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IV. Summary of Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    A summary of the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (``IRFA'') 
on the proposed amendment to Rule 102(e) was published in the proposing 
release. The IRFA indicated that the proposed amendment would clarify 
the standard by which the Commission determines whether accountants 
have engaged in ``improper professional conduct.'' No comments were 
received on the IRFA. The Commission has prepared a Final Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis (``FRFA'') in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 604 on the 
amendment to Rule 102(e). The following summarizes the FRFA.
    The FRFA discusses the need for the rule amendment. Rule 102(e) 
currently authorizes the Commission to censure an accountant or deny, 
temporarily or permanently, an accountant's privilege of appearing or 
practicing before the Commission, if the accountant lacks character or 
integrity, or has engaged in unethical or ``improper professional 
conduct.'' The existing rule does not define ``improper professional 
conduct.''
    In a recent opinion addressing the conduct of two accountants, the 
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit found that 
the Commission's opinions in the case had not articulated clearly the 
``improper professional conduct'' element of the Rule. To address the 
court's concerns, the Commission is clarifying the Commission's 
standard for determining when accountants engage in ``improper 
professional conduct.''
    The FRFA explains that the rule amendment is designed to protect 
the integrity of the Commission's processes. By clarifying the 
standards applied in determining ``improper professional conduct,'' the 
amendment will help the Commission, its administrative law judges, and 
the courts apply the rule fairly and consistently. The amendment will 
also give practitioners additional guidance about the standards for 
proceedings under Rule 102(e).
    The FRFA explains that the notice of proposed rulemaking indicated 
how a copy of the IRFA could be obtained, and that no one requested a 
copy of the IRFA. The IRFA, and the summary of the IRFA that appeared 
in the notice of proposed rulemaking, also solicited comments 
generally, and in particular on the number of small entities that would 
be affected by the proposed amendment and the existence or nature of 
the effect. No commenters discussed either the IRFA generally or the 
number of small entities that would be affected by the proposed 
amendment.
    The FRFA also discusses the effect of the amendment on small 
entities. The FRFA states that approximately 1000 accounting firms can 
or do appear or practice before the Commission. While most of this 
practice is conducted by the ``Big Five'' firms, which are not small 
entities, many smaller firms do practice before the Commission. The 
Commission does not, however, collect information about revenues of 
accounting firms, which information generally is not made public by the
[[Page 57171]]
firms, and therefore cannot determine how many of these are small 
entities for purposes of the analysis. In any event, the proposed 
amendment should have little or no impact on small entities because the 
proposal simply clarifies the Commission's standard for determining 
when accountants engage in ``improper professional conduct.'' The 
Commission's standard provides a remedy for certain violations of the 
accountants' own professional standards and does not impose any new 
standards of conduct.
    The FRFA notes that the amendment would not impose any new 
reporting, recordkeeping or compliance requirements. The FRFA discusses 
the various alternatives considered to minimize the effect on small 
entities, including: (a) The establishment of differing compliance or 
reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the 
resources of small entities; (b) the clarification, consolidation or 
simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the Rule 
for small entities; (c) the use of performance rather than design 
standards; and (d) an exemption from coverage of the Rule, or any part 
thereof, for small entities. The Commission believes it would be 
inconsistent with the purposes of the Rule to exempt small entities 
from the proposed amendment. Different compliance or reporting 
requirements for small entities are not necessary because the proposed 
amendment does not establish any new reporting, recordkeeping or 
compliance requirements. The proposed amendment is already designed to 
clarify the current standard employed in Rule 102(e)(1)(ii), and the 
Commission does not believe it is feasible to further clarify, 
consolidate or simplify the Rule for small entities. Finally, the 
proposal does use a performance standard, not a design standard, to 
specify what conduct is expected of accountants; the Commission does 
not believe different performance standards for small entities would be 
consistent with the purposes of the Rule.
    The FRFA notes that two commenters suggested that the proposed rule 
could have an adverse effect on small accounting firms and/or small 
public companies. The Commission believes that it has addressed the 
concern that a simple negligence standard might raise fees or 
discourage auditors from practice by raising the standard in the final 
amendment. Finally, the FRFA notes that one commenter contended that 
the proposed amendment would not impose a disproportionate impact on 
small entities, and that another commenter wrote that the level of 
competence expected of a professional must be an absolute standard, 
regardless of the entity's size.
    A copy of the FRFA may be obtained by contacting David R. 
Fredrickson, Office of the General Counsel, Securities and Exchange 
Commission, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549.
V. Cost-Benefit Analysis
    The Commission requested comments on any costs or benefits 
associated with the proposed amendment. No commenters offered any 
specific cost or benefit estimates. Several commenters, however, 
discussed the costs and benefits of the proposed amendment in general 
terms.
    One commenter suggested that the ``costs associated with the 
proposed amendment appear to outweigh its potential benefits,'' \75\ 
but offered no data to support the view. The commenter did describe the 
costs of the proposed amendment as ``costs associated with a decisional 
standard that fails to provide professionals with adequate notice of 
the conduct which could be subject to sanction,'' and costs created by 
the ``exposure of auditors to sanction based on a single negligent 
mistake,'' which the commenter believed ``would introduce an overly 
conservative bias into the financial reporting process.'' \76\
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    \75\ See AICPA Comment Letter, at 30.
    \76\ Id. at 30-31.
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    This commenter's concern that the proposed rule's use of a simple 
negligence standard would impose costs was shared by other commenters. 
Three commenters suggested that adoption of a simple negligence 
standard would, among other things, cause audit fees to increase.\77\ 
Likewise, one of these commenters and one other commenter suggested 
that the proposed rule's use of a negligence standard would discourage 
competent practitioners from pursuing careers in public company 
auditing.\78\
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    \77\ See Comment Letter of R. Fogg (Aug. 12, 1998); Comment 
Letter of James Backus (Aug. 13, 1998) (``Backus Comment Letter''); 
Comment Letter of Kyle E. Carrick (Aug. 20, 1998) (``Carrick Comment 
Letter'').
    \78\ See BDO Seidman Comment Letter, at 9; Backus Comment 
Letter.
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    The Commission does not believe that the final rule amendment 
imposes these costs. First, the Commission believes that the standard 
it adopts today defines with precision when an accountant's conduct 
will subject the accountant to Rule 102(e) proceedings. In fact, the 
clarification of the Commission's standard for ``improper professional 
conduct'' is one of the benefits of this final rule amendment. Second, 
these commenters' concern that accountants will be held liable for a 
single negligent mistake is addressed by the final rule amendment. As 
described above, the Commission is not adopting a standard that reaches 
single acts of simple negligence.
    One commenter argued that the proposed rule's costs outweighed its 
benefits because it applied to ``CPAs and CPA firms whose past errors 
are not necessarily a precursor of future substandard practice.'' \79\ 
The Commission believes that the final rule amendment only reaches 
accountants whose past violations demonstrate a lack of competence to 
practice before the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \79\ See ABA Comment Letter, at 7; see also BDO Seidman Comment 
Letter, at 9 (stating that proposed amendment ``makes no distinction 
between professionals who have erred and those who are likely to err 
again'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    According to this commenter, the ``elimination of individuals and 
firms whose audit services are unreliable will undoubtedly have a 
beneficial effect in preventing future investor losses.'' \80\ Weighed 
against this benefit, this commenter identified the costs of bringing 
Rule 102(e) proceedings and the costs ``associated with depriving the 
public of the services of qualified auditors.'' \81\ This commenter 
stated that the number of accounting firms providing auditing services 
to public companies has declined sharply in the last 20 years and that 
there is no assurance that a further decline might not lead to 
increased audit fees.\82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \80\ Id.; see also BDO Seidman Comment Letter, at 9.
