Ferris et al v. Wynn Resorts Limited et al
Filing
171
ORDER Granting in Part 125 Motion to Dismiss, 128 Motion to Dismiss and 140 Motion to Dismiss. The Court Further Grants the 160 Motion for Leave to File surreply and the 164 Motion for Leave to File Supplemental Authority. If plaintiff chooses to file an Amended Complaint, it must be filed by 9/3/2021. Signed by Judge Andrew P. Gordon on 7/28/2021. (Copies have been distributed pursuant to the NEF - DRS)
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1
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
2
DISTRICT OF NEVADA
3 JOHN V. FERRIS, et al.,
4
Plaintiffs
5 v.
6 WYNN RESORTS LIMITED, et al.,
7
Defendants
Case No.: 2:18-cv-00479-APG-DJA
Order Granting in Part Motions to
Dismiss, Granting Motion for Leave to File
Surreply, and Granting Motion for Leave
to File Supplemental Authority
[ECF Nos. 125, 128, 140, 160, 164]
8
9
This is a securities fraud class-action suit against Wynn Resorts (the Company), Stephen
10 Wynn, and several Company officers and board members. Wynn Resorts develops, owns, and
11 operates resort casinos in Las Vegas, Macau, and Massachusetts. Stephen Wynn, the founder
12 and former CEO and chairman of the board, resigned in 2018 after a Wall Street Journal article
13 reported on allegations that he sexually assaulted and harassed several employees over the course
14 of more than a decade. On the day of the article’s publication, Company share prices dropped
15 10.12%. Lead plaintiffs John V. Ferris and JoAnn M. Ferris and named plaintiff Jeffrey Larsen
16 allege that Company officers, board members, and other senior-level management knew about or
17 recklessly disregarded the allegations of Wynn’s misconduct and concealed them.
18
The plaintiffs allege that in concealing the misconduct, the defendants made material
19 misrepresentations or omissions in violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of
20 1934 (the Exchange Act), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
21 Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5. They also assert a control-person liability claim alleging that
22 Wynn and certain other defendants violated Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act. The defendants
23 move to dismiss the second amended complaint (SAC) on many grounds. Defendants Wynn and
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1 Kimmarie Sinatra each move separately to dismiss and join in the other defendants’ motion to
2 dismiss. Defendant Stephen Cootey also joins in that motion to dismiss.
3
I grant in part the motions to dismiss because the plaintiffs have adequately alleged that
4 only two sets of statements are actionable: (1) the Company’s press releases responding to Elaine
5 Wynn’s allegations in her cross claim regarding serious misconduct and misuse of Company
6 resources by Stephen Wynn, and (2) the Company’s and Wynn’s statements responding to the
7 2018 Wall Street Journal article (WSJ article). So, I deny the motions as to those two sets of
8 statements. I grant the motions to dismiss claims against Sinatra and Matthew Maddox as to
9 Wynn’s separate statement responding to the WSJ article because they are not makers of the
10 statement. I grant the motions to dismiss with respect to the other categories of alleged
11 misrepresentations because the plaintiffs have not adequately alleged falsity.
12 I. Background
13
The SAC asserts claims against three groups of defendants. The individual defendants
14 are Stephen Wynn, Matthew Maddox (president and CEO), Kimmarie Sinatra (former executive
15 vice president, general counsel, and secretary), Stephen Cootey (former CFO, senior vice
16 president, and treasurer), and Craig Billings (CFO, principal accounting officer, and treasurer).
17 The director defendants are John Hagenbuch, Ray Irani, Jay Johnson, Robert Miller, Patricia
18 Mulroy, Clark Randt, Jr., Alvin Shoemaker, J. Edward Virtue, and D. Boone Wayson. Wynn
19 Resorts is the corporate defendant.
20
The alleged misrepresentations and omissions arise out of Wynn’s alleged sexual
21 misconduct, which the SAC alleges is a decades-long pattern. His alleged misconduct came to
22 light when the Wall Street Journal published an article detailing several allegations against him.
23 The plaintiffs allege that the defendants made misrepresentations in response to that article, as
2
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1 well as in statements involving the Company’s code of conduct, SEC filings, earnings calls, and
2 in response to Elaine Wynn’s cross claim in a lawsuit involving the Company and Kazuo Okada,
3 a former beneficial shareholder of the Company.
4
A. The Okada Litigation
5
The Okada litigation “arose out of the fact that the Company used the Code of Conduct to
6 find Kazuo Okada—an early investor and formerly the largest single shareholder of Wynn
7 Resorts—unsuitable to be a shareholder in the company,” leading to “his ouster from the Board
8 of Directors [and] Wynn Resorts redeeming his shares.” ECF No. 122 at 53. On March 28,
9 2016, as part of the Okada litigation, Elaine Wynn filed a cross claim alleging that Stephen
10 Wynn “made a multimillion dollar payment after apparently being threatened with allegations of
11 serious misconduct occurring on Company property against a Wynn Resorts employee.” Id. at
12 96. The cross claim alleged that Sinatra knew about the alleged settlement. Id. at 94-96. The
13 cross claim also stated that Wynn “misused Company resources to support his legendary
14 lifestyle[,]” without effective oversight by the board. Id. at 96.
