GERARD E. LYNCH, Circuit Judge.
Joseph Contorinis appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Richard J. Sullivan, Judge) ordering him to disgorge $7,260,604 in profits from illegal insider trading, enjoining him from further violating the securities laws, and ordering him to pay prejudgment interest on the entire disgorgement amount. The primary issue presented is whether an insider trader who trades on behalf of another person or entity using funds he does not own, and thus produces illegal profits that he does not personally realize, can nevertheless be required to disgorge the full amount of illicit profit he generates from his illegal and fraudulent actions. Because our cases have established that tippers can be required to disgorge profits realized by their tippees' illegal insider trading, and this case is distinguishable only insofar as Contorinis himself executed the fraudulent trades rather than leave that task to a tippee, we conclude that the district court was empowered to enter the disgorgement order, and did not abuse its discretion in doing so. Additionally, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court's imposition of an injunction on Contorinis or in its order that Contorinis pay prejudgment interest on the disgorgement amount. We therefore affirm the district court's decision.
Defendant-appellant Joseph Contorinis, a Managing Director at Jeffries & Company, Inc. ("Jeffries"), executed several illegal insider trades involving the stock of the supermarket chain Albertson's, Inc.
In January 2006, as negotiations involving the acquisition of Albertson's unfolded, Stephanou on several occasions disclosed material inside information regarding the acquisition to Contorinis before the information became public. Relying on that information, Contorinis made several opportune trades in Albertson's stock. Contorinis did not execute these trades with his personal assets, but rather did so on behalf of the Jeffries Paragon Fund (the "Paragon Fund"), of which Contorinis was a co-manager and over which he had investment control. As a result of these insider trades the Paragon Fund realized profits of $7,304,738, and avoided losses of $5,345,700.
In February 2009, Contorinis was indicted on one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and nine counts of securities fraud. A jury found him guilty of the conspiracy and of seven counts of securities fraud, and on October 6, 2010, he was sentenced to six years of imprisonment and ordered to pay $12,650,438 (the combined value of the Paragon Fund's realized profits and avoided losses) in criminal forfeiture penalties.
On appeal, this Court affirmed Contorinis's conviction but vacated the forfeiture order, remanding to the district court to redetermine the proper amount. United States v. Contorinis, 692 F.3d 136, 148 (2d Cir.2012). We observed that neither the language of the criminal forfeiture statute nor Circuit case law supported the proposition that a defendant must forfeit proceeds that "go directly to an innocent third party and are never possessed by the defendant." Id. at 147. Rather, criminal forfeiture penalties are "usually based on the defendant's actual gain." Id. at 146. The district court's initial forfeiture calculation reflected the total benefit to the Paragon Fund, not the gains accruing to Contorinis himself. On remand, the district court found that Contorinis's personal profit, in the form of linked compensation from the trades, amounted to $427,875, and ordered forfeiture of that amount.
Following the filing of the criminal indictment, the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") brought this civil action against Contorinis in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, seeking disgorgement of $7,260,604 in unlawful profits obtained by the Paragon Fund (equivalent to the total profit from insider trading less trading commission costs), as well as additional civil monetary penalties and an injunction against future securities law violations. After Contorinis was convicted at his criminal trial, the SEC moved for summary judgment, and Contorinis, without admitting to the underlying offense, acknowledged that the jury verdict had a preclusive effect requiring a finding of civil liability. On February 3, 2012, the district court granted the SEC's summary judgment motion against Contorinis and granted relief in the forms requested by the SEC, permanently enjoining Contorinis from violating the securities laws in the future, ordering Contorinis to disgorge $7,260,604 (less any amount paid pursuant to the criminal forfeiture), and imposing a civil penalty of $1,000,000. In a superseding judgment of February 29, 2012, the
Contorinis timely brought this appeal, challenging the judgment insofar as it required him to disgorge the entire amount obtained by the Paragon Fund through insider trading and to pay prejudgment interest on the disgorgement amount, and permanently enjoined him from violating the securities laws.