    \81\ Id.
    \82\ ABA Comment Letter, at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    These comments seem directed at the costs and benefits of Rule 
102(e) as a whole. The Commission only sought comment on the costs and 
benefits of its proposal to clarify ``improper professional conduct,'' 
not the costs and benefits of Rule 102(e). Moreover, the Commission has 
adopted a standard that is designed to reach only those accountants who 
lack competence to practice before the Commission. The rule amendment 
should not therefore ``deprive'' the public of the service of 
``qualified auditors.'' The Commission therefore believes that the 
costs and benefits described by the commenter will not be affected by 
the particular standard adopted.
    The Commission anticipates several benefits from the final rule 
amendment. The amendment will provide clearer guidance to accountants. 
Members of the accounting profession will better understand the 
standard the Commission uses to determine ``improper professional 
conduct.'' Also,
[[Page 57172]]
the clarified amendment will make it easier for the Commission, its 
administrative law judges and the courts to administer the Rule, which 
will further benefit the integrity of the Commission's processes. The 
Commission notes that its standard requires in the first instance that 
the accountant violate applicable professional standards. Therefore, 
the rule imposes no obligation that accountants are not already subject 
to. Rather, the amendment merely clarifies that when the Commission 
finds that an accountant has violated the applicable professional 
standards in circumstances meeting one of three standards of 
culpability, that accountant has engaged in ``improper professional 
conduct.'' The Commission also notes the existence of state accountancy 
boards, which can discipline accountants for violations of professional 
standards.
    In addition, the federal securities laws and state law causes of 
action may provide for sanctions against accountants for related 
conduct. Therefore, accountants are already subject to liability and 
disciplinary schemes that encourage accountants to comply with 
applicable professional standards. After careful consideration of the 
comments received, the Commission continues to believe that the 
amendment will impose no costs.
VI. Efficiency, Competition and Capital Formation
    Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act requires the Commission to 
consider the impact of its rules on competition. Moreover, Section 2(b) 
of the Securities Act, Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act and Section 
2(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (``Investment Company Act'') 
require the Commission, when engaged in rulemaking that requires a 
public interest finding, to consider, in addition to the protection of 
investors, whether the action will promote efficiency, competition and 
capital formation.
    The Commission requested data on what effect, if any, the proposed 
amendment would have on efficiency, competition and capital formation. 
No specific data was received in response to this request. One 
commenter asserted that the rule as proposed would cause ``the steps 
and costs to take a company public'' to escalate.\83\ This commenter 
did not, however, provide any detail or explanation of why the proposed 
rule would cause this effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \83\ See Carrick Comment Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Commission anticipates no effect on capital formation or 
efficiency, as the rule amendment clarifies an existing standard. 
Further, because the rule change applies equally to all accountants who 
practice before the Commission, and because it clarifies an existing 
standard, there should be no anti-competitive effect. In any event, the 
Commission believes that any burden on competition imposed by this 
amendment is necessary and appropriate in furtherance of the purpose of 
the Exchange Act.
VII. Statutory Authority
    The Commission is adopting the amendment to the rule pursuant to 
its authority under Section 19(a) of the Securities Act, Section 23(a) 
of the Exchange Act, Section 20(a) of the Public Utility Holding 
Company Act of 1935, Section 319(a) of the Trust Indenture Act of 1939, 
Section 211(a) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and Section 38(a) 
of the Investment Company Act.
Text of Amendment
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 201
Administrative practice and procedure, Investigations, Securities.
    In accordance with the foregoing, Title 17, Chapter II of the Code 
of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
PART 201--RULES OF PRACTICE
    1. The authority citation for Part 201, Subpart D continues to read 
as follows:
    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77h-1, 77j, 77s, 77u, 
78c(b), 78d-1, 78d-2, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 78o-3, 78s, 78u-2, 78u-
3, 78v, 78w, 79c, 79s, 79t, 79z-5a, 77sss, 77ttt, 80a-8, 80a-9, 80a-
37, 80a-38, 80a-39, 80a-40, 80a-41, 80a-44, 80b-3, 80b-9, 80b-11, 
and 80b-12 unless otherwise noted.
    2. Amend Sec. 201.102 by adding paragraphs (e)(1)(iv) to read as 
follows:
Sec. 201.102  Appearance and practice before the Commission.
* * * * *
    (e) Suspension and disbarment. (1) Generally.
    (iv) With respect to persons licensed to practice as accountants, 
``improper professional conduct'' under Sec. 201.102(e)(1)(ii) means:
    (A) Intentional or knowing conduct, including reckless conduct, 
that results in a violation of applicable professional standards; or 
(B) Either of the following two types of negligent conduct:
    (1) A single instance of highly unreasonable conduct that results 
in a violation of applicable professional standards in circumstances in 
which an accountant knows, or should know, that heightened scrutiny is 
warranted.
    (2) Repeated instances of unreasonable conduct, each resulting in a 
violation of applicable professional standards, that indicate a lack of 
competence to practice before the Commission.
* * * * *
    By the Commission.
    Dated: October 19, 1998.
Margaret H. McFarland,
Deputy Secretary.
Dissenting Statement of Commissioner Norman S. Johnson
    Although I have the deepest respect for my esteemed colleagues, I 
must dissent from the Commission's decision to issue today's 
release.\1\ Despite the good faith demonstrated by my colleagues 
throughout this difficult rulemaking process, I believe that the 
Commission is repeating past mistakes by again attempting to ``push the 
envelope'' of its permissible authority under Rule 102(e) of our Rules 
of Practice, which governs the ability of professionals to practice 
before the Commission. In my view, the Commission's release disregards 
the plain import of the two Checkosky decisions of the United States 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.\2\ The release 
amends our Rule of Practice 102(e) so that an accountant's single act 
of negligence may amount, under some circumstances, to ``improper 
professional conduct,'' with the likely result of depriving an 
accountant of his or her livelihood.\3\
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    \1\ The standard contained in today's release (the ``Standard'') 
was adopted at an open meeting of the Commission on September 23, 
1998. See SEC Defines ``Improper Professional Conduct'' by 
Accountants, 1998 WL 649370 (S.E.C.) (News Release Sept. 23, 1998).
    \2\ See Checkosky v. SEC, 23 F.3d 452 (D.C. Cir. 1994) 
(``Checkosky I''); Checkosky v. SEC, 139 F.3d 221 (D.C. Cir. 1998) 
(``Checkosky II''). The weight the Commission must attach to the 
views of the D.C. Circuit cannot be overstated. Under the 
jurisdictional provisions of the securities laws, every respondent 
in a Commission administrative proceeding has the option of 
appealing an adverse outcome to the D.C. Circuit. See, e.g., 15 
U.S.C. 77i(a) & 78y(a)(1).
    \3\ Amendment to Rule 102(e) of the Commission's Rules of 
Practice, Securities Act Release No. 33-7593 (October 19, 1998) (the 
``Release''). Before the recodification of the Commission's Rules of 
Practice in 1995, Rule 102(e) was formerly designated Rule 2(e). 
There are no substantive differences between the two rules. When 
directly quoting pre-1995 materials, I have left references to 
``Rule 2(e)'' intact; otherwise all references to the former Rule 
2(e) appear as ``Rule 102(e).''
