MARCIA S. KRIEGER, Chief District Judge.
This is a shareholder derivative suit, brought by shareholders of Nominal Defendant Western Union Company ("WU"), against certain WU directors and officers. The Consolidated Shareholder Derivative Complaint ("Complaint")
WU's primary business operations involve facilitating domestic and international money transfers, by which a customer may send money to a recipient nearly anywhere in the world, usually within a matter of minutes. WU provides this service through a broad network of domestic and international "agents," individuals and entities such as banks, grocery stores, pharmacies, and so on, that serve as WU's storefronts where customers can send or receive funds. WU charges fees to the senders of money transfers, which accounted for more than 80% of WU's revenue during the time period at issue here. Transfers from senders in the United States amounted to approximately 20% of WU's revenues.
The money transfer industry is a common means by which persons engaged in serious criminal activity attempt to launder money. As a consequence, the money transfer industry is heavily-regulated, both domestically and internationally. Among other things, transactions above a certain dollar threshold trigger requirements that WU obtain and retain identification information for senders and recipients and require WU to disclose high-value transactions to regulatory authorities. Customers (both licit and illicit) sometimes attempt to avoid triggering these regulatory requirements by "structuring" a large transaction as several smaller transactions, each falling below the necessary dollar threshold. WU allegedly has a reputation for lax compliance with anti-money laundering regulations. Customers were aware of this fact, and those seeking to avoid or evade scrutiny of their transfers were more likely to use WU than its competitors. That allowed WU to charge premium rates to such customers. As a result, WU has enjoyed an unusually large profit margin relative to its competitors and its market share.
After 2002, WU was the subject of frequent investigations and regulatory actions by state and federal authorities who sought to enforce WU's compliance with anti-money laundering rules and policies. The Complaint goes into considerable detail about several of these investigations, but it is not necessary here to recite the particulars. It is sufficient to note that WU resolved many of the investigations by paying many millions of dollars in settlement and adopting more stringent anti-money laundering policies. As pertinent here, such policies often required WU to appoint an officer to oversee WU's compliance with money laundering regulations and that such officer report to the Board of Directors about compliance issues as well as threatened or actual regulatory actions investigations.
For purposes of this action, the most prominent of the regulatory actions was brought by the State of Arizona in 2005. The investigation revealed that WU and its agents were not maintaining proper records and indeed, that some of WU's agents in the Southwest border region of the United States — an area accounting for 25% of WU's domestic revenues — knowingly facilitating money laundering of funds paid over to human smugglers. In 2010, WU and the State of Arizona entered into a settlement agreement — the "Southwest Border Agreement" or "SBA" — intended to resolve the matter. Among its provisions, the Southwest Border Agreement required WU to allow a court-appointed Monitor to evaluate and recommend improvements to the company's anti-money laundering procedures. The crux of the Plaintiffs' contentions in this action seems to be that, notwithstanding the SBA, WU has resisted adoption of the anti-money laundering policies recommended by the Monitor, has attempted to narrow the scope of the Monitor's authority, and has generally resisted demands that it improve its (and its agents') compliance with regulatory requirements.
Most recently, the State of Arizona asserted that WU was in material breach of the SBA in various respects. The parties resolved that dispute by WU's agreement to extend the Monitor's oversight for several more years and to engage in even more aggressive recordkeeping and reporting on transactions over $500 in the Southwest U.S. The Plaintiffs contend that the additional expenses and reporting requirements resulting from this controversy "could have been avoided if Defendants had ensured good faith compliance" with governmental entities dating back as early as 2003.
The Plaintiffs allege, generally, that each named director and officer ached his/her fiduciary duties to WU by: (i) willfully failing to address issues of WU's lax anti-money laundering compliance at an earlier date; (ii) allowing misleading proxy statements to be sent to shareholders (in that the proxy statements failed to reveal various facts about the regulatory enforcement actions and investigations that were occurring), (iii) misrepresenting the progress and costs of the SBA in WU's 2010-2012 public securities filings, and (iv) authorizing a stock buy-back program during 2010-2012, when WU stock was trading at an inflated value due to the non-disclosures discussed above. In addition, the Plaintiffs allege that Mr. Scheirman engaged in insider trading by disposing of large numbers of WU shares in 2011 and 2012, mindful of these same facts.
