==========================================START OF PAGE 1====== UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION LITIGATION RELEASE NO. 15387 / June 16, 1997 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. ROBERT CLIFFORD COWAN No. 5:96-CR-023, USDC/ND, TX (Lubbock Division) The Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") and the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Texas announced that on June 4, 1997, Robert Clifford Cowan ("Cowan") of Lubbock, Texas, was sentenced to 60 months in federal prison, with three years supervisory release. Cowan was also fined $25,000 and ordered to pay $4.2 million restitution. Previously, Cowan pled guilty to one count of mail fraud which charged that he received over $400,000 from a client for the purpose of investing in trust units in CS Investments ("CSI"), an entity which Cowan represented to be an investment company registered with the Commission, and that the client received checks from Cowan purportedly representing interest from his trust account when, in fact, the checks represented monies taken in from new investors in the CSI trust accounts. On June 2, 1997, in a related civil action, an Agreed Final Judgment was entered in federal district court enjoining Cowan, CSI, and Cowan Asset Management, Inc., a registered investment adviser, from future violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. According to the complaint, Cowan raised at least $1 million, and as much as $3 million, from his customers for the purpose of purchasing trust units in CSI. In fact, according to the complaint, CSI does not exist, apart from Cowan's misrepresentations and created records, and does not hold securities or funds for customers; rather, Cowan used customers' funds for his personal expenses, and to satisfy periodic payments and redemptions for his customers as part of a "ponzi" scheme.