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    The more than 150 comment letters we have received--the 
overwhelming majority of them highly critical of the most important 
part of the proposal--demonstrate that Rule 102(e) is a matter of 
crucial importance to the accountants
[[Page 57173]]
who practice before the Commission.\4\ As Judge Randolph observed in 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Checkosky:
    \4\ See, e.g., Richard I. Miller, General Counsel & Secretary, 
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (``AICPA''), 
Comment Letter (``CL'') 84; Arthur Andersen LLP, CL 98; Ernst & 
Young, LLP, CL 100; see also John M. Liftin, Chair, Committee on 
Federal Regulation of Securities, and Richard H. Rowe, Chair, 
Committee on Law and Accounting, American Bar Association, Section 
of Business Law (``ABA''), CL 81.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    A proceeding under Rule 2(e) threatens ``to deprive a person of 
a way of life to which he has devoted years of preparation and on 
which he and his family have come to rely.'' * * * It is of little 
comfort to an auditor defending against such charges that the 
Commission's authority is limited to suspending him from agency 
practice. For many public accountants such work represents their 
entire livelihood. Moreover, when one jurisdiction suspends a 
professional it can start a chain reaction.\5\
    \5\ Checkosky I, 23 F.3d at 479 (Randolph, J.) (quoting Henry J. 
Friendly, ``Some Kind of Hearing'', 123 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1267, 1297 
(1975)). Almost without exception, the comment letters bear out 
Judge Randolph's remarks, indicating that even if an accountant 
receives ultimate vindication, the mere bringing of charges of 
``improper professional conduct'' by the Commission may well have a 
``career-crippling'' effect. See Arthur Andersen, CL 98 at 1 & 5-6; 
see also, e.g., J.D. Fluno, Vice Chairman, W.W. Grainger, Inc., CL 
75; ABA, CL 81 at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    As nature abhors a vacuum, so does the Commission: its intentions 
regarding the expansion of its Rule 102(e) authority have quickly 
become apparent. Within days of the adoption of the new standard on 
September 23, 1998, the Commission announced a major new initiative to 
address improper accounting practices.\6\ It is clear to me that the 
Commission intends for the expanded Rule 102(e) authority it has 
arrogated to itself in today's release to be an important enforcement 
weapon in this new initiative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \6\ Remarks by SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt, The ``Numbers Game'', 
New York University Center for Law and Business (Sept. 28, 1998) 
<http://www.sec.gov/news/speeches/spch220.txt>; SEC Press Release 
98-95 (Sept. 28, 1998) <http:// www.sec.gov/news/press/98-95.txt> 
(announcing ``a major address on the state of accounting'' that will 
express Commission ``concern that the quality of financial reporting 
in corporate America is eroding and * * * [will] present an action 
plan that calls on the entire financial community to remedy the 
problem''); see Jube Shiver Jr., SEC to Crack Down on Inflated 
Earnings, L.A. Times, Sept. 29, 1998, at B1; see also Saul Hansell, 
S.E.C. Crackdown on Technology Write-Offs, N.Y. Times, Sept. 29, 
1998, at C1.
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    The proponents of the amendment claim that it is significantly more 
protective of accountants than the standard set forth in the 
Commission's June 1998 proposing release.\7\ I disagree. I think that 
the proposed standard will not preclude the Commission from instituting 
Rule 102(e) proceedings for simple negligence.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \7\ Proposed Amendment to Rule 102(e) of the Commission's Rules 
of Practice, Securities Act Release No. 7546, 1998 WL 311988 
(S.E.C.) (June 12, 1988), 63 Fed. Reg. 33305 (June 18, 1998) (the 
``Proposing Release'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    For close to thirty years, I have followed the Commission's Rule 
102(e) proceedings indeed, long ago I wrote two articles on the 
subject.\8\ In my view, today's release represents another wrong turn 
in the Commission's Rule 102(e) jurisprudence. Previous wrong turns 
resulted in the two Checkosky opinions by the D.C. Circuit. Rule 102(e) 
differs fundamentally from the securities laws enforced by the 
Commission. The purpose of the securities laws is to protect investors, 
while the professed purpose of Rule 102(e) is to protect the integrity 
of the Commission's administrative processes. Under today's proposal, 
Rule 102(e) will be just another weapon in the Commission's enforcement 
arsenal. The use of Rule 102(e) as just another enforcement tool 
eliminates the underpinning of those few Court decisions that have 
upheld, in the most general terms possible, the Commission's ability 
even to promulgate Rule 102(e). Thus, the Commission's ability to bring 
any Rule 102(e) proceeding--under any standard, against even the most 
egregious violators--may now be in jeopardy. Even assuming the 
Commission has adequate authority to promulgate Rule 102(e), both 
Checkosky opinions indicate that the Commission lacks authority to 
adopt the sort of negligence standard contained in the Release. Under 
Checkosky, the Commission may only discipline professionals under Rule 
102(e) when scienter, including recklessness, is shown.\9\
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    \8\ See Norman S. Johnson, The Dynamics of SEC Rule 2(e): A 
Crisis for the Bar, 1975 Utah L. Rev. 629; Norman S. Johnson, The 
Expanding Responsibilities of Attorneys in Practice Before the SEC: 
Disciplinary Proceedings Under Rule 2(e) of the Commission's Rules 
of Practice, 25 Mercer L. Rev. 637 (1974).
    \9\ See Robert D. Potts, Exchange Act Release No. 39126, 1997 WL 
690519 (S.E.C.), at *12 (Sept. 29, 1997) (Commissioner Johnson, 
concurring), aff'd on other grounds, 151 F.3d 810 (8th Cir. 1998); 
David J. Checkosky, Exchange Act Release No. 38183, 1997 WL 18303 
(S.E.C.), at *14 (Jan. 21, 1997) (Commissioner Johnson, dissenting), 
rev'd, Checkosky II, 139 F.3d 221.
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    My long-standing interest in the Commission's Rule 102(e) 
jurisprudence, as well as my deep-rooted objections to the rule's 
expansive and improper uses, leads me to set forth my dissenting views 
at some length and in the following order:
    <bullet> Because it is impossible to evaluate fairly today's 
release without consideration of the Commission's past missteps, I 
outline the history of Rule 102(e) in the first section.
    <bullet> Next, in the second section, I discuss the Checkosky case, 
including the D.C. Circuit's two reversals of Commission opinions.
    <bullet> In the third section, I explain the basis for my view that 
the Commission lacks legal authority even to promulgate Rule 102(e), 
and that, in any event, the Commission lacks the legal authority to 
adopt a negligence standard under Rule 102(e).
    <bullet> In the fourth section, I demonstrate that the Standard is 
vague, and that it does not comply with the mandate of both Checkosky I 
and Checkosky II that we adopt a clear standard.
    <bullet> In the fifth section, I set forth the various reasons 
why--even assuming adequate legal authority and clarity--it is not in 
the public interest for the Commission to adopt the Standard.
    <bullet> Next, in the sixth section, I question whether the 
Commission gave adequate notice in its Proposing Release that it might 
adopt certain aspects of today's release.
    <bullet> Finally, in the seventh section, I set forth the likely 
ways in which the Commission will seek to expand its Rule 102(e) 
authority in the future.