Based on these allegations, the Plaintiffs assert six causes of action: (i) breach of fiduciary duty, under an unspecified jurisdiction's common law, against the "Director Defendants" (Defendants Devitre, Ersek, Goodman, Greenberg, Holden, Levinson, Mendoza, Townsend, and Trujillo), based on allegations that, among other things, these Defendants refused to implement an effective anti-money laundering program over many years, reappointed the same Directors to various committees over various years, caused WU to breach the SBA and repurchase artificially-inflated stock, and awarded themselves excessive compensation; (ii) breach of fiduciary duty, under an unspecified jurisdiction's common law, against the "Officer Defendants" (Defendants Ersek, Scheirman, and Stockdale), in that these Defendants caused WU to ignore its anti-money laundering compliance obligations and breach the SBA; (iii) violation of 15 U.S.C. § 78n(a) against all Defendants, in that the Defendants caused WU to issue misleading proxy statements in 2012, 2013, and 2014; (iv) a claim for "corporate waste," under an unspecified jurisdiction's common law, against all Defendants, based on allegations that the Defendants caused WU to pay undeserved compensation to themselves, exposed WU to the expenses of defending against a securities fraud class action, and authorized a stock buy-back program at inflated prices, among other things; (v) unjust enrichment, under an unspecified jurisdiction's common law, against all Defendants; and (vi) breach of fiduciary duty, premised upon insider trading, against Mr. Schierman.
The Defendants filed a joint Motion to Dismiss
In reviewing a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), the Court must accept all well-plead allegations in the Complaint as true and view those allegations in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Stidham v. Peace Officer Standards and Training, 265 F.3d 1144, 1149 (10th Cir. 2001), quoting Sutton v. Utah State Sch. For the Deaf & Blind, 173 F.3d 1226, 1236 (10th Cir. 1999). The Court must limit its consideration to the four corners of the Amended Complaint, any documents attached thereto, and any external documents that are referenced in the Amended Complaint and whose accuracy is not in dispute. Oxendine v. Kaplan, 241 F.3d 1272, 1275 (10th Cir. 2001); Jacobsen v. Deseret Book Co., 287 F.3d 936, 941 (10th Cir. 2002); Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Howsam, 261 F.3d 956, 961 (10th Cir. 2001).
A claim is subject to dismissal if it fails to state a claim for relief that is "plausible on its face." Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S.Ct. 1937, 1949 (2009). To make such an assessment, the Court first discards those averments in the Complaint that are merely legal conclusions or "threadbare recitals of the elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory statements." Id. at 1949-50. The Court takes the remaining, well-pled factual contentions, treats them as true, and ascertains whether those facts (coupled, of course, with the law establishing the requisite elements of the claim) support a claim that is "plausible" or whether the claim being asserted is merely "conceivable" or "possible" under the facts alleged. Id. at 1950-51. What is required to reach the level of "plausibility" varies from context to context, but generally, allegations that are "so general that they encompass a wide swath of conduct, much of it innocent," will not be sufficient. Khalik v. United Air Lines, 671 F.3d 1188, 1191 (10th Cir. 2012).
This action is a derivative one; that is, the Plaintiffs are attempting to bring causes of action that properly belong to WU itself, as the entity ostensibly injured by wrongdoing by its directors and officers. The decision to commence litigation and assert causes of action belongs in the first instance to the corporation itself. As a result, most jurisdictions, including Delaware,
It is undisputed that the Plaintiffs did not make pre-suit demand on WU's Board of Directors. Thus, the question becomes whether the Complaint alleges sufficient facts to carry the Plaintiffs' burden of showing that such demand would have been futile. Beam v. Stewart, 845 A.2d 1040, 1048-49 (Del. 2004). The Plaintiffs are required to plead the pertinent facts with particularity. Id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 23.1(b)(3)(B).
Under Delaware law, two different tests govern the issue of demand futility, depending on the nature of the allegations. If the suit challenges a particular decision made by the board, the Court applies the Aronson test. See Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 812 (Del. 1984). The Aronson test requires the plaintiff to plead facts sufficient to demonstrate a reasonable doubt as to whether: (i) the directors were disinterested or independent with regard to the decision in question; or (ii) that the challenged decision was the product of a valid exercise of business judgment. Id. If the suit does not challenge a specific business decision, but rather, challenges the board's failure to adequately carry out its oversight duties, the Court applies the Rales test. See Rales v. Blasband, 634 A.2d 927, 934 (Del. 1993). The Rales test is essentially the first prong of the Aronson test — the Complaint must plead particularized facts demonstrating that the board could not have made a disinterested and independent decision regarding the demand.