Disgorgement serves to remedy securities law violations by depriving violators of the fruits of their illegal conduct. See SEC v. Fischbach Corp., 133 F.3d 170, 175 (2d Cir.1997); see also SEC v. Tome, 833 F.2d 1086, 1096 (2d Cir.1987) ("The paramount purpose of enforcing the prohibition against insider trading by ordering disgorgement is to make sure that wrongdoers will not profit from their wrongdoing."). Disgorgement is an equitable remedy, imposed to "forc[e] a defendant to give up the amount by which he was unjustly enriched." FTC v. Bronson Partners, 654 F.3d 359, 372 (2d Cir.2011), quoting SEC v. Commonwealth Chem. Sec., Inc., 574 F.2d 90, 102 (2d Cir.1978). By forcing wrongdoers to give back the fruits of their illegal conduct, disgorgement also "has the effect of deterring subsequent fraud." SEC v. Cavanagh, 445 F.3d 105, 117 (2d Cir.2006) ("Cavanagh II"). Because disgorgement does not serve a punitive function, the disgorgement amount may not exceed the amount obtained through the wrongdoing. Id. at 116 n. 25. At the same time, however, as it operates to make the illicit action unprofitable for the wrongdoer, disgorgement need not serve to compensate the victims of the wrongdoing. Bronson, 654 F.3d at 374. Because disgorgement is not compensatory, it "forces a defendant to account for all profits reaped through his securities law violations and to transfer all such money to the court, even if it exceeds actual damages to the victim." Cavanagh II, 445 F.3d at 117. Because disgorgement's underlying purpose is to make lawbreaking unprofitable for the law-breaker, it satisfies its design when the lawbreaker returns the fruits of his misdeeds, regardless of any other ends it may or may not accomplish.
"The district court has broad discretion not only in determining whether or not to order disgorgement but also in calculating the amount to be disgorged." SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc., 101 F.3d 1450, 1474-75 (2d Cir.1996). Accordingly, we review a disgorgement order for abuse of that discretion. SEC v. Posner, 16 F.3d 520, 522 (2d Cir.1994).
Contorinis argues that because he never personally controlled the profits that accrued to the Paragon Fund — although he could make investment decisions, he did not control disbursement of the proceeds — ordering him to disgorge the entire amount gained through his insider trading
In resolving this dispute, we do not write on a clean slate. Our prior cases indicate that an insider trader may be ordered to disgorge not only the unlawful gains that accrue to the wrongdoer directly, but also the benefit that accrues to third parties whose gains can be attributed to the wrongdoer's conduct. We have long applied that principle in the tipper-tippee context. Thus, in SEC v. Warde we held that, in the determination of a disgorgement amount, "[a] tippee's gains are attributable to the tipper, regardless whether benefit accrues to the tipper." 151 F.3d 42, 49 (2d Cir.1998). That principle has deep roots in parallel civil remedial structures. For example, in Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc., 635 F.2d 156, 165 (2d Cir. 1980), we concluded that "[t]rades by tippees are attributed to the tipper" in determining liability for damages, and in SEC v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 446 F.2d 1301, 1308 (2d Cir.1971), the foundational case for insider trading liability, we required a tipper to make common-law civil restitution "for the profits derived by his tippees."
But if that is so, and our precedents confirm that it is, it must follow that the insider who, rather than passing the tip along to another, directly trades for that other's account must equally disgorge the benefit he obtains for his favored beneficiary. Indeed, that was the actual situation in Warde, in which the defendant utilized an account belonging to his wife, over which he had control, to make trades based on material nonpublic information. 151 F.3d at 49. Whether he traded on his own account and gave the profit to his wife, gave the information to his wife to enable her to trade on it, or executed the trades on his own authority using his wife's account such that the proceeds accrued to her, the wrong committed by the defendant would be the same, as would the economic result. Whether the defendant's motive is direct economic profit, self-aggrandizement, psychic satisfaction from benefitting a loved one, or future profits by enhancing one's reputation as a successful fund manager, the insider trader who trades for another's account has engaged in a fraud, secured a benefit thereby, and directed the profits of the fraud where he has chosen them to go.
Thus, given our precedent establishing that tippers may be held liable to disgorge the gains of their tippees, it would be inconsistent to deny the district court the discretion to impose equivalent liability for conduct such as Contorinis's. Indeed, to the extent that this case can be distinguished from the tipper-tippee situation, the case for disgorgement is stronger here. The tipper in possession of material nonpublic information who passes that inside information to another, even with full knowledge that the tippee will use the information to trade, has no control over, and likely no knowledge of, the extent to which the tippee will trade. The tippee may make a modest wager or take a deep plunge; she may act at the ideal moment, or sacrifice some potential profit by trading prematurely or delaying too long. The tipper is liable for the tippee's gains, whatever they may be.