15
In response to Elaine Wynn’s cross claim, the Company issued a press release the same
16 day, stating that “Ms. Wynn’s latest allegations regarding our Board, its composition and its
17 independence are simply not true and are rehashed from her previous, unfounded statements
18 made during her proxy campaign.” Id. at 97. The press release further stated, in relevant part:
19
20
21
22
Her allegations regarding the use of company assets are without merit. The use of
company assets is governed by many internal policies and is closely supervised both by
the Audit Committee[ ] . . . and our external auditors. As outlined in recent proxy
statements, Mr. Wynn reimburses the Company for his accommodations at the hotel, his
personal use of corporate aircraft and all other company assets subject to company policy.
These policies and any perquisites he receives have always been set forth in our proxy
statements.
23
3
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1
2
As a leader in a highly regulated industry, Wynn Resorts prides itself on its transparency
and full disclosure to regulators and shareholders. Allegations made by Ms. Wynn that
the company would hide any relevant activities from our regulators are patently false.
3 Id. at 98. Days later, Elaine Wynn issued a press release related to the allegations in her cross
4 claim. The Company responded with its own press release the next day, stating in relevant part:
5
6
7
8
Neither her nor the company’s recent filings contain any new facts or revelations, as she
so passionately claims. Ms. Wynn’s comments regarding our Board of Directors, their
independence and their actions in this matter are false. . . .
Her previous allegations that Mr. Wynn applied company resources for personal use are
false; Mr. Wynn’s use of company assets is fully audited by both the Board and our
external auditors, as well as completely outlined in our proxy statements.
9 Id. at 105. In addition to directly addressing Elaine Wynn’s allegations in press releases, the
10 Company also addressed the Okada litigation in various SEC filings. For example, in May 2016,
11 the Company filed a quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the first quarter. Id. at 106. It referenced
12 the Okada litigation and the possibility of “separate investigations” by other regulators, and
13 stated that “the Company believes that it is in full compliance with all applicable laws[.]” Id.
14 The SAC alleges that all of these statements are material misrepresentations or omissions.
15
B. The Wall Street Journal Article and Other Allegations
16
On January 26, 2018, the Wall Street Journal published an article revealing allegations of
17 Wynn’s sexual misconduct. Id. at 121. It stated that “dozens of people . . . who have worked at
18 Mr. Wynn’s casinos told of behavior that cumulatively would amount to a decades-long pattern
19 of sexual misconduct by Mr. Wynn.” Id. The article revealed that Wynn had paid a Company
20 employee $7.5 million “after being accused of forcing the employee to have sex with him.” Id.
21 On the day the article came out, the Company’s “share price fell $20.31, or 10.12%, to close at
22 $180.29.” Id. at 122. A few days later, the stock closed at $163.48. Id.
23
4
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1
In response to the WSJ article, Wynn denied the allegations, stating, “The idea that I ever
2 assaulted any woman is preposterous.” Id. He further stated, “The instigation of these
3 accusations is the continued work of my ex-wife Elaine Wynn, with whom I am involved in a
4 terrible and nasty lawsuit in which she is seeking a revised divorce settlement.” Id. The
5 Company also issued a statement in response to the article, stating in relevant part:
6
7
8
9
10
11
The recent allegations about Mr. Wynn reflect allegations made in court hearings by Mr.
Wynn’s ex-wife, Elaine Wynn, in her legal battle with him and the company. It is clear
that Mr. Wynn’s ex-wife has sought to use a negative public relations campaign to
achieve what she has been unable to do in the courtroom: tarnish the reputation of Mr.
Wynn in an attempt to pressure a revised divorce settlement from him. . . .
The Company requires all employees to receive annual anti-harassment training and
offers an independent hotline that any employee can use anonymously, without fear of
retaliation. Since the inception of the company, not one complaint was made to that
hotline regarding Mr. Wynn.
12 Id. at 123-24. The SAC alleges that both statements include material misrepresentations.
13
In reaction to the WSJ article, analysts speculated that Wynn’s departure could be
14 harmful to the Company. Id. at 126-28. Previously, the Company had addressed Wynn’s
15 importance to the Company in SEC filings stating that his “involvement . . . provides a distinct
16 advantage over other gaming enterprises”; the “loss of [Wynn] could significantly harm our
17 business”; his “talent, image and likeness are key to [the Company’s] continued success”; and he
18 has a “unique blend of entrepreneurial and managerial skills required to be successful in gaming
19 and certain regulatory and other extraordinary demands.” Id. at 57, 61-62.
20
The Company announced Wynn’s resignation on February 6, 2018. Id. at 130. On
21 February 12, the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department announced that in January and
22 February 2018, two women filed reports alleging that Wynn sexually assaulted them in the
23
5
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1 1970s. Id. at 133. On the day of that announcement, the Company’s share price closed at
2 $169.92, which is a 2% drop compared to the February 9 closing price. Id.
3
C. Regulatory Investigations
4
Soon after the WSJ article, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission’s (MGC)
5 Investigations and Enforcement Bureau (IEB) started an investigation “to determine whether
6 Wynn Resorts was qualified to hold a gaming license under Massachusetts law in light of the”
7 recent sexual misconduct allegations. Id. at 126. The Nevada Gaming Control Board (NGCB)
8 also started an investigation. Id. at 126. In 2013, the MGC had “issued a positive determination
9 of suitability” to Wynn Resorts. Id. n.15. Both Nevada and Massachusetts regulate gaming
10 licensees “to ensure that they—as well as their officers, directors, and employees—have the
11 necessary character, qualifications, and integrity to be suitable to hold that privilege so as not to
12 pose a threat to the public or the integrity” of gaming regulation. Id. at 16. Nevada gaming
13 regulators, for example, seek to require that gaming establishments “be operated in a manner
14 suitable to protect the public health, safety, morals, good order and general welfare of the
15 inhabitants of the State of Nevada.” Id. at 17 (quoting Nevada Gaming Commission Regulation
16 5.010). Unsuitable methods of operations are “grounds for disciplinary action.” Id. at 18.