As will be seen below, the Plaintiffs' claims spring entirely from allegations of
The Court agrees with the Defendants that, under Delaware law, the Aronson test is not appropriate where a plaintiff alleges claims arising out of a board's
The Plaintiffs' position here — that the Aronson test should be applied when a board has not taken any affirmative action — is premised upon on Abbott Labs and a Seventh Circuit opinion, Westmoreland County Employees Retirement System v. Parker, 727 F.3d 719, 725-26 (7
Under Rales, a pre-suit demand on the Board was required unless the Complaint states particularized facts that show, "a reasonable doubt that, as of the time the complaint is filed, the board of directors could have properly exercised its independent and disinterested business judgment in responding to a demand." Teamsters Union 25 Health Servs. & Ins. Plan v. Baiera, 119 A.3d 44, 58 (Del. Ch. 2015). The Plaintiffs must plead facts specific to each director, demonstrating that at least half of them could not have acted in a disinterested fashion in response to a demand.
Under Delaware law, Directors are presumed to be independent. Id. at 59. If the Complaint shows that a given director faces a "substantial likelihood"
The Plaintiffs' claims in this action t are known as Caremark claims, based on In re Caremark Intl. Inc. Deriv. Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996). Caremark recognizes that a director may be liable to a corporation for "an unconsidered failure of the board to act in circumstances in which due attention would, arguably, have prevented [a] loss." Id. at 967. Such claims require a showing of bad faith, that is, that "the fiduciary intentionally fail[ed] to act in the face of a known duty to act, demonstrating a conscious disregard for his/her duties." Stone ex rel. AmSouth Bancorporation v. Ritter, 911 A.2d 362, 369 (Del. 2006). Thus, in the circumstances here, the Complaint must state facts showing that: (i) the Defendants utterly failed to implement any anti-money laundering compliance system; or (ii) having implemented such a system, the Defendants consciously failed to monitor or oversee its operations, thus disabling themselves from being informed of risks or problems requiring their attention; and, in either case, (iii) that the Defendants knew that they were not discharging their fiduciary obligations.
A central feature of Caremark-type claims is the concept of "red flags." A plaintiff is required to plead, with particularly, certain circumstances or events that "put the directors on notice of problems with their systems, but which were consciously disregarded." In re General Motors Co. Derivative Litig., 2015 WL 3958724 (Del. Ch. Jun. 26, 2015) (slip op.). Such "red flags" are, essentially, a proxy for pleading knowledge. Id. The Plaintiffs are required to show "obvious and problematic occurrences that support an inference that [WU's] directors knew that there were material weaknesses in [WU's internal policies] and failed to correct such weaknesses." Rich ex rel. Fuqi Intern., Inc. v. Yu Kwai Chong, 66 A.3d 963, 983 (Del. Ch. 2013).
With these principles in mind, the Court undertakes a fairly detailed dissection of the Complaint, examining whether the it contains sufficient factual allegations to demonstrate that more than 50% of WU's board members lacked independence with regard to consideration of a demand that the Board bring suit on these claims.
February 11, 2010 is the most pertinent date for beginning this analysis. This date is the start of the "Relevant Period" selected by the Plaintiffs in this action; the earliest date on which a claim could accrue. Docket # 38 at 1. In addition, it is the date on which WU entered into the Southwest Border Agreement with the State of Arizona. These two facts combine to render the events that precede February 11, 2010 — and the Complaint references a fair number — irrelevant. The Plaintiffs repeatedly argue that WU was on notice of defects in its money-laundering compliance policies based on events, mostly regulatory enforcement actions, dating back as far as 2002. These events clearly fall outside the Plaintiffs' self-identified "Relevant Period," and thus, do not alone give rise to any claim.
The Court understands the Plaintiffs to present these events as some sort of "background" evidence, suggesting that they reflect a series of "red flags" that should already have put WU's board on some sort of heightened notice by 2010. But this historical background is largely superfluous in light of the Southwest Border Agreement itself. The SBA (and the allegations it resolves) is the only "red flag" that the Court need consider here, as it alone demonstrates that WU's Board knew of alleged defects in WU's money-laundering compliance activities and the need for remedial action. Accordingly, the Court disregards the allegations of events before February 11, 2010.