I. ``Administrative Oaks'' and ``Legislative Acorns'': A Brief 
History of Rule 102(E)
    In one of its landmark securities decisions restricting the growth 
of implied private actions under the federal securities laws, the 
Supreme Court remarked that Rule 10b-5 was ``a judicial oak which has 
grown from little more than a legislative acorn.'' \10\ The 
Commission's use of Rule 102(e) to regulate professional conduct might 
similarly be described as an ``administrative oak'' growing out of a 
``legislative acorn.'' There is no express statutory provision 
authorizing the Commission to discipline professionals; instead, a 
handful of courts have upheld the Commission's promulgation of Rule 
102(e) as impliedly proper because the rule is `` `reasonably related' 
to the purposes of the securities laws.'' \11\ I fully subscribe to the 
views of a distinguished predecessor, Commissioner Roberta Karmel, who 
observed in a Rule 102(e) case almost twenty years ago that ``[t]he 
administrative implication of
[[Page 57174]]
prosecutorial remedies under federal legislation is rife with the same 
evil'' possessed by ``judicial implication of private rights of 
action.'' \12\ In my view, the same disfavor the Supreme Court has 
enunciated towards implied private rights of action is equally 
applicable--and probably more so--to implied prosecutorial remedies 
such as those the Commission utilizes under Rule 102(e).\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \10\ Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, 421 U.S. 732, 737 
(1975).
    \11\ Checkosky I, 23 F.3d at 455 (Silberman, J.) (quoting Touche 
Ross & Co. v. SEC, 609 F.2d 570, 582 (2d Cir. 1979)); see also, 
e.g., Daniel L. Goelzer & Susan Ferris Wyderko, Rule 2(e): 
Securities and Exchange Commission Discipline of Professionals, 85 
Nw. U. L. Rev. 652, 652 (1991) (lawyers and accountants ``are not 
subject to direct regulation under the federal securities laws,'' 
and their licensing and discipline is ``largely a matter committed 
to state licensing bodies and professional associations'').
    \12\ Keating, Muething & Klekamp, 47 S.E.C. 95, 111 (1979) 
(Commissioner Karmel, dissenting). Unfortunately, Commissioner 
Karmel dissented in the context of a settled enforcement action, so 
there was no opportunity for judicial review of the issues she 
raised. Several commentators have suggested that attempts to evade 
appellate review are a hallmark of the Commission's Rule 102(e) 
jurisprudence. See, e.g., Ann Maxey, SEC Enforcement Actions Against 
Securities Lawyers: New Remedies v. Old Policies, 22 Del. J. Corp. 
L. 537, 552-53 (1997); Richard W. Painter & Jennifer E. Duggan, 
Lawyer Disclosure of Corporate Fraud: Establishing a Firm 
Foundation, 50 S.M.U. L. Rev. 225, 271 (1996).
    \13\ See Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington, 442 U.S. 560 (1979); 
see also, e.g., Central Bank v. First Interstate Bank, 511 U.S. 164 
(1994); Keating, 47 S.E.C. at 111 & 116 n.35 (Commissioner Karmel, 
dissenting). The Supreme Court has approved the use of implied 
ancillary remedies, such as when the Commission seeks, e.g., 
disgorgement as a remedy in a typical enforcement action, but that 
situation seems readily distinguishable from Rule 102(e), in which 
both the cause of action and its remedy are implied. Cf. Franklin v. 
Gwinnett County Public Schools, 503 U.S. 50 (1992) (approving 
implied remedy to express cause of action).
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    The Commission first promulgated Rule 102(e) in 1935.\14\ In its 
initial form, the rule contained a requirement that attorneys be 
admitted to practice before the Commission (as was then required of 
attorneys and accountants who sought to represent persons before the 
Internal Revenue Service).\15\ In 1938, however, the Commission struck 
the admission requirement, and since then the rule's only use has been 
to permit the Commission to censure, suspend or disbar 
professionals.\16\
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    \14\ See Touche Ross & Co. v. SEC, 609 F.2d 570, 578 n.13 (2d 
Cir. 1979) (``Touche Ross''); Harold Marsh, Jr., Rule 2(e) 
Proceedings, 35 Bus. Law. 987, 987 (1980).
    \15\ Marsh, supra note 14, 35 Bus. Law. at 987.
    \16\ Id. Although Rule 102(e) reaches all types of professionals 
who might practice before the Commission, including engineers or 
expert witnesses, there have been only a few cases in the rule's 63-
year history that did not involve either a lawyer or an accountant.
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    Although Rule 102(e) has caused a great deal of controversy since 
its inception,\17\ it was only used sparingly
[[Page 57175]]
during the first 35 years or so of its existence.\18\ Things changed in 
the early 1970's when the Commission embarked on its so-called 
``access'' theory of securities law enforcement.\19\ As a consequence 
of its belief that access to capital markets is controlled by a limited 
number of professionals, the Commission sought to achieve maximum 
deterrent value from its limited enforcement resources by suing the 
gatekeepers, rather than simply proceeding against the principal 
wrongdoers.\20\ Accordingly, the Commission brought wave-upon-wave of 
actions--including many Rule 102(e) administrative proceedings--against 
securities professionals, accountants and lawyers.\21\
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    \17\ The following is a sampling of the literature discussing 
the Commission's use of Rule 102(e), the vast bulk of it 
extraordinarily critical--particularly when one discounts articles 
by Commission officials defending policies they themselves have 
helped formulate and administer. (I find it ironic that the number 
of law review articles discussing Rule 102(e) dwarfs the number of 
actual federal court decisions construing it by a factor of 
approximately 10 to 1). See, e.g., Roberta S. Karmel, Regulation by 
Prosecution: The Securities and Exchange Commission vs. Corporate 
America 173-83 (1982); ABA, Statement of Policy Adopted by ABA 
Regarding Responsibilities and Liabilities of Lawyers in Advising 
with Respect to the Compliance of Clients with Laws Administered by 
the Securities and Exchange Commission, 31 Bus. Law. 543, 545 
(1975); ABA Task Force on Rule 102(e) Proceedings, Report of the 
Task Force on Rule 102(e) Proceedings: Rule 102(e) Sanctions Against 
Accountants, 52 Bus. Law. 965 (1997); David H. Barber, Lawyer Duties 
in Securities Transactions Under Rule 2(e): The Carter Opinions, 
1982 B.Y.U. L. Rev. 513; Arthur Best, Shortcomings of Administrative 
Agency Lawyer Discipline, 31 Emory L.J. 535 (1982); Judah Best, In 
Opposition to Rule 2(e) Proceedings, 36 Bus. Law. 1815 (1981); 
Dennis J. Block & Charles J. Ferris, SEC Rule 2(e)--A New Standard 
for Ethical Conduct or an Unauthorized Web of Ambiguity, 81 Cap. U. 
L. Rev. 501 (1982); John C. Burton, SEC Enforcement and Professional 
Accountants: Philosophy, Objectives and Approach, 28 Vand. L. Rev. 
19 (1975); Michael P. Cox, Regulation of Attorneys Practicing Before 
Federal Agencies, 34 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 173 (1984); Joseph C. 
Daley & Roberta S. Karmel, Attorneys' Responsibilities: Adversaries 
at the Bar of the SEC, 24 Emory L.J. 747 (1975); Mitchell F. Dolin, 
SEC Rule 2(e): After Carter-Johnson: Toward a Reconciliation of 
Purpose and Scope, 9 Sec. Reg. L.J. 331 (1982); James R. Doty et 
al., The Professional as Defendant, in 23rd Annual Institute on 
Securities Regulation 681 (PLI Corp. Law & Practice Course Handbook 
Series No. B4-6978, 1991); Robert A. Downing & Richard L. Miller, 
Jr., The Distortion and Misuse of Rule 2(e), 54 Notre Dame Law. 774 
(1979); Robert W. Emerson, Rule 2(e) Revisited: SEC Disciplining of 
Attorneys since In re Carter, 29 Am. Bus. L.J. 155 (1991); Ralph C. 