In contrast, Contorinis had greater control over the Paragon Fund's illegal profits than a tipper does over a tippee. Contorinis both obtained the inside information that facilitated the illegal trade and executed
It thus necessarily follows from existing Circuit precedent, and from the logic of the disgorgement remedy, that Contorinis may be held responsible for disgorgement of the Paragon Fund's illegal profits. To conclude otherwise would permit greater liability in a relationship (tipper-tippee) which is, in all material respects, more tenuous than the relationship here (controlling manager-financial vehicle). Our conclusion is required to maintain consistency in the remediation of securities law violations.
We thus conclude that the district courts possess discretion to allocate disgorgement liability for insider trading to those responsible for the illegal acts, including to those with investment power over third-party accounts used to make illegal investments as well as to tippers. Our conclusion prevents insider traders from evading liability by operating through or on behalf of third parties. As we said in Warde, in the absence of the discretion to allocate liability to wrongdoers, "[t]he value of the rule in preventing misuse of inside information would be virtually nullified [because] those in possession of such information, although prohibited from trading for their own accounts, [would be] free to use the inside information on trades to benefit their families, friends, and business associates." 151 F.3d at 49. See also Tex. Gulf Sulphur, 446 F.2d at 1308 ("[W]ithout such a remedy, insiders could easily evade their duty to refrain from trading on the basis of inside information. Either the transactions so traded could be concluded by a relative or an acquaintance of the insider, or implied understandings could arise under which reciprocal tips between insiders in different corporations could be given.").
We do not conclude that district courts must impose disgorgement liability for insider trading upon wrongdoers when the gains accrue to innocent third parties, but rather that the district courts may elect to do so in appropriate circumstances.
Contorinis's argument that he should be forced to disgorge only the amounts that he directly obtained as personal pecuniary benefit seeks to undermine this discretion by conflating a central, well-established principle in disgorgement law — that "the court may only exercise its equitable power only over property causally related to the wrongdoing," SEC v. First City Fin. Corp., 890 F.2d 1215, 1231 (D.C.Cir. 1989) — with the proposition, unsupported in our case law, that the wrongdoer need disgorge only the financial benefit that accrues to him personally.
Moreover, limiting disgorgement amounts to the direct pecuniary benefit enjoyed by the wrongdoer would run contrary to the equitable principle that the wrongdoer should bear the risk of any uncertainty affecting the amount of the remedy. A wrongdoer's unlawful action may create illicit benefits for the wrongdoer that are indirect or intangible. Because it would be difficult to quantify the advantages of an enhanced reputation or the psychic pleasures of enriching a family member, to require precise articulation of such rewards in calculating disgorgement amounts would allow the wrongdoer to benefit from such uncertainty. As our precedents make clear, the risk of uncertainty in the amount of disgorgement is not properly so allocated. See First Jersey, 101 F.3d at 1475; Patel, 61 F.3d at 140. That is not to say the amount of disgorgement a court can order from a wrongdoer is bounded only by the court's discretion; to the contrary, it is set at the maximum of the total gain from the illicit action. Here, that is precisely that amount of gain that the district court ordered disgorged. Contorinis wishes us to replace that limit on disgorgement amounts — established both by precedent and by the logic of disgorgement — with a new principle that would limit the maximum disgorgement amount to the direct pecuniary benefit to the wrongdoer. We decline to do so.
Contorinis further argues that our recent decision in his criminal appeal limiting the extent of the criminal forfeiture to his personal gain, Contorinis, 692 F.3d at 147-148, should be applied in the civil disgorgement context. That argument is unavailing. As we noted in deciding Contorinis's criminal appeal, criminal forfeiture "serves no remedial purpose, is designed to punish the offender, and cannot be imposed upon innocent owners." Id. at 146, quoting United States v. Bajakajian, 524 U.S. 321, 332, 118 S.Ct. 2028, 141 L.Ed.2d 314 (1998). Disgorgement, in contrast, is a civil remedy which serves the remedial purpose of preventing unjust enrichment.