The first post-February 11, 2010 event alleged in the Complaint occurred on an unspecified date in September 2010. At that time, WU's management "informed the Board. . . of known or anticipated issues" with proposals that the Monitor had made. Docket # 38, ¶ 91 (emphasis in original). The Complaint quotes from an unidentified document in which WU's management reports that: (i) the Monitor was "suggesting greater control around [Front Line Associates] system sign-on" and background checks for these associates, although management noted that the SBA "only contemplates the use of E-verify," rather than a more complex background check; (ii) the Monitor was "considering data validation methods to rid system of false and faulty information"; (iii) that a policy or document known as the Southwest Border Risk Assessment "may need adjustment," after Arizona "submitted additional information focusing on underlying criminal activity along [the Southwest border]," information which the Monitor may wish to "integrate[] into future risk assessments"; and (iv) the "Monitor approaches all issues with a law enforcement zero tolerance attitude," and "has a high expectation for [front-line associate] knowledge, awareness, and engagement." Id. The Plaintiffs assert that "there is no indication whatsoever that the Board rebuked management for objecting to" the Monitor's positions on the enumerated issues.
The Court finds that these allegations are insufficient, by themselves or in conjunction with others discussed herein, to demonstrate lack of independence by any Director Reduced to their component parts, the issues enumerated above reflect a single disagreement between WU's management and the Monitor (as to whether the SBA required WU to screen its Front Line Associates via the E-verify system or whether the Monitor could demand more extensive background checks), one general criticism about the Monitor's attitude (that it was too exacting), and two issues for which management was merely providing the Board with information about what the Monitor might do in the future. The Plaintiffs contend that the September 2010 report was itself a "red flag" that alerted the Board to some material deficiency in WU's compliance-related efforts. This Court cannot say that a mere disagreement between WU and the Monitor over the type of background check the SBA required for Front Line Associates is the sort of red flag with which Caremark is concerned.
Even if the Complaint sufficiently demonstrated a problem with WU's compliance policies, other allegations suggest that WU undertook remedial efforts to address it. The Complaint states that in May 2011, management reported to the Board that WU and the Monitor attempted to negotiate an agreement on issues involving Front Line Associates, but were unsuccessful and that WU was therefore discussing "proposed solutions" directly with the State of Arizona. Notably, it is conscious
The Complaint also makes a passing reference to "management inform[ing] the Board in September 2010 that Arizona law enforcement advised [WU] of a large Californian Agent being the subject of an investigation," and that "the Board undertook no initiative or action." Docket # 38, ¶ 93. The Complaint does not otherwise elaborate on this assertion or the underlying event. The Court cannot say that this bare allegation of misconduct by an employee, untethered to any specific allegations of particular defects in WU's policies, suffices as a "red flag" compelling Board action. See Stone, 911 A.2d at 373.
The Complaint also makes a passing reference to a July 2011 event in which "management informed the Board . . . that an internal review of the 157 riskiest [WU] agents in the Southwest Border Area concluded that more than 84% of those agents on the U.S. side of the border had one or more findings," and that "the Board again did nothing." The Complaint does not elaborate, much less explain what these "findings" are or what they entail, and thus this allegation fails to satisfy the Plaintiffs' pleading burden. (In any event, the Court notes that this allegation references an "internal review," which the Court assumes refers to a review conducted by WU itself. This somewhat undercuts the Plaintiffs' general implication that WU remained almost entirely passive on Southwest border issues during the relevant time period.)
In December 2011, management advised the Board about WU's ongoing compliance management activities and discussed "significant current risks" (the Complaint does not provide context for the use of this phrase).
Once again, the Court cannot say that these allegations demonstrate that any Defendant was consciously inactive in the face of a genuine "red flag." Neither allegation points to a clear defect in WU's compliance policies. One merely highlights concerns that WU's agents might not respond correctly to surprise inspections by the Monitor. The allegations instead reflect nothing more than WU's concern about certain steps the Monitor (or the State of Arizona) might take, and was formulating a plan to address those concerns.
Putting aside the patent ambiguity in the Complaint and elsewhere,
At some point in or about February 2012, a dispute arose between WU and the Monitor over the scope of the Monitor's authority. Apparently, until that point, WU only gave the Monitor information about "person-to-person" money transfers within a business unit at WU known as "WUFSI." The Monitor requested information about money transfers through WU where the sender or recipient was a business; transfers that seem to be handled by a unit other than WUFSI. Apparently with the blessing of the Corporate Governance and Public Policy Committee, WU resisted those requests, contending that they fell outside the terms of the SBA. In March 2012, the Monitor, with the State of Arizona's support, petitioned the court overseeing the SBA for a determination of whether the Monitor was entitled to records of business transfers. WU opposed the request. Although, the court ruled on the Monitor's motion in January 2013, the Plaintiffs acknowledge that, even now, they do not know the outcome of that ruling because it is sealed. Docket # 38, ¶ 105-108.