17
18
1. The NGCB Complaint and Settlement
The NGCB filed a complaint against the Company and an accompanying settlement on
19 January 25, 2019. Id. at 137. The complaint “listed eight instances of sexual harassment claims
20 by employees against . . . Wynn that were not investigated by the Company, and further stated
21 that at least seven former executives knew of sexual harassment allegations made by female
22 employees and did not investigate.” Id. In the settlement, which Maddox signed, the Company
23 admitted many of the allegations in the complaint. Id.
6
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1
2
a. 2005 Settlement
The complaint details an allegation from 2005 that Wynn raped an employee and she
3 became pregnant. Id. The employee’s managers reported the allegation to the Company’s human
4 resources department, and Marc Schorr (former president and COO), Doreen Whennen (former
5 vice president of hotel operations), and Arte Nathan (former senior vice president and chief
6 human resources officer) all knew about the allegation but did not initiate an investigation. Id. at
7 137-38. Wynn reached a confidential settlement with the employee in which he paid $7.5
8 million through a separate legal entity funded by him. Id. at 138.
9
10
b. 2006 Settlement
According to the NGCB complaint, and as admitted by the Company, another employee
11 accused Wynn “of pressuring her into a nonconsensual sexual relationship that lasted from 2005
12 through her departure from [the Company] . . . in 2006[.]” Id. Wynn reached a confidential
13 settlement with the employee and her parents for $975,000 in December 2006. Id. Schorr,
14 Nathan, and Kevin Tourek (former vice president and general counsel) knew about these
15 allegations but failed to investigate. Id.
16
17
c. Other Allegations
In 2014, a former employee accused Wynn of sexual misconduct against her that
18 occurred in 2005. Id. at 139. The Company admitted the allegation that Tourek and Maurice
19 Wooden (former president) knew about the allegation. Id. But they did not start an investigation.
20 Id.
21
Also in 2014, three additional employees who worked at the Wynn Encore spa alleged
22 that Wynn sexually harassed them during massages he received in 2014. Id. They reported the
23
7
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1 allegations to Wynn management, but the allegations never reached human resources even
2 though they were reported to other management. Id.
3
An employee who worked as a flight attendant with LV Jet, LLC, a wholly owned Wynn
4 subsidiary, wrote a letter to Stephen Wynn in 2016 alleging that he had sexually harassed
5 multiple LV Jet flight attendants. Id. Wynn’s personal assistant forwarded the letter to Sinatra
6 and Stacie Michaels (former Wynn general counsel), but they did not report the allegations to
7 human resources or ensure that the allegations were reported according to the Company’s
8 policies and procedures. Id.
9
Lastly, the NGCB complaint alleged that Wynn engaged in sexual misconduct against
10 cocktail servers. Id. at 140. An employee allegedly facilitated sexual relationships between
11 Wynn and cocktail servers. Id. Nathan was aware of these rumors but did not investigate them.
12 Id. In 2007, Tourek received an email stating that a former executive “loves sleeping with
13 cocktail servers,” but he did not start an investigation. Id.
14
15
d. Admissions and Wynn’s Failure to Comply With Policy
The Company admitted that it and its executives failed to investigate in violation of
16 “NRS 463.170(8) and/or Nevada Gaming Commission Regulations 5.010, 5.011(1) and
17 5.011(1).” Id. It further admitted that these failures were “an unsuitable method of operation”
18 and “grounds for disciplinary action against” the Company. Id.
19
The NGCB complaint also summarized Wynn’s failures to comply with the Company’s
20 policies. Id. He did not follow policies and procedures applying to Wynn spas and requiring
21 attendance at annual compliance training. Id. He also did not follow policies on conflicts of
22 interests “for several settlements, including, but not limited to, the 2005 Settlement, and the 2006
23
8
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1 Settlement.” Id at 141. The Company failed to ensure compliance with policies, which
2 constituted a violation of Nevada law. Id.
3
4
2. The MGC Decision and Order
On April 30, 2019, the MGC issued its decision and order related to its investigation into
5 the suitability of Wynn MA, LLC and its qualifiers. Id. at 146. The order addressed many of the
6 findings discussed in the NGCB complaint. It stated that “it is difficult to fathom why the
7 existence of the allegations and settlements was not disclosed to the Commission in 2013 and
8 2014 during the RFA-1 and RFA-2 reviews.” Id. at 147. And it noted that Maddox knew about
9 allegations against Wynn once Elaine Wynn filed her 2016 cross claim. Id. at 148. Maddox then
10 asked Sinatra about the details of the settlement, and she told him “that there was a consensual
11 event that occurred between Mr. Wynn and a Company employee around the opening of the
12 Wynn Las Vegas and that the matter . . . had been settled.” Id. at 148-49. Maddox “never
13 initiated any sort of investigation or even asked Mr. Wynn himself for an explanation[,]” which
14 the MGC found “difficult to comprehend.” Id. at 149.