Thus, while both criminal forfeiture and disgorgement serve to deprive wrongdoers of their illicit gain, the two remedies reflect different characteristics and purposes — disgorgement is an equitable remedy that prevents unjust enrichment, and criminal forfeiture a statutory legal penalty imposed as punishment. See SEC v. Lorin, 869 F.Supp. 1117, 1121 (S.D.N.Y. 1994) ("I will not label disgorgement a `fine, penalty, or forfeiture' in light of the operation of disgorgement, which merely deprives one of wrongfully obtained proceeds"), citing Tex. Gulf Sulphur, 446 F.2d at 1308; see also SEC v. Williams, 884 F.Supp. 28, 30-31 (D.Mass.1995) (holding the same and collecting cases). One ramification in particular of this qualitative divergence between disgorgement and criminal forfeiture nullifies Contorinis's argument. As disgorgement is designed to
However, unjust enrichment may also be prevented by requiring the violator to disgorge the unjust enrichment he has procured for the third party. As our case law has indicated (and as our opinion here confirms), when third parties have benefitted from illegal activity, it is possible to seek disgorgement from the violator, even if that violator never controlled the funds. The logic of this, as more fully articulated supra, is that to fail to impose disgorgement on such violators would allow them to unjustly enrich their affiliates. Thus, ordering a violator to disgorge gain the violator never possessed does not operate to magnify penalties or offer an alternative to fines, but serves disgorgement's core remedial function of preventing unjust enrichment. District courts possess the equitable discretion to determine whether disgorgement liability should fall upon third parties or violators, a responsibility concordant with the district courts' broad discretion to assay disgorgement more generally.
Moreover, unlike disgorgement, which is a discretionary, equitable remedy, criminal forfeiture is mandatory, and a creature of statute. Thus, unlike the criminal forfeiture case, the district court's discretion in determining disgorgement is not confined by precise contours of statutory language, but rather serves the broader purposes of equity. There is nothing inequitable about requiring a person who created an unjust gain by fraudulently trading on material nonpublic information, and allocated that gain, for reasons of his own, to beneficiaries that he chose, to return that gain to the public by disgorging the illegal benefits he obtained and directed.
Therefore, the substantive distinctions between the liability imposed by the disgorgement remedy and the criminal forfeiture penalty, and the subsequently differing impacts on violators, reflect the diversity of corrective action necessary to enforce the securities regime. As forfeiture is punitive in nature, it would be irrational to impose it upon innocent third parties, whereas disgorgement's purpose — the prevention of unjust enrichment — would be thwarted if securities law violators were able to pass their illicit gains off to affiliates. To expect the same outcomes from legal concepts with such different characteristics is unrealistic, and Contorinis's efforts to analogize his criminal forfeiture penalty and disgorgement remedy are unavailing.
We therefore conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in requiring Contorinis to disgorge profits of $7,260,604 obtained by the Paragon Fund through his illegal insider trading.
Contorinis additionally challenges the district court's order requiring him to pay $2,417,940 in prejudgment interest, reflecting interest that has accrued on the entire disgorgement amount. A decision to grant prejudgment interest is "confided to the district court's broad discretion, and will not be overturned on appeal absent an abuse of that discretion." Endico Potatoes, Inc. v. CIT Group/Factoring, Inc., 67 F.3d 1063, 1071-72 (2d Cir.1995), quoting Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Milken, 17 F.3d 608, 613-14
Prejudgment interest on a disgorgement amount is intended to deprive the wrongdoer of the benefit of holding the illicit gains over time by reasonably approximating the cost of borrowing such gain from the government. First Jersey, 101 F.3d at 1476. Our cases suggest, and Contorinis acknowledges, Appellant's R. Br. at 22, that the amount on which a violator must pay prejudgment interest usually tracks the amount that the party is ordered to disgorge. Whether or not a party personally enjoyed the gains from the illegal action does not alter this principle, see, e.g., Warde, 151 F.3d at 50 (prejudgment interest awarded on entire amount of gain from violator's wrongdoing, even though he did not enjoy that amount directly), and courts have required tippers who have been ordered to disgorge their tippees' gains — the very context to which we have analogized Contorinis's conduct in our analysis supra — to pay prejudgment interest on those gains. See, e.g., SEC v. Aragon Capital Mgmt., LLC, 672 F.Supp.2d 421, 444-45 (S.D.N.Y.2009), rev'd on other grounds and aff'd in relevant part, SEC v. Rosenthal, 650 F.3d 156, 157 n. 1 (2d Cir.2011); SEC v. Tome, 638 F.Supp. 638, 639-40 (S.D.N.Y.1986). As we have discussed above, it is within the district court's equitable discretion to order Contorinis to disgorge the Paragon Fund's gains even though he did not personally enjoy them, and for parallel reasons we detect no abuse of discretion by the district court in ordering him to pay prejudgment interest on that amount.