Once again, the Complaint does little more than assume that WU's resistance to a request made by the Monitor is a "red flag" demonstrating WU's inadequate compliance efforts and, thus, the Board should have immediately capitulated to the Monitor's demands. The Court will not repeat what has been said above, except to observe that the Plaintiffs' burden is to allege specific facts that show that WU's compliance efforts were materially deficient. The mere fact that a third party asserted as much is not, of itself, sufficient to carry that burden. Something more is necessary: an independent factual demonstration that the Monitor's position was correct and WU's compliance systems were inadequate; a showing of conscious bad faith or dilatory purpose by WU in resisting the Monitor's demands, etc. None are present here. (e)
In March 2012, a U.S. Attorney's Office in California advised WU that it was a target in a money laundering investigation involving an individual named Wang, who was serving as the manager of a WU agent called US Shen Zhou ("Zhou"). Zhou processed more individual transactions and dollar volume (indeed, by several multiples) than any other WU agent. Mr. Wang ultimately cooperated with the FBI, admitting to engaging in illegally structuring transfers to avoid reporting requirements. Mr. Wang stated that he "acted, at least in part with the intent to benefit [WU]."
The Complaint presents these assertions without additional comment, making it unclear what, if anything, WU did in response. Moreover, the allegations do not allege when (or if) the Compliance Department ever reported the whistleblower's allegation to the Board of Directors. The absence of any allegation that the Board was advised of the situation involving Mr. Wang, Zhou, or the whistleblower makes this event immaterial for purposes of demonstrating conscious inaction by any Defendant.
At some unspecified point in time, the Monitor issued recommendations for changes in WU's anti-money laundering compliance policies. (The Complaint does not disclose many particulars about the recommendations themselves.) By late 2012, WU determined that it would be unable to implement the recommendations by the July 2013 deadline. The Complaint refers to certain internal WU memos from December 2012 indicating that WU had completion rates between 0% and 10% in certain categories and was acknowledging that "major components" of the recommendations were "at risk for a July 2013 delivery date." In May 2013, management informed the Board that "major issues" relating to the recommendations "still remained open" and that a consultant advising WU would be reporting to the Monitor that "key areas" in the company's compliance policies "should be improved." The Plaintiffs allege that, "[n]othing indicates that, upon learning this news, the Board expressed impatience or disappointment."
At some point in or about late 2013, the State of Arizona apparently declared that WU had not made adequate progress in implementing the Monitor's recommendations, such that Arizona was prepared to declare a "material breach" of the SBA. This threat returned the parties to the bargaining table, and on January 31, 2014, WU agreed to amend and extend the terms of the SBA. Among the new terms were agreements that: (i) the Monitor would continue to oversee WU through at least June 2017; (ii) WU would provide the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas with data on all transactions over $500 to or from locations within the Southwest border area until February 2019,; and (iii) WU would implement certain recommendations by the Monitor, in both its person-to-person money transfer unit and, presumably, its business-related money transfer unit. The Plaintiffs assert that more timely efforts to comply with the SBA might have alleviated the need for an amended agreement, and have spared WU the costs of providing the transaction data through 2019 and continued oversight by the Monitor. Docket # 38, ¶ 121-124.