15
The MGC order also discussed a 2008 settlement that the Company reached after another
16 allegation of sexual misconduct against Wynn. Id. at 33. According to the SAC, a previously
17 terminated employee alleged, among other things, that “she had a previous ‘intimate
18 relationship’ with Mr. Wynn when she was his subordinate at Mirage Resorts.” Id. The
19 Company paid $700,000 for the settlement using corporate funds. Id. The SAC alleges that
20 Wynn and Tourek knew about the allegation and settlement, and Sinatra was present at two
21 meetings about it. Id. When Maddox saw the $700,000 settlement on a memo in 2008, “he was
22 told that the payment was paid to a former employee who had fallen on hard times and whom
23
9
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1 Steve and Elaine Wynn wanted to help.” Id. at 150. Maddox “did not pursue the matter further,”
2 according to the SAC. Id. at 34.
3
D. Relevant Procedural History
4
Judge Navarro previously dismissed the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, finding that
5 it did not sufficiently allege material misrepresentations. ECF No. 119. The plaintiffs then filed
6 the SAC, and the defendants now move to dismiss. The plaintiffs move for leave to file a
7 surreply, and the defendants move for leave to file supplemental authority in support of their
8 motion to dismiss.
9 II. Requests for Judicial Notice
10
The defendants request that I take judicial notice of 29 exhibits, which they argue are
11 either incorporated by reference into the SAC, public SEC filings, or matters of public record.
12 ECF Nos. 128; 131. Sinatra requests judicial notice of the April 30, 2019 MGC decision and
13 order and 10 Form 4s filed with the SEC. ECF Nos. 125; 127 at 2. The plaintiffs do not oppose
14 the defendants’ requests for judicial notice and note only that “judicial notice is limited to the
15 existence and terms of the record.” ECF No. 146 at 27. The plaintiffs state that the MGC order,
16 the NGCB complaints, and the NGCB settlement are incorporated by reference into the SAC.
17 ECF No. 146 at 19 & n.7.
18
A. Incorporation by Reference
19
The defendants argue that exhibits 3-5, 10-14, and 21 are quoted or referenced in the
20 SAC. These exhibits include: (3) the April 30, 2019 MGC order, (4) a January 28, 2019 Wynn
21 Resorts press release, (5) a February 26, 2019 settlement between the NGCB and Wynn Resorts,
22 (10) a March 28, 2016 Wynn Resorts press release, (11) an April 5, 2016 Wynn Resorts press
23 release, (12) a January 26, 2018 CNN Business article, (13) the March 28, 2016 Elaine Wynn
10
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1 cross claim filed in the Okada litigation in Nevada state court, (14) the WSJ article, and (21) the
2 Wynn Resorts Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, amended as of August 1, 2016.
3
A document “may be incorporated by reference into a complaint if the plaintiff refers
4 extensively to the document or the document forms the basis of the plaintiff’s claim.” United
5 States v. Ritchie, 342 F.3d 903, 908 (9th Cir. 2003). Under Ritchie, “the mere mention of the
6 existence of a document is insufficient to incorporate the contents of a document.” Khoja v.
7 Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc., 899 F.3d 988, 1002 (9th Cir. 2018) (quotation omitted). Here,
8 exhibits 3-5, 10-14, 1 and 21 are extensively quoted or referenced in the SAC. I find that these
9 documents are incorporated by reference into the SAC. Additionally, the plaintiffs contend that
10 the NGCB complaint, NGCB settlement, and NGCB Wynn complaint are incorporated by
11 reference into the SAC. The SAC extensively references them, so I consider them incorporated.
12
B. Judicial Notice
13
The defendants propose two categories of documents that are judicially noticeable.
14 Under Federal Rule of Evidence 201(b), courts “may judicially notice a fact that is not subject to
15 reasonable dispute.” “A fact is ‘not subject to reasonable dispute’ if it is ‘generally known,’ or
16 ‘can be accurately and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
17 questioned.’” Khoja, 899 F.3d at 999 (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(1)-(2)). Thus, courts “may
18 take judicial notice of matters of public record,” but courts “cannot take judicial notice of
19 disputed facts contained in such public records.” Id. (quotation and citation omitted).
20 Additionally, a court must consider and identify “which fact or facts it is noticing from” a given
21 document. Id.
22
23
1
I only incorporate exhibit 12 by reference assuming that it is the same January 26, 2018 CNN
article referenced in the SAC. ECF No. 122 at 122 n.14.
11
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1
First, the defendants argue that exhibits 1, 4, 6, 10-12, 14, and 21 are public news articles,
2 press releases, or trading information. I have already incorporated exhibits 4, 10-12, 14, and 21,
3 so only exhibits 1 and 6 remain relevant for purposes of judicial notice. The defendants have not
4 clarified why they seek judicial notice of these documents, or what facts they request that I
5 judicially notice. They cite case law within the Ninth Circuit, but not Khoja or cases coming
6 after Khoja, which “aim[ed] . . . to clarify when it is proper to take judicial notice of facts in
7 documents[.]” 899 F.3d at 999. I deny the defendants’ request as to those documents.
8
Second, they argue that exhibits 14-20 and 22-27 were filed with the SEC and exhibits 2,
9 7-9, 13, and 28 are publicly filed court documents. I have incorporated exhibits 13 and 14 into
10 the SAC, so I consider the remaining exhibits: 7-9, 15-20, 22-27, and 28. Again, the defendants
11 do not explain why they seek judicial notice of these documents or what facts they want
12 judicially noticed. “Judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs,” so I will not
13 scour the defendants’ brief for explanation. United States v. Dunkel, 927 F.2d 955, 956 (7th Cir.
