to
      be found kept by her as a hard copy or saved electronically on BGC's
      computer system. I do not find it credible that she would have typed
      up the report and handed it to Mr Verrier without saving it on the
      computer system. I conclude that the other copies and copies of any
      further reports as foreseen by the e-mail were destroyed. They were
      also deleted from BGC's computer system."

Notes to editors

Tullett Prebon

Tullett Prebon (www.tullettprebon.com) is one of the world's
largest inter-dealer brokers and operates as an intermediary in wholesale
financial markets facilitating the trading activities of its clients, in
particular commercial and investment banks. The business now covers seven
major product groups: Volatility, Rates, Non Banking & Sterling Cash,
Treasury, Energy, Credit, Environmental and Equities. Tullett Prebon's
Electronic Broking division offers electronic solutions to these products.

In addition to its brokerage services, Tullett Prebon offers a variety of
market information services through its IDB Market Data division, Tullett
Prebon Information.

Tullett Prebon has its principal offices in London, New Jersey, Hong
Kong
, Singapore and Tokyo, with other offices, joint ventures and affiliates
in Bahrain, Bangkok, Calgary, Frankfurt, Jakarta, Luxembourg, Manila, Mumbai,
Paris, Salt Lake City, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, Toronto, Warsaw and Zurich.

    For further information, please contact:

    Nigel Szembel
    Tullett Prebon
    +44(0)7802-362088/+44(0)2072007722
    nszembel@tullettprebon.com

For further information, please contact: Nigel Szembel, Tullett Prebon, +44(0)7802-362088/+44(0)2072007722, nszembel at tullettprebon.com

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