Brown Files Suit Against Former CalPERS Officials And Freezes Assets of Alfred Villalobos

Thursday, May 6, 2010
Contact: (916) 210-6000, agpressoffice@doj.ca.gov

*** Brown will hold a news conference today at 1 p.m. at 1300 I Street in Sacramento to discuss the lawsuit. ***

LOS ANGELES – Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today announced that his office has filed a civil suit against former California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) Board Member Alfred Villalobos, his company ARVCO Capital, and former CalPERS CEO Federico “Fred” Buenrostro, charging them with fraud.

“Working as a placement agent for ARVCO, Villalobos spent tens of thousands of dollars to lavishly entertain key senior executives at CalPERS, who then influenced the Board to authorize investments that generated over $40 million in commissions to Villalobos,” explained Brown. “None of these actions were disclosed as required by law, as state pension holders and taxpayers have every right to expect.”

According to the complaint, Villalobos influenced these CalPERS officials by, among other things, taking two of them on an around-the-world trip, taking another on a private jet trip to New York, and giving Buenrostro a $300,000 job and a condo when he left the pension fund.

Brown also obtained a court order to freeze Villalobos’ assets and place them in receivership to recover the more than $40 million in commissions that Villalobos earned during the period alleged in the complaint. Brown explained that the freeze order, granted yesterday, was necessary because Villalobos has transferred real estate suspiciously, has lost tens millions of dollars in high-stakes gambling, and maintains over 20 bank accounts. Among the assets placed under receivership are two Bentleys, two BMWs, a Hummer H2, art work worth more than $2.7 million, $6 million in yet-to-be-paid placement-agent commissions, and 14 pieces of real property in California, Nevada and Hawaii.

Specific charges allege that:

• Villalobos and ARVCO falsely represented that they had the required securities licenses and complied with all laws;

• Defendants gave, accepted, and failed to disclose gifts;

• Villalobos and ARVCO submitted bogus disclosure forms.

In addition to a permanent order preventing the defendants from violating state securities and unfair competition laws, and the imposition of civil penalties, Brown seeks to recover the more than $40 million in placement agent commissions that Villalobos and ARVCO collected. The receiver appointed by the court will be charged with recovering the money.

Brown's Office acknowledges the full support and assistance of CalPERS and its special review headed by Philip Khinda, Esq., of the Steptoe and Johnson law firm.

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AttachmentSize
PDF icon Petition to Freeze Assets2.49 MB
PDF icon Complaint1.42 MB
PDF icon Order to Freeze Assets2.15 MB