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The SEC said its case continues against Fabrice Tourre, a Goldman vice president accused of shepherding the deal. Tourre is still employed by Goldman and remains on paid administrative leave, according to a person familiar with his status who wasn't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. Goldman is paying Tourre's legal expenses, the source said. The Justice Department opened a criminal inquiry of Goldman in the spring, following a criminal referral by the SEC. Of the $550 million Goldman agreed to pay, $250 million will go to the two big losers in the deal. German bank IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG will get $150 million. Royal Bank of Scotland, which bought ABN AMRO Bank, will receive $100 million. Goldman also will pay back $15 million in fees it collected for managing the deal. The remaining $535 million is considered a civil penalty. Paulson & Co. was not charged by the SEC. The SEC brought the case after a series of embarrassing blunders -- most notably its failure to detect the massive Ponzi scheme run by Bernard Madoff and the alleged $7 billion fraud by R. Allen Stanford. The Goldman case was a high-profile opportunity for the agency to prove it could be tough on Wall Street. Jacob Frenkel, a former SEC enforcement attorney, said the SEC met that objective. "This was a bet-the-agency case," Frenkel said. "They had a lot at stake here, and this did wonders to re-establish a strong enforcement image and presence." Goldman dodged major risks as well. The company quieted a source of public criticism and can return to focusing on its business. Goldman's legal troubles may not be over, though. Investors who lost money on the transactions could still sue the firm for civil damages, according to Thomas Ajamie, a Houston-based defense lawyer who specializes in financial fraud cases. "Nothing stops the investors from filing their own claims," Ajamie said. The chairman of a Senate panel that interrogated Goldman officials at a hearing after the SEC filed its charges applauded the settlement. "Goldman played fast and loose ... misled its clients, and got called on it today," Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., said Thursday. "A key factor in the settlement is that Goldman acknowledges wrongdoing, in addition to paying a fine and changing its practices."
[Associated
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