Finally, Contorinis appeals from the district court's decision to permanently enjoin him from future violations of the securities laws. We review a district court's decision regarding imposition of such injunctive relief for abuse of discretion. SEC v. Bausch & Lomb, Inc., 565 F.2d 8, 18 (2d Cir.1977). Here, the district court reviewed the standard by which injunctions are applied, assessed Contorinis's conduct — noting in particular that his offense consisted of multiple profitable illegal trades made over the course of several weeks — and deemed that an injunction was appropriate.
Because the district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering disgorgement, calculating the disgorgement amount, granting prejudgment interest on the disgorgement amount, and imposing a permanent injunction prohibiting Contorinis from future violations of the securities laws, the judgment of the district court is hereby AFFIRMED.
DENNY CHIN, Circuit Judge:
In this case, the district court ordered defendant-appellant Joseph Contorinis to "disgorge" $7.2 million in "profits." The profits were not his, however, and the monies were never in his possession or control. Instead they were earned by the fund by which he was employed (the "Fund"). The majority nonetheless affirms. I respectfully dissent, for the district court's order is, in my view, inconsistent with both the nature and purpose of disgorgement as well as our decision in the related criminal case, United States v. Contorinis, 692 F.3d 136 (2d Cir.2012).
Disgorgement is an equitable remedy that requires "a defendant to give up the amount by which he was unjustly enriched." SEC v. First Jersey Sec., Inc., 101 F.3d 1450, 1475 (2d Cir.1996) (emphases added). Its primary purpose "is to deprive violators of their ill-gotten gains." Id. at 1474; accord SEC v. Fischbach Corp., 133 F.3d 170, 175 (2d Cir.1997) ("As an exercise of its equity powers, the court may order wrongdoers to disgorge their fraudulently obtained profits."). The amount of disgorgement "is determined by the amount of profit realized by the defendant." SEC v. AbsoluteFuture.com, 393 F.3d 94, 96 (2d Cir.2004); accord SEC v. Cavanagh, 445 F.3d 105, 116 (2d Cir.2006) ("The remedy consists of ... the amount of money acquired through wrongdoing."). Disgorgement thus should have the effect of returning a defendant to his status quo prior to the wrongdoing, SEC v. Tome, 833 F.2d 1086, 1096 (2d Cir.1987) ("The paramount purpose of enforcing the prohibition against insider trading by ordering disgorgement is to make sure that wrongdoers will not profit from their wrongdoing."), and a court may not order disgorgement above "the amount of money acquired through wrongdoing." Cavanagh, 445 F.3d at 117.
Here, the district court ordered Contorinis to pay an amount substantially above what he acquired through his wrongdoing. The district court ordered him to disgorge funds he never had and to pay back profits he never received. Instead of returning Contorinis to his status quo prior to his wrongdoing, the district court's disgorgement order penalized him by requiring him to pay an amount equal to the $7.2 million in profits earned by the Fund and an additional $2.5 million in prejudgment interest.
Disgorgement, however, is not intended to be punitive; it is remedial in nature. See Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors of WorldCom, Inc. v. SEC, 467 F.3d 73, 81 (2d Cir.2006) ("`Disgorgement merely requires the return of wrongfully obtained profits; it does not result in any actual economic penalty....'") (quoting H.R.Rep. No. 101-616 (1990), 1990 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1379, 1384); accord Cavanagh, 445 F.3d at 116, 117 n. 25 ("Because the [disgorgement] remedy is remedial
The district court's disgorgement order is also inconsistent with our decision in the related criminal case, United States v. Contorinis, 692 F.3d 136 (2d Cir.2012). There, we held that Contorinis could not be required to forfeit profits that the Fund earned from his illegal use of inside information. Our holding rested on the principle that a defendant can be ordered to forfeit only the proceeds that he actually received or controlled. Because Contorinis never received or controlled the proceeds sought by the government, we concluded that Contorinis could not be ordered to forfeit those proceeds. Id. at 147. Now, in this civil proceeding involving the same defendant, the same investment fund, and the same proceeds, the majority reaches the opposite result, holding that Contorinis must "disgorge" the Fund's profits and forfeit millions of dollars that he never received.