Ferrara, Administrative Disciplinary Proceedings Under Rule 2(e), 36 
Bus. Law. 1807 (1981); Ted J. Fiflis, Choice of Federal or State Law 
for Attorneys' Professional Responsibility in Securities Matters, 56 
N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1236 (1981); Monroe H. Freedman, A Civil Libertarian 
Looks at Securities Regulation, 35 Ohio St. L.J. 280 (1974); Ray 
Garrett, Jr., Social Responsibility of Lawyers in Their Professional 
Capacity, 30 U. Miami L. Rev. (1976); Daniel L. Goelzer, The SEC and 
Opinion Shopping: A Case Study in the Changing Regulation of the 
Accounting Profession, 52 Brook. L. Rev. 1057 (1987); Stuart C. 
Goldberg, Policing Responsibilities of the Securities Bar: The 
Attorney-Client Relationship and the Code of Professional 
Responsibility--Considerations for Expertizing Securities Attorneys, 
19 N.Y.L.F. 221 (1973); Paul Gonson, Disciplinary Proceedings and 
Other Remedies Available to the SEC, 30 Bus. Law. 191 (1975); Kent 
Gross, Attorneys and Their Corporate Clients: SEC Rule 2(e) and the 
Georgetown ``Whistle Blowing'' Proposal, 3 Corp. L. Rev. 197 (1980); 
Samuel H. Gruenbaum, The SEC's Use of Rule 2(e) to Discipline 
Accountants and Other Professionals, 56 Notre Dame Law. 820 (1981); 
Samuel H. Gruenbaum & Marc I. Steinberg, Accountants' Liability and 
Responsibility: Securities, Criminal and Common Law, 13 Loy. L.A. L. 
Rev. 247 (1980); Stanley A. Kaplan, Some Ruminations on the Role of 
Counsel for a Corporation, 56 Notre Dame L. Rev. 873 (1981); Roberta 
S. Karmel, A Delicate Assignment: The Regulation of Accountants by 
the SEC, 56 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 959 (1981); Roberta S. Karmel, Attorneys' 
Securities Law Liabilities, 27 Bus. Law. 1153 (1972); John J. 
Kelleher, Scourging the Moneylenders from the Temple: The SEC, Rule 
2(e) and the Lawyers, 17 San Diego L. Rev. 501 (1980); Michael R. 
Klein, The SEC and the Legal Profession: Material Adverse 
Developments, 11 Inst. on Sec. Reg. (PLI) 604 (1979); Reynold Kosek, 
Professional Responsibility of Accountants and Lawyers Before the 
Securities and Exchange Commission, 72 L. Libr. J. 453 (1979); 
Steven C. Krane, The Attorney Unshackled: SEC Rule 2(e) Violates 
Clients' Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel, 57 Notre Dame L. Rev. 50 
(1981); Werner Kronstein, The Carter-Johnson Case: A Higher 
Threshold for SEC Actions Against Attorneys, 9 Sec. Reg. L.J. 293 
(1981); Michael R. Lanzarone, Professional Discipline: Unfairness 
and Inefficiency in the Administrative Process, 51 Fordham L. Rev. 
818 (1983); Philip H. Levy, Regulation of the Accounting Profession 
Through Rule 2(e) of the SEC's Rules of Practice: Valid or Invalid 
Exercise of Power?, 46 Brook. L. Rev. 1159 (1980); Frederick D. 
Lipman, The SEC's Reluctant Police Force: A New Role for Lawyers, 49 
N.Y.U. L. Rev. 437 (1974); Simon M. Lorne, The Corporate and 
Securities Adviser, the Public Interest, and Professional Ethics, 76 
Mich. L. Rev. 423 (1978); Lewis D. Lowenfels, Expanding Public 
Responsibilities of Securities Lawyers: An Analysis of the New Trend 
in Standard of Care and Priorities of Duties, 74 Colum. L. Rev. 412 
(1974); Harold L. Marquis, An Appraisal of Attorneys' 
Responsibilities Before Administrative Agencies, 26 Case W. Res. L. 
Rev. 285 (1976); Arthur F. Mathews, SEC Injunctive Proceedings 
Against Attorneys, 36 Bus. Law. 1819 (1981); Christine Neylon 
O'Brien, SEC Regulation of the Accounting Profession: Rule 2(e), 21 
Gonz. L. Rev. 675 (1985); L. Ray Patterson, The Limits of the 
Lawyer's Discretion and the Law of Legal Ethics: National Student 
Marketing Revisited, 1979 Duke L.J. 1251; Marvin G. Pickholtz, SEC 
Regulation of Professionals, 4 Rev. Fin. Serv. Reg. 165 (1988); 
Irving M. Pollack, The SEC Lawyer: Who is His Client and What are 
His Responsibilities?, 49 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 453 (1981); Martin B. 
Robins, Policeman, Conscience or Confidant: Thoughts on the 
Appropriate Response of a Securities Attorney Who Suspects Client 
Violations of the Federal Securities Laws, 15 J. Marshall L. Rev. 
373 (1982); Michel Rosenfeld, The Transformation of the Attorney-
Client Privilege: In Search of an Ideological Reconciliation of 
Individualism, the Adversary System, and the Corporate Client's SEC 
Disclosure Obligations, 33 Hastings L.J. 495 (1982); Quinton F. 
Seamons, Inside the Labyrinth of the Elusive Standard Under the 
SEC's Rule 2(e), 23 Sec. Reg. L.J. 57 (1995); Morgan Shipman, The 
Need for SEC Rules to Govern the Duties and Civil Liabilities of 
Attorneys Under the Federal Securities Statutes, 34 Ohio St. L.J. 
231 (1973); George J. Siedel, Rule 2(e) and Corporate Officers, 39 
Bus. Law. 455 (1984); Marshall L. Small, An Attorney's 
Responsibilities Under Federal and State Securities Laws: Private 
Counselor or Public Servant?, 61 Cal. L. Rev. 1189 (1973); Mindy 
Jaffe Smolevitz, The Opinion Shopping Phenomenon: Corporate 
America's Search for the Perfect Auditor, 52 Brook. L. Rev. 1077 
(1987); Theodore Sonde, Professional Disciplinary Proceedings, 30 
Bus. Law. 157 (1975); Marc I. Steinberg, Attorney Liability Under 
the Securities Laws, 45 Sw. L.J. 711 (1991); Wallace L. Timmeny, 
Responsibilities of Lawyers in Connection with the Sale of Municipal 
Securities, 36 Bus. Law. 1799 (1981); Francis M. Wheat, The Impact 
of SEC Professional Responsibility Standards, 34 Bus. Law. 969 
(1979); David B. Wilkins, Who Should Regulate Lawyers?, 105 Harv. L. 