14 1991). However, the defendants’ motion to dismiss discusses stock trading histories at length in
15 relation to scienter. I still decline the requests for judicial notice as to documents relevant to
16 stock trading histories because even if I consider them, they do not impact the scienter analysis,
17 as discussed below. I deny the defendants’ request for judicial notice as to these documents. For
18 the same reason, I also deny Sinatra’s request for judicial notice of the same type of documents.
19 III. Motions to Dismiss
20
Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act prohibits the use of “any manipulative or deceptive
21 device or contrivance” related to the purchase or sale of securities when that use violates the
22 regulations promulgated by the SEC. 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b). Under SEC Rule 10b-5, it is unlawful
23 for any person “[t]o make any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state a material
12
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1 fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under
2 which they were made, not misleading.” 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5(b). “To recover damages for
3 violations of section 10(b) and Rule 10b–5, a plaintiff must prove (1) a material
4 misrepresentation or omission by the defendant; (2) scienter; (3) a connection between the
5 misrepresentation or omission and the purchase or sale of a security; (4) reliance upon the
6 misrepresentation or omission; (5) economic loss; and (6) loss causation.” Halliburton Co. v.
7 Erica P. John Fund, Inc., 573 U.S. 258, 267 (2014) (quotation omitted).
8
At the pleading stage, a complaint alleging violations of Section 10(b) must meet the
9 heightened pleading requirements for fraud claims under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b)
10 and the “exacting pleading requirements” of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
11 (PSLRA). In re Quality Sys., Inc. Sec. Litig., 865 F.3d 1130, 1140 (9th Cir. 2017) (quotation
12 omitted). Rule 9(b) requires that the complaint “state with particularity the circumstances
13 constituting fraud.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). The PSLRA requires that the complaint “state with
14 particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state
15 of mind.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2)(A).
16
A. Material Misrepresentations or Omissions
17
The defendants argue that the plaintiffs failed to plead any actionable false statement
18 because the alleged misrepresentations are inactionable puffery or are not pleaded with
19 particularity. “An actionable material misrepresentation or omission has two components.”
20 Retail Wholesale & Dep’t Store Union Loc. 338 Ret. Fund v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 845 F.3d
21 1268, 1274 (9th Cir. 2017). First, the complaint must “specify each statement alleged to have
22 been misleading, [and] the reason or reasons why the statement is misleading.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u–
23 4(b)(1). “Second, applying an objective standard, that misrepresentation or omission must have
13
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1 been material to investors.” Retail Wholesale, 845 F.3d at 1274 (citing 15 U.S.C. § 78u–
2 4(b)(1)(A)–(B)). A misrepresentation or omission is material when “there is a substantial
3 likelihood that [it] would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having significantly
4 altered the total mix of information made available for the purpose of decisionmaking by
5 stockholders concerning their investments.” Id. (quotation omitted).
6
The defendants primarily argue the plaintiffs have not adequately alleged that the
7 statements were false or misleading. “Falsity is alleged when a plaintiff points to defendant’s
8 statements that directly contradict what the defendant knew at that time.” Khoja, 899 F.3d at
9 1008. And a “statement is misleading if it would give a reasonable investor the impression of a
10 state of affairs that differs in a material way from the one that actually exists.” Retail Wholesale,
11 845 F.3d at 1275 (quotation omitted).
12
13
14
There are seven categories of alleged misrepresentations or omissions.
1. Responses to the WSJ Article
The plaintiffs allege that Wynn’s and the Company’s responses to the WSJ article are
15 material misrepresentations. First, Wynn stated, “The idea that I ever assaulted any woman is
16 preposterous.” ECF No. 122 at 122. Wynn argues that this statement is not false because he is
17 not required to admit wrongdoing and none of the accusations against him have been proven
18 true. However, the statement would give a reasonable investor the impression that the
19 allegations against Wynn were “preposterous,” when the SAC alleges several instances of sexual
20 assault by Wynn. Taking the allegations in the SAC as true, the plaintiffs have sufficiently
21 alleged the falsity of the statement at this stage. I deny Wynn’s motion on this basis.
22
Second, the Company’s response cast the allegations as part of a “negative public
23 relations campaign” by Elaine Wynn:
14
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1
2
3
The recent allegations about Mr. Wynn reflect allegations made in court hearings by Mr.
Wynn’s ex-wife, Elaine Wynn, in her legal battle with him and the company. It is clear
that Mr. Wynn’s ex-wife has sought to use a negative public relations campaign to
achieve what she has been unable to do in the courtroom: tarnish the reputation of Mr.
Wynn in an attempt to pressure a revised divorce settlement from him.
4 Id. The plaintiffs assert that this statement is attributable to Wynn, Sinatra, and Maddox. The
5 defendants argue that the statement is puffery and not capable of objective verification. They
6 further argue it is not false because it did not deny the misconduct described in the WSJ article.
7 At this early stage, the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged the falsity of this statement because a
8 reasonable investor would get the impression that the allegations are false and fabricated by
9 Elaine Wynn as part of her “negative public relations campaign” to “tarnish” Stephen Wynn’s
10 reputation and “pressure a revised divorce settlement from him.” The SAC alleges that a
11 materially different state of affairs existed because the Company had received multiple
12 complaints about Wynn’s sexual misconduct by that point and various Company executives were
13 aware of that. I thus deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss on this basis.