To be sure, as the majority discusses, there are differences between criminal forfeiture and civil disgorgement. But conceptually they are largely the same. We even used the terms together in Contorinis as we explained that: "Criminal forfeiture focuses on the disgorgement by a defendant of his `ill-gotten gains.'" 692 F.3d at 146 (emphasis added) (quoting United States v. Kalish, 626 F.3d 165, 170 (2d Cir.2010)); see also United States v. Ursery, 518 U.S. 267, 284, 116 S.Ct. 2135, 135 L.Ed.2d 549 (1996) (forfeiture is "designed primarily to confiscate property used in violation of the law, and to require disgorgement of the fruits of illegal conduct") (emphasis added). Both forfeiture and disgorgement seek to force a defendant to give up — that is, to forfeit or to disgorge — what he has wrongfully gained. Thus, we held that the district court had erred in ordering Contorinis "to forfeit funds that were never possessed or controlled by himself or others acting in concert with him." 692 F.3d at 148; see id. at 147 ("[E]xtending the scope of a forfeiture to include proceeds that have never been acquired either by a defendant or his joint actors would be at odds with the broadly accepted principle that forfeiture is calculated based on a defendant's gains.").
Contorinis is also instructive with respect to the majority's reliance on the tipper-tippee cases that hold that "[a] tippee's gains are attributable to the tipper, regardless whether benefit accrues to the tipper." SEC v. Warde, 151 F.3d 42, 49 (2d Cir.1998). We acknowledged in Contorinis that "a court may order a defendant to forfeit proceeds received by others who participated jointly in the crime, provided the actions generating those proceeds were reasonably foreseeable to the defendant." 692 F.3d at 147. We observed that "[t]he extension of forfeiture to proceeds received by actors in concert with a defendant may be deemed to be based on the view that the proceeds of a crime jointly committed are within the possessory rights of each concerted actor." Id. We concluded, however, that "[t]his view does not support an extension to a situation where the proceeds go directly to an innocent third party and are never possessed by the defendant." Id. This reasoning applies with equal force here.
We do not have a tipper-tippee relationship here. Contorinis was not a tipper. Nor is there any evidence that the Fund knew that Contorinis breached any duty when he made his investment decisions. As we concluded in the criminal case, the Fund did not act in concert with Contorinis in his criminal venture, and he never possessed or controlled its profits. See 692 F.3d at 147 ("we hold that the district court erred in ordering [Contorinis] to forfeit funds that were never possessed or controlled by himself or others acting in concert with him"). Hence, the Fund's gains were not properly included in the disgorgement calculation.
For all these reasons, I believe the district court abused its discretion in ordering Contorinis to disgorge the profits the Fund accrued as a result of his criminal activity. Accordingly, I would vacate and remand the judgment of the district court for recalculation of the amounts of disgorgement and pre-judgment interest.
Id. To support this proposition, the district court cited, inter alia, SEC v. Blavin, which states that "[d]isgorgement orders are not limited to the confiscation of trading profits... The district court was well within its equitable power to `make violations unprofitable'...." 760 F.2d 706, 713 (6th Cir.1985), quoting SEC v. Manor Nursing Ctrs., Inc., 458 F.2d 1082, 1104 (2d Cir.1972). See also SEC v. Sierra Brokerage Servs. Inc., 608 F.Supp.2d 923, 968 (S.D.Ohio 2009), quoting Great Lakes Equities and citing Blavin to support the proposition that, by controlling Sixth Circuit precedent, a violator can be ordered to disgorge the entire amount of profits. Outcomes in the Ninth Circuit suggest that a defendant's obligation to disgorge all profits depends upon the defendant's level of responsibility for the unlawful enrichment. Where an unjustly enriched defendant was unaware of the illicit conduct of the wrongdoing third party, the court limited the disgorgement to an amount "approximately equal to the unjust enrichment" enjoyed by the defendant. Hateley v. SEC, 8 F.3d 653, 656 (9th Cir.1993). However, where a defendant had violated securities laws and enjoyed "substantial personal benefit from the infusion of the illegally obtained proceeds" into a third party's account, the court concluded the violator could be required to disgorge the total profit from the illegal conduct. SEC v. First Pac. Bancorp, 142 F.3d 1186, 1192 (9th Cir.1998). In contrast, the Fifth Circuit has vacated a district court's order that individual, knowing participants in an illegal securities scheme disgorge amounts beyond their personal gain, limiting each violator's disgorgement to "the amount of the fee realized by each defendant for his assistance in executing the fraud." SEC v. Blatt, 583 F.2d 1325, 1336 (5th Cir. 1978). The Fifth Circuit stated "[t]he court's power to order disgorgement extends only to the amount with interest by which the defendant profited from his wrongdoing. Any further sum would constitute a penalty assessment." Id. at 1335.