Rev. 799 (1992); Harold M. Williams, Corporate Accountability and 
the Lawyer's Role, 34 Bus. Law. 7 (1978); Marie L. Coppolino, Note, 
Rule 2(e) and the Auditor: How Should the Securities and Exchange 
Commission Define its Standard of Professional Conduct?, 63 Fordham 
L. Rev. 2227 (1995); Michael J. Crane, Note, Disciplinary 
Proceedings Against Accountants: The Need for a More Ascertainable 
Improper Professional Conduct Standard in the SEC's Rule 2(e), 53 
Fordham L. Rev. 351 (1984); Robert G. Day, Note, Administrative 
Watchdogs or Zealous Advocates? Implications for Legal Ethics in the 
Face of Expanded Attorney Liability, 45 Stan. L. Rev. 645, 673 
(1993); William Kenneth C. Dippel, Comment, Attorney Responsibility 
and Carter Under SEC Rule 2(e): The Powers That Be and the Fear of 
the Flock, 36 Sw. L.J. 897 (1982); Todd J. Flagel, Note, Securities 
Law: SEC Must Clarify Its Position as to the Level of Culpability 
that Must Be Shown to Constitute a Rule 2(e)(1)(ii) Violation By 
Accountants, 20 Dayton L. Rev. 1083 (1995); Note, Attorney 
Discipline by the SEC: 2(e) or not 2(e)?, 17 New Eng. L. Rev. 1267 
(1982); Note, The Duties and Obligations of the Securities Lawyer: 
The Beginning of a New Standard for the Legal Profession?, 1975 Duke 
L.J. 121; Note, SEC Disciplinary Proceedings Against Attorneys Under 
Rule 2(e), 79 Mich. L. Rev. 1270 (1981); Comment, SEC Disciplinary 
Rules and the Federal Securities Laws: The Regulation, Role and 
Responsibilities of the Attorney, 1972 Duke L.J. 969.
    \18\ As to the lawyers, the first Rule 102(e) proceeding was not 
brought until 1950, and only five cases were brought before 1960. 
See Keating, 47 S.E.C. at 112 (Commissioner Karmel, dissenting). The 
number of Rule 102(e) cases against accountants during from 1935 to 
1970 was also de minimis by comparison to recent years when the 
Commission has brought (according to statistics supplied by our 
Office of the Chief Accountant) an average of over 25 cases 
annually. See Marsh, supra note 14, 35 Bus. Law. at 987-89. 
Commentators seem to agree that, for various reasons, it is 
impossible to obtain accurate historical statistics regarding Rule 
102(e) proceedings, particularly for the period before 1975. See 
Emerson, supra note 17, 29 Am. Bus. L.J. at 173-83 (comprehensive 
effort to tabulate number and type of Rule 102(e) proceedings 
against lawyers through 1989); Marsh, supra note 14, 35 Bus. Law. at 
988.
    \19\ See, e.g., Burton, supra note 17, 28 Vand. L. Rev. at 19-
20; Simon M. Lorne & W. Hardy Callcott, Administrative Actions 
Against Lawyers Before the SEC, 50 Bus. Law. 1293, 1297 (1995); 
Maxey, supra note 12, 22 Del. J. Corp. L. at 549.
    \20\ Harvey L. Pitt & Karen L. Shapiro, Securities Regulation by 
Enforcement: A Look Ahead at the Next Decade, 7 Yale J. on Reg. 149, 
171-74 (1990).
    \21\ Id.; see also Emerson, supra note 17, 29 Am. Bus. L.J. at 
176 (for attorneys, peak years of Rule 102(e) enforcement activity 
were 1975 through 1977, when the Commission brought actions against 
53 attorneys and three law firms).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The high water mark of the Commission's ``access'' theory was 
probably the National Student Marketing case.\22\ In National Student 
Marketing, the Commission brought an injunctive action that charged two 
nationally prominent law firms and several of their respective partners 
with aiding and abetting a securities fraud based on their alleged 
failure to take proper action when they ``permitted'' their clients to 
complete a merger that had received shareholder approval based on a 
proxy statement containing materially misleading financial 
information.\23\ The Commission's complaint alleged that the lawyers 
had a duty to insist that their clients resolicit proxies based on 
corrected information, and that, if the clients refused to follow this 
advice, the lawyers were required to resign and to report the alleged 
securities violations to the Commission.\24\ In practical terms, the 
Commission sought to make involuntary ``whistle-blowers'' or government 
agents out of private counsel by ``plac[ing] upon the lawyer a 
responsibility to investigate his clients'' activities in search for 
possible violations of law.'' \25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \22\ SEC v. National Student Marketing Corp., [1971-1972 
Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 93,360, at 91,913 
(D.D.C. 1972) (complaint). Less than two weeks after the filing of 
the National Student Marketing complaint, the Wall Street Journal 
reported that it had become the ``best-read document since Gone With 
the Wind.'' Green, Irate Attorneys--A Bid to Hold Lawyers 
Accountable to Public Stuns, Angers Firms, Wall St. J., Feb. 15, 
1972, at 1, col. 1; see also Samuel H. Gruenbaum, Corporate/
Securities Lawyers: Disclosure, Responsibility, Liability to 
Investors, and National Student Marketing Corp., 54 Notre Dame Law. 
795 (1979).
    \23\ National Student Marketing, [1971-1972 Transfer Binder] 
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 93,360, at 91,913; see also Lorne, 
supra note 17, 76 Mich. L. Rev. at 455.
    \24\ SEC v. National Student Marketing Corp., [1971-1972 
Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) para. 93,360 at para. 
48(i).
    \25\ Milton V. Freeman, Recent Governmental Attacks on the 
Private Lawyer as an Infringement of the Constitutional Right to 
Counsel, 36 Bus. Law. 1791, 1792 (1981); see Cox, supra note 17, 34 
Case W. Res. L. at 204 (referring to attempts by Commission towards 
the ``enlistment of attorneys as agents of the government''); 
Wilkins, supra note 17, 105 Harv. L. Rev. at 836 (Commission has 
appeared to engage in ``overzealous enforcement'' actions against 
lawyers in order to encourage them to serve as watchdogs over their 
clients). Accord Mathews, supra note 17, 36 Bus. Law. at 1829; Marc 
I. Steinberg, Attorney Liability for Client Fraud, 1991 Colum. Bus. 
L. Rev. 1, 9.
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    In discussing National Student Marketing, one Commissioner went so 
far as to state that, at least in the context of a securities 
transaction, a lawyer's role was ``more akin to that of an auditor,'' 
i.e., the lawyer would ``have to exercise a measure of independence'' 
from his client and would have to be ``acutely cognizant of his 
responsibility to the public who engage in securities transactions that 
would never have come about if not for his professional presence.'' 
\26\ Although the Commission brought National Student Marketing as an 
injunctive action in federal court, it soon changed its emphasis in 
professional discipline cases and increasingly brought them as 
administrative proceedings under Rule 102(e).\27\
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    \26\ A.A. Sommer, The Emerging Responsibilities of the 
Securities Lawyer, [1973-1974 Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. 
(CCH) para. 79,631, 83,686, at 83,689 to 83,690 (Jan. 24, 1974). I 
have the highest regard for former Commissioner Sommer, but I have 
long believed that this notion of lawyer as auditor is contrary to 
traditional canons of professional responsibility. See Johnson, 
supra note 8, 1975 Utah L. Rev. at 645-50.