14
Third, the Company’s response described a reporting hotline available to Company
15 employees: “The Company requires all employees to receive annual anti-harassment training and
16 offers an independent hotline that any employee can use anonymously, without fear of
17 retaliation. Since the inception of the company, not one complaint was made to that hotline
18 regarding Mr. Wynn.” Id. at 124. The defendants argue it is true that the Company had a hotline
19 that any employee could use anonymously. But the SAC alleges that according to the IEB
20 report, while a hotline did exist the instructions for it “focused on the reporting of financial and
21 accounting misinformation and misconduct under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and did not direct
22 employees to utilize the hotline for reports of sexual harassment.” Id. at 125. Moreover, the IEB
23 report states that “[a]fter the publication of the WSJ article, the Company re-wrote the
15
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1 instructions for the hotline to include instructions for the reporting of sexual harassment.” Id.
2 The plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that this statement is false. It gives a reasonable investor
3 the impression that a specific process for reporting sexual misconduct on the hotline existed
4 “[s]ince the inception of the company,” even though the SAC alleges the hotline was for
5 reporting financial misinformation. It also gives the impression that the Company received no
6 documented sexual misconduct complaints about Wynn through this supposedly established
7 mechanism for receiving such complaints, when according to the SAC, the Company received
8 multiple sexual misconduct complaints against him. I therefore deny the defendants’ motions to
9 dismiss as to these statements. 2
10
2. Responses to the Allegations in Elaine Wynn’s Cross Claim
11
The plaintiffs allege that the defendants made material misrepresentations in response to
12 Elaine Wynn’s cross claim in the Okada litigation and her press release regarding the same. The
13 plaintiffs assert that the misrepresentations are attributable to the Company, Wynn, Maddox,
14 Sinatra, and Cootey. I divide the statements into three actionable categories: denials of Elaine
15 Wynn’s allegations, the use of Company assets, and the Company’s full disclosure to regulators.
16
First, the statements include broad denials of the cross claim allegations. This includes
17 statements such as, “Ms. Wynn’s allegations regarding our Board, its composition and its
18 independence are simply not true and are rehashed from her previous, unfounded statements
19 made during her proxy campaign.” Id. at 97. And, “Neither her nor the company’s recent filings
20
21
2
The defendants appear to argue that because the WSJ article was public, they cannot be liable
for omitting information about the allegations in their response to it. But their response included
22
affirmative misrepresentations giving investors the impression that the allegations were
fabricated by Elaine Wynn and that the Company never received a complaint about Wynn on its
23
hotline meant for sexual misconduct complaints. The defendants’ argument is undeveloped, and
the only case they cited is not on point.
16
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1 contain any new facts or revelations, as she so passionately claims. Ms. Wynn’s comments
2 regarding our Board of Directors, their independence and their actions in this matter are false.”
3 Id. at 105. The defendants contend that these statements are too vague to be false and do not
4 explicitly address Stephen Wynn’s misconduct. But the SAC has sufficiently pleaded the falsity
5 of these statements at this early stage. While the statements do not explicitly refer to Wynn’s
6 alleged sexual misconduct, they refer generally to Elaine Wynn’s “allegations regarding [the]
7 Board,” of which Stephen Wynn was the chairman. And they refer generally to Elaine Wynn’s
8 “recent filings” and “comments regarding our Board of Directors.” These statements would give
9 a reasonable investor the impression that the Company denied all of Elaine Wynn’s allegations,
10 which addressed Stephen Wynn’s “serious misconduct” against an employee and a resultant
11 multi-million dollar settlement. The SAC alleges that in reality, by the time this statement was
12 made, the Company had received multiple complaints about Wynn’s sexual misconduct, and
13 multiple Company executives knew about it. I therefore deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss
14 on this basis.
15
Second, the Company made statements about the use of Company assets. One press
16 release stated, “Her allegations regarding the use of company assets are without merit.” Id. at 98.
17 The other press release stated, “Her previous allegations that Mr. Wynn applied company
18 resources for personal use are false; Mr. Wynn’s use of company assets is fully audited by both
19 the Board and our external auditors, as well as completely outlined in our proxy statements.” Id.
20 at 105. Taking the SAC’s allegations as true, the plaintiffs have sufficiently pleaded the falsity
21 of these statements. According to the SAC, a former employee alleged in part that “she had a
22 previous ‘intimate relationship’ with Mr. Wynn when she was his subordinate at Mirage
23 Resorts,” and the Company reached a settlement with her for $700,000 paid with corporate
17
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1 funds. Id. at 33. The defendants argue that no investor would infer anything related to the 2008
2 settlement because Elaine Wynn’s cross claim referred to the 2005 settlement, but Stephen Wynn
3 allegedly used Company funds for the 2008 settlement. This argument is unconvincing because
4 the challenged statements give reasonable investors the impression that Stephen Wynn did not
5 use Company resources for his personal use, but at this stage, the SAC adequately alleges that he
6 did. I thus deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss as to this set of statements.