Notably, the Plaintiffs do not allege that the Board declined to act in response to the December 2012 advisement about difficulties in implementing the recommendations; indeed, the Complaint is silent as to what happened in the aftermath of that meeting. The Complaint simply alleges that six months later (in May 2013) the Board was advised that "major issues still [remained] open." Once again, the Complaint does not expressly accuse the Board of ignoring this information
In July 2013, a consultant retained by WU presented the Compliance Committee with a draft "risk assessment" for the Southwest border area. WU's Chief Compliance Officer used that document to prepare a document entitled "Anti-Money Laundering Risk Assessment of the Southwest Border Area . . ." ("the Risk Assessment"). The Risk Assessment was intended to be a "constitutional document" setting forth the contours and principles of the anti-money laundering program that WU would implement to satisfy its obligations under the SBA and other regulations. The Board approved the Risk Assessment on October 11, 2013. The Complaint states that this Risk Assessment "did not, however, reflect a change in the Board's adversarial approach to compliance," because it "made clear that it was location-specific . . . and limited to the risks associated with money laundering and terrorist financing" only in the Southwest border region. The Complaint alleges that "other geographical areas in the United States," such as South Florida, New York, and Chicago, are also "considered both high-intensity drug trafficking and high-intensity financial crimes areas," and that WU's Board did not prepare risk assessments for
This allegation is curious in several respects. The Complaint acknowledges that the Risk Assessment was specifically created pursuant to the Southwest Border Agreement; the Complaint does not allege that the SBA required WU to create risk assessments for jurisdictions outside the Southwest. Rather, the Complaint alleges that WU's obligation to complete risk assessments for other locations was triggered by "review of publicly available information from the [U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Treasury Department]" that revealed s other geographical areas in the United States as high-intensity crime areas. As is often the case, the use of the passive voice — "review of," or "reveals that" — obscures precisely who is acting. Is the Complaint alleging that WU's Board "review[ed the] publicly available information"? Or is the allegation that the Board
In March 2014, WU was notified by a U.S. Attorney's Office in Florida that it was a target of a money laundering investigation focused on certain WU agents in Central America. Beyond alleging that the U.S. Attorney issued subpoenas to WU for various records relating to this incident, the Complaint only states that this investigation is "ongoing." Plaintiffs seem to contend that the investigation is partly attributable to WU's failure to create a Florida Risk Assessment, although this is a conclusion for which the Complaint offers no particular supporting facts. Docket # 38, ¶ 125-129.
For many of the reasons discussed above, the Court finds this allegation sufficient to fulfill the Plaintiffs' pleading burden. The Complaint does not allege that the Board was advised of this investigation, nor what particular steps the Plaintiffs believe the Board should have taken, but did not, in response to the investigation.
As the foregoing makes clear, none of the Complaint's allegations, individually or in combination, show particularized facts sufficient to establish the existence of a "red flag," the Board's knowledge of that flag, and inaction by the Board in response to it. Accordingly, the Court finds that the Plaintiffs failed to allege facts sufficient to demonstrate that any Board member, including the named Defendants, faces a
The Court pauses here to acknowledge that this outcome is a result of deficient
In doing so, the Court notes that the Plaintiffs must fundamentally reshape their concept of the case. To indulge in an extended metaphor, it appears that t the Plaintiffs have a profoundly different understanding of the plot of this story than can be pursued here. The Plaintiffs focus on the tragic fall of WU beginning in 2002. But the story pertinent to the claims asserted starts on February 11, 2010 when WU entered into the SBA agreement. In addition, the story is not about the
To the extent the Plaintiffs argue that some claims, such as Claim 3 alleging proxy fraud, could survive even in the absence of proof of other allegations, the Court finds that these claims are nevertheless deficient insofar as they are insufficiently conclusory or otherwise fail to state a cognizable claim. should be specific about key factual information, such as dates, persons involved in actions, and specific statements made or actions performed (rather than characterizations of what occurred).
Accordingly, the Defendants' Motion to Dismiss is granted.
In addition to joining in the Defendants' Motion to Dismiss, which the Court has now granted, Mr. Scheirman seeks dismissal of the claims against him on Rule 12(b)(6) grounds. Because the Court dismisses the Complaint on other grounds, it need not reach the arguments in Mr. Schierman's motion.
Only because the Court is granting leave to amend does it comment generally on the allegations against Mr. Schierman. The Court agrees to some extent with Mr. Schierman that the Complaint improperly attempts to sweep Mr. Schierman up in generic references to "Individual Defendants" or "Officer Defendants" without specifically identifying and explaining those situations in which he or other officers or directors were involved. Mr. Schierman has unique status here, as the only non-Director Defendant, and that status requires more specific explanations of how Mr. Schierman's acts subject him to personal liability. (The Court also has doubts that any of the Complaint's citations to paragraphs 8, 40, and 76-80 support their contention that they adequately pled facts that would show that Mr. Schierman had actual responsibility for internal controls at WU.) In short, the Court strongly encourages the Plaintiffs to revisit the entirety of the Complaint with regard to Mr. Schierman and to sharpen, prune, and refine its allegations with regard to him and other individual Defendants. Should Mr. Schierman believe that any amended Complaint still fails to adequately state a claim against him, he may re-assert the arguments in the instant motion, and the Court will examine those allegations mindful of the instructions this opinion.
Accordingly, the Court