    \27\ During the 1970's, federal courts increasingly placed 
limitations on the Commission's ability to bring suit and obtain 
injunctive relief. See, e.g., Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 
185, 197-198 (1976) (proof of scienter required in a Rule 10b-5 
action); SEC v. Commonwealth Chemical Securities, Inc., 574 F.2d 90, 
98 (2d Cir. 1978) (``current judicial attitude toward the issuance 
of injunctions on the basis of past violations at the SEC's request 
has become more circumspect than in earlier days''). Convincing 
evidence exists demonstrating that the Commission increased its use 
of Rule 102(e) administrative proceedings after National Student 
Marketing as a means to circumvent these judicially-imposed 
limitations. See Downing & Miller, supra note 17, 54 Notre Dame Law. 
at 783-85 (quoting June 1976 memorandum from Commission's General 
Counsel to Commission's Chairman suggesting that the Commission 
might appropriately bring Rule 102(e) actions in situations in which 
a professional's conduct would not satisfy the Hochfelder 
requirement of scienter for Rule 10b-5 actions); see also, e.g., 
Arthur Best, supra note 17, 31 Emory L.J. at 550 (lesser negligence 
standard ``may explain why SEC chose'' to bring Rule 102(e) action, 
rather than injunctive action against major accounting firm, and 
this option ``can be viewed either as an advantage of the 
administrative process or as a dangerous discretionary weapon that 
ought not to be available to the agency''); James P. Hemmer, 
Resignation of Corporate Counsel: Fulfillment or Abdication of Duty, 
39 Hastings L.J. 641, 650 (1988) (``The unwillingness of the courts 
to issue injunctions when there is no likelihood of recurring 
violation * * * is at least one of the principal factors in the 
SEC's increasing use of rule 2(e) proceedings to govern the 
discipline of professionals.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Although National Student Marketing involved charges against law 
firms and individual lawyers, the Commission did not limit its 
overreaching to the legal profession--indeed, one contemporaneous 
commentary referred to accountants as the ``most actively besieged 
profession'' under Rule 102(e).\28\ In SEC v. Arthur Young & Co., a 
case arising from the activities of an oil and gas venture promoter 
over a seven-year period in the 1960's, the Commission charged a 
nationally prominent accounting firm and the responsible auditors with 
committing or aiding and abetting securities fraud.\29\ Because the 
case predated the Supreme Court's decision requiring the Commission to 
prove scienter in its Rule 10b-5 enforcement cases,\30\ the Ninth 
Circuit assumed that ``negligence, rather than scienter, constitutes 
the standard by which an accountant's or auditor's
[[Page 57176]]
performance must be measured.''\31\ Before the district court, the 
Commission argued that the firm and its auditors performed their work 
``with blinders on'' and that they should have done ``more'' to reveal 
the risks to those who invested in the ventures.\32\ On appeal, the 
Commission apparently argued that the accountants had failed to perform 
their audit in a manner that would have revealed to ``an ordinary 
prudent investor, who examined the * * * audits or financial 
statements, a reasonably accurate reflection of the financial risks * * 
*.'' \33\ The Ninth Circuit rejected both formulations of the 
Commission's argument, noting:
    \28\ See Downing & Miller, supra note 17, 54 Notre Dame Law. at 
775 n.6; see also id. at 774 (``Recent 2(e) proceedings against 
accountants demonstrate that the SEC has converted the rule from one 
designed to serve the limited salutary purpose of exercising 
disciplinary authority over the incompetent, unethical or dishonest 
accounting practitioner to a rule which has effectively been 
utilized to pervasively regulate accounting firms and the profession 
as a whole.'').
    \29\ 590 F.2d 785, 786 (9th Cir. 1979).
    \30\ Aaron v. SEC, 446 U.S. 680 (1980).
    \31\ 590 F.2d at 787.
    \32\ 590 F.2d at 787.
    \33\ 590 F.2d at 787-88.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    To accept the SEC's position would go far toward making the 
accountant both an insurer of his client's honesty and an 
enforcement arm of the SEC. We can understand why the SEC wishes to 
so conscript accountants. Its frequently late arrival on the scene 
of fraud and violations of the securities laws almost always suggest 
that had it been there earlier with the accountant it would have 
caught the scent of wrong-doing and, after an unrelenting hunt, 
bagged the game. What it cannot do, the thought goes, the accountant 
can and should. The difficulty with this is that Congress has not 
enacted the conscription bill that the SEC seeks to have us fashion 
and fix as an interpretive gloss on existing securities laws.\34\
    \34\ 590 F.2d at 788.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To be sure, the Commission's attitude towards the conscription of 
accountants--and their purported wearing of ``blinders,'' or failures 
to observe and respond to ``red flags''--persists to this day.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \35\ In a later case upholding disciplinary sanctions imposed by 
the Commission on an accountant under Rule 102(e), the Ninth Circuit 
purported to distinguish Arthur Young. See Davy v. SEC, 792 F.2d 
1418, 1422 (9th Cir. 1986). I confess to being confused by Davy--one 
would think that if the Commission were barred from directly 
``conscript[ing] accountants'' under the substantive securities 
laws, it would also be barred from indirectly ``conscript[ing] 
accountants'' under Rule 102(e). The real distinction seems to be 
that Davy, unlike Arthur Young, involved truly egregious scienter-
based misconduct by an accountant. See 792 F.2d at 1422 (referring 
to Commission finding, supported by ``substantial evidence,'' that 
the accountant ``knowingly participated in the fraud practice by 
[the issuer] on the investing public''). In any event, Davy does not 
support the Commission's adoption of the Standard, because the Court 
went to great lengths to limit its holding:
    We do not consider whether cases can arise in which the SEC in 
Rule 2(e) matters exceeds its proper jurisdictional boundaries. The 
precise reach of the SEC in these situations has not been defined 
and we leave that task for a future case which implicates that 
question directly.
    Id.; see also id. (``there may be cases where the SEC should not 
be empowered to determine the standards by which accountants, or 
attorneys for that matter, are to be judged''; ``[w]e pretermit any 
discussion of the SEC's power to determine standards for discipline 
under Rule 2(e) until we have the issue squarely before us'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Many legal scholars and members of the securities bar and industry, 
myself among them, decried the Commission's overreaching in National 
Student Marketing, Arthur Young and similar cases.\36\ One commentary 
described the Commission's efforts, colorfully but accurately, as a `` 
`reign of terror' on broker-dealers, accountants and attorneys.'' \37\ 
Indeed, for more than twenty-five years, the Commission's attempts to 
set standards for professional conduct, under Rule 102(e) and 
otherwise, have caused much dissension on the Commission itself.\38\ 
The roster of distinguished former Commissioners who have expressed 
serious doubts about the Commission's expansive uses of Rule 102(e) and 
other attempts to set professional standards includes: Edward H. 
Fleischman, Roberta S. Karmel, Philip Lochner, Jr., Richard Y. Roberts, 
and Steven M.H. Wallman.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \36\ See, e.g., Daley & Karmel, supra note 17, 24 Emory L.J. 
747; Downing & Miller, supra note 17, 54 Notre Dame Law. 774; 
Freeman, supra note 25, 36 Bus. Law. 1791; Johnson, supra note 8, 
1975 Utah L. Rev. 629; Johnson, supra note 8, 25 Mercer L. Rev. 637.
    \37\ Dennis J. Block & Jonathan M. Hoff, SEC Moves Against 
Attorneys Under the Remedies Act, N.Y.L.J., Sept. 23, 1993, at 5 
(quoting Harvey L. Pitt & Dixie L. Johnson, Justice Delayed, Justice 
Denied: Observations on the SEC's `Kern' Decision, N.Y.L.J., July 
11, 1991, at 5).
    \38\ See, e.g., Keating, 47 S.E.C. at 109 (Commissioner Karmel, 
dissenting); Richard E. Brodsky, P.A., CL 54.
    \39\ Keating, 47 S.E.C. at 112 (1979) (Commissioner Karmel, 
dissenting); see also Potts, 1997 WL 690519 (S.E.C.), at *17 
(Commissioner Wallman, dissenting); David J. Checkosky, 50 S.E.C. 
1180, 1198 (1992) (Commissioner Roberts, concurring in part and 
dissenting in pertinent part); Allied Stores Corp., 1987 SEC LEXIS 
4306, at *19 (June 29, 1987) (Commissioner Fleischman, dissenting); 
Richard Y. Roberts, CL 18.