7
Third, the Company’s press release discussed the Company’s full disclosure to
8 regulators: “Allegations made by Ms. Wynn that the company would hide any relevant activities
9 from our regulators are patently false.” Id. at 98. The defendants contend the plaintiffs have not
10 shown that the relevant defendants knew in March 2016 that the misconduct allegations should
11 have been disclosed to the MGC. 3 But the statement is false, for purposes of the motions to
12 dismiss. It denies that “that the company would hide any relevant activities from [its]
13 regulators,” but the SAC adequately alleges that the Company did not disclose Wynn’s alleged
14 misconduct to regulators, even when the MGC emailed Sinatra and others to ask for documents
15 involving “the high profile issues that Mr. Wynn and WR are dealing or have dealt with in the
16 past. These matters may involve litigation and personal relationships as well as business
17 matters.” ECF No. 133-3 at 19. The MGC’s email further stated that “any, or all, of them may
18 be viewed as suitability related issues.” Id. The SAC’s allegations, taken as true, further show
19 that several executives at the Company knew about Wynn’s alleged misconduct but did not
20
21
22
3
The defendants also point out that according to the MGC order, Tourek “spoke with Chair A.G.
Burnett of the [NGCB] about [Elaine Wynn’s] cross-claim” before it was filed, but that is vague
23
and does not mean the Company properly disclosed the allegations. Id. at 32. Moreover, the
MGC order states that the Company did not report the cross claim to the MGC. Id. at 173.
18
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1 disclose it. 4 See, e.g., ECF No. 122 at 49, 51-52, 137-140. I have considered the defendant’s
2 additional arguments and they do not change the outcome. The plaintiffs’ allegations are
3 sufficient at this early stage, so I deny the defendants’ motion to dismiss on this basis.
4
Last, the defendants argue that other statements in the press releases are too general to be
5 false. For example, the Company stated that “[n]one of what Wynn Resorts has accomplished
6 would be possible without its extraordinary employees and the sense of family and community
7 that Mr. Wynn has created.” Id. at 98. These statements are not actionable because they are not
8 capable of being objectively false. I grant the defendants’ motion with respect to these
9 statements.
10
3. Code of Conduct
11
The plaintiffs allege that several statements in or regarding the Company’s code of
12 conduct are material misrepresentations. The Company’s code opened with a letter from Wynn
13 stating that “[o]ur goal is not just to comply with the laws, rules and regulations that apply to our
14 business; we also continuously strive to abide by high standards of ethical business conduct.” Id.
15 at 41. The letter also states that the code “is not to be ignored or taken lightly. All employees,
16 officers and directors, agents and representatives of Wynn Resorts and its affiliates must comply
17 with the Code,” which was “important[t] to the success of the Company.” Id. The code states
18 that “[h]arassment or discrimination of any sort will not be tolerated[,]” and “[i]f you know of or
19 suspect a violation of applicable laws, rules or regulations, the Code, or the Company’s related
20 policies, you must immediately report that information as described in Section 1.4 of this Code.”
21 Id. at 46-47. “All reported violations of the Code will be taken seriously and promptly
22
23
4
The defendants’ argument about their mental states in making the statements appears more
relevant to scienter. As explained below, I have concluded that there is a strong inference of
scienter as to each defendant who made these statements.
19
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1 investigated,” and “[t]he Company intends to use every reasonable effort to prevent the
2 occurrence of conduct not in compliance with the Code and to halt any such conduct that may
3 occur as soon as reasonably possible after its discovery.” Id. 5 Additionally, a 2013 10-K states
4 that the code is “applicable to all directors, officers and employees,” and “[i]n the event we
5 determine to amend or waive certain provisions of this code of ethics, we intend to disclose such
6 amendments or waivers on our website.” Id. at 59. 10-Ks from subsequent years also made this
7 statement. Id. at 74, 86, 109.
8
The plaintiffs allege that these statements are misrepresentations because the Company
9 did not apply these policies to Wynn’s alleged misconduct. They further allege that Wynn’s
10 statement about the code’s importance was misleading because he considered the code
11 “counterintuitive” to “good management” of the Company, did not apply the code’s policies to
12 his alleged misconduct, and wanted to change the code to allow relationships between employees
13 and supervisors. The defendants contend the statements are not actionable because they are
14 aspirational and not materially false.
15
The statements involving the code of conduct are not actionable because they are
16 aspirational, and even if there were any affirmative misrepresentation, it could not be material.
17 Aspirational statements in a code of conduct are not misleading. Retail Wholesale, 845 F.3d at
18 1276. And the statements are not material because “[i]t cannot be said that there is a substantial
19 likelihood that the [code] and related representations altered the total mix of information made
20
21
5
The SAC alleges that the NGCB complaint described a Company policy supplementing the
code, which covered sexual harassment, a personal relationships policy, and how to investigate
22
violations. Id. at 47-48. However, the defendants argue that this sexual harassment policy “is not
public or otherwise published for investors to read.” ECF No. 128 at 14 n.7. The plaintiffs do
23
not dispute that point, so I will not consider statements from the separate sexual harassment
policy because the statements were not available to investors.
20
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1 available for use in stockholder decisionmaking.” Id. at 1277 (quotation omitted). I grant the
2 defendant’s motion to dismiss with respect to these statements.
3
4
4. Statements Regarding Full Compliance With All Applicable Laws
In SEC filings, the Company addressed the Okada litigation and its belief “that it is in
5 full compliance with all applicable laws”:
6
7
8
9
Other regulators may pursue separate investigations into Wynn Resorts’ compliance with
applicable laws arising from the allegations in the matters described above and in
response to the Counterclaim and other litigation filed by Mr. Okada suggesting
improprieties in connection with Wynn Resorts’ donation to the University of Macau.