    It appears that the Rule 102(e) skeptics on the Commission have 
not always been in the minority. See Potts, 1997 WL 690519 (S.E.C.), 
at *12 (Commissioner Johnson, concurring) (noting that the 
Commission was ``evenly split two-two'' on the issue of whether a 
single act of mere negligence was sufficient for liability under 
Rule 102(e)); see also Checkosky I, 23 F.3d at 487 (discussing media 
reports that, at a preliminary stage, three Commissioners had voted 
to overturn the `` `harsh sanction' '' imposed by the Administrative 
Law Judge); David J. Checkosky, 50 S.E.C. at 1182 (denying 
respondents' ``factual assertion that * * * the Commission had 
[earlier] rendered a final opinion in this case and improperly 
refused to publish it'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Much of the criticism of the Commission's efforts in this area has 
focussed on two factors. First, neither the Commission nor its 
administrative law judges (``ALJ's'') have a statutory mandate to 
establish ethical standards nor any special expertise in the area of 
professional responsibility; second, the threat of disciplinary action 
might well intimidate and interfere with the exercise of independent 
professional judgment and, as to lawyers, might deprive clients of 
their constitutional right to counsel.\40\ These fears were far from 
academic: the National Student Marketing case clearly affected the 
ability and willingness of the securities bar to take zealous positions 
before the Commission.\41\ According to an article co-written by the 
then-General Counsel of the Commission, the controversy caused by 
National Student Marketing and similar cases became so heated that it 
affected ``the Commission's ability to carry out its statutory 
mandates,'' because it lessened the necessary cooperation and trust 
between the Commission, its staff and the securities bar and 
industry.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \40\ See Keating, 47 S.E.C. at 112-17 & n.31 (1979) 
(Commissioner Karmel, dissenting); see also, e.g., Kivitz v. SEC, 
475 F.2d 956, 962 (D.C. Cir. 1973) (reversing Commission finding of 
liability in Rule 102(e) disbarment case; declining to give 
Commission any deference in matters of alleged professional 
misconduct); Judah Best, supra note 17, 36 Bus. Law. at 1817; 
Freeman, supra note 25, 36 Bus. Law. at 1792-94; Lorne & Callcott, 
supra note 19, 50 Bus. Law. at 1301-03.
    \41\ Cf. Lorne, supra note 17, 76 Mich. L. Rev. at 455-56 
(recounting post-National Student Marketing incident in which a 
lawyer, unable to compel disclosure, resigned from his law firm and 
reported the matter to the SEC; after the disclosure was made, a 
class action lawsuit followed that was settled upon payment of 
$785,000, $625,000 of which came from the lawyer's former firm, and 
only $160,000 from the client).
    \42\ Lorne & Callcott, supra note 19, at 1300-01 (referring to 
actions against lawyers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In response to the well-deserved firestorm of criticism caused by 
National Student Marketing and similar cases, the Commission 
retreated.\43\ As to lawyers, the Commission announced that it would 
commence Rule 102(e) actions only where it could demonstrate scienter 
and that it would cease bringing ``original'' Rule 102(e) actions 
(i.e., the Commission would only bring an administrative proceeding 
against a lawyer if a federal court first determined that the lawyer 
had violated the federal securities laws).\44\ As to accountants, the
[[Page 57177]]
situation was less clear, but, at least for a time, the Commission 
seemed less aggressive in bringing Rule 102(e) actions against them as 
well.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \43\ Lorne & Callcott, supra note 19, at 1303-04; Pitt & 
Shapiro, supra note 20, 7 Yale J. on Reg. at 174; see also Freeman, 
supra note 25, 36 Bus. Law. at 1792.
    \44\ William R. Carter, 47 S.E.C. 471, 511-12 (1981); Lorne & 
Callcott, supra note 19, at 1303-04 (referring to a speech given by 
the Commission's then-General Counsel: Edward Greene, Lawyer 
Disciplinary Proceedings Before the Securities and Exchange 
Commission, [1981-1982 Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) 
para. 83,089, at 84,800 (Jan. 13, 1982)). In 1988, the Commission 
ratified Mr. Greene's speech in a release that stated: ``the 
Commission, as a matter of policy, generally refrains from using its 
administrative forum to conduct de novo determinations of 
professional obligations of attorneys.'' Disciplinary Proceedings 
Involving Professionals Appearing or Practicing Before the 
Commission, Securities Act Release No. 6783, 53 Fed. Reg. 26,427, 
26,431 n.30, 1988 WL 278442 (F.R.) (July 13, 1988); see also id. 
(referring to Commission practice of generally instituting Rule 
102(e) proceedings ``only where the attorney's conduct has already 
provided the basis for a judicial or administrative order finding a 
securities law violation in a non-Rule 2(e) proceeding'').
    \45\ Pitt & Shapiro, supra note 20, 7 Yale J. on Reg. at 174.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In the late 1980's, however, Rule 102(e) actions against 
accountants became more of a focal point for the Commission.\46\ In 
1988, the Commission amended Rule 102(e) to create a presumption that 
disciplinary proceedings would be public rather than private--
previously Rule 102(e) proceedings only became public if sanctions were 
imposed.\47\ In addition, as an enforcement adjunct to combat 
``financial fraud,'' the Commission stepped up its use of Rule 102(e) 
to bring charges of ``improper professional conduct'' against the 
auditors of public companies.\48\ It was in this context that the 
Commission instituted administrative proceedings under Rule 102(e) 
against two accountants, David J. Checkosky and Norman A. Aldrich.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \46\ Goelzer & Wyderko, supra note 11, 85 Nw. U.L. Rev. at 653.
    \47\ Rule 102(e)(7); see Disciplinary Proceedings Involving 
Professionals Appearing or Practicing Before the Commission, 
Securities Act Release No. 6783, 53 Fed. Reg. 26,427, 1988 WL 278442 
(F.R.) (July 13, 1988).
    \48\ Goelzer, supra note 17, 52 Brook. L. Rev. at 1061; see also 
infra note 135.
    \49\ David J. Checkosky, Order Instituting Private Proceedings, 
File No. 3-6776 (Nov. 12, 1987).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. The Checkosky Decisions
    Checkosky and Aldrich, partners at one of the nation's preeminent 
accounting firms, were the engagement partner and audit manager in 
connection with audits of the Savin Corporation from 1981 to 1984.\50\ 
The Commission brought a Rule 102(e) proceeding against them in 1987, 
and in 1992 affirmed an ALJ's finding of ``improper professional 
conduct.'' \51\ In its initial opinion, the Commission found that 
Savin's financial statements were false in that the company improperly 
capitalized certain expenses for research and development rather than 
recording them in their entirety as expenses in the years incurred.\52\ 
These violations were based on a finding that the auditors, in 
violation of Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (``GAAS''), had 
improperly permitted Savin to capitalize these expenditures and falsely 
certified that Savin's financial statements set forth its financial 
condition in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles 
(``GAAP'').\53\
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    \50\ David J. Checkosky, 50 S.E.C. 1180, 1180-81 (1992).
    \51\ 50 S.E.C. at 1180-81.
    \52\ 50 S.E.C. at 1181.
    \53\ 50 S.E.C. at 1181.
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    Commissioner Roberts concurred in the majority's finding that 
respondents violated GAAS and misapplied GAAP, but dissented from the 
finding that these errors amounted to ``improper professional conduct'' 
under Rule 102(e).\54\ In Commissioner Roberts' view, respondents' 
conduct did not provide a sufficient basis for a finding that they 
would threaten the Commission's processes.\55\