While Wynn Resorts believes that it is in full compliance with all applicable laws, any
such investigations could result in actions by regulators against Wynn Resorts.
10 ECF No. 122 at 63. The plaintiffs contend this statement includes a material omission and
11 “created a false impression that Defendants were ‘in full compliance with all applicable laws.’”
12 Id. at 64. The plaintiffs assert that the statement failed to disclose that the Company knowingly
13 failed to investigate and report allegations of sexual misconduct. The defendants argue this
14 omission theory fails because the statements “have nothing to do with Mr. Wynn,” so a duty to
15 disclose did not arise. ECF No. 157 at 11. They further argue that the statement only refers to
16 the Okada litigation, to which the plaintiffs respond that at a minimum, the same statements
17 issued after Elaine Wynn’s 2016 cross claim could be interpreted as applying to the misconduct
18 she alleged.
19
When proceeding under an omission theory, “[t]he investor must identify particular (and
20 material) facts going to the basis for the issuer’s opinion—facts about the inquiry the issuer did
21 or did not conduct or the knowledge it did or did not have—whose omission makes the opinion
22 statement at issue misleading to a reasonable person reading the statement fairly and in context.”
23 Omnicare, Inc. v. Laborers Dist. Council Const. Indus. Pension Fund, 575 U.S. 175, 194
21
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1 (2015). 6 “[T]he complaint must . . . call into question the issuer’s basis for offering the opinion.”
2 Id. Under the Ninth Circuit’s standard, which is “substantively similar[,]” plaintiffs may
3 establish falsity if “the speaker is aware of undisclosed facts tending seriously to undermine the
4 statement’s accuracy.” City of Dearborn Heights Act 345 Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v. Align Tech.,
5 Inc., 856 F.3d 605, 616 (9th Cir. 2017) (citation omitted).
6
The challenged statement is not “misleading to a reasonable person reading the statement
7 fairly and in context.” Omnicare, 575 U.S. at 194. In context, the statement does not give the
8 impression that the Company is in full compliance with all laws generally because it is
9 specifically discussing the Okada litigation. As to the plaintiffs’ argument that these statements
10 were at least misleading once the cross claim was filed, they are still not misleading because they
11 refer only to “the Counterclaim and other litigation filed by Mr. Okada suggesting improprieties
12 in connection with Wynn Resorts’ donation to the University of Macau.” ECF No. 122 at 63. I
13 grant the motion to dismiss with respect to these statements.
14
5. Statements Regarding Regulatory Risks
15
The plaintiffs allege that in statements describing the consequences of violating gaming
16 laws, the defendants “failed to disclose that Wynn had already engaged in a pattern of sexual
17 misconduct that violated those laws.” ECF No. 146 at 43. The defendants argue that the
18 statements are inactionable because none of them “warranted anything about Mr. Wynn’s
19 conduct or the Company’s compliance with gaming regulations.” ECF No. 128 at 15.
20
The challenged statements are not actionable because the alleged omission does not make
21 the statements misleading. Federal securities laws require disclosure of material information
22
23
6
Omnicare’s reasoning applies to “the falsity pleading standard for Section 10(b) claims based
on opinion statements.” City of Dearborn Heights Act 345 Police & Fire Ret. Sys. v. Align Tech.,
Inc., 856 F.3d 605, 616 (9th Cir. 2017).
22
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1 “only when necessary ‘to make . . . statements made, in the light of the circumstances under
2 which they were made, not misleading.’” Matrixx Initiatives, Inc. v. Siracusano, 563 U.S. 27, 44
3 (2011) (quoting 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b–5(b)). The statements merely describe possible measures
4 regulators could take if they determine that the Company violated a regulation, so the omission
5 of Wynn’s alleged pattern of misconduct does not make the statements misleading. I therefore
6 grant the defendants’ motion to dismiss on this basis.
7
8
6. Statements Regarding Wynn’s Skills and Possible Departure
The plaintiffs further assert that the defendants made misleading statements related to
9 Wynn’s skills, unique value, and possible departure because they omitted “the huge liability
10 posed by his alleged misconduct.” ECF No. 146 at 45. The alleged false statements describe his
11 “vision, direction, and the public’s association of his name and likeness with [the] casino” as
12 “integral components of [the Company’s] success.” ECF No. 122 at 61. Additional statements
13 describe his “unique blend of . . . skills required to be successful in gaming and certain
14 regulatory and other extraordinary demands,” and state that “[t]he loss of Stephen A. Wynn
15 could significantly harm [the Company’s] business.” Id. at 57, 62. The defendants argue that it is
16 true that Wynn was important to the Company and the statements did not imply that Wynn had
17 not engaged in misconduct.
18
The challenged statements are not misleading. In Berson v. Applied Signal Technology,
19 Inc., the defendants touted a backlog of uncompleted contracts even though it contained delayed
20 work “at serious risk of being cancelled altogether.” 527 F.3d 982, 986 (9th Cir. 2008). While
21 the statement referenced the customers’ rights to cancel or modify contracts, it was misleading
22 because it spoke “entirely of as-yet-unrealized risks and contingencies” and did not “alert[ ] the
23 reader that some of these risks may already have come to fruition.” Id. Here, the challenged
23
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1 statements only describe Wynn’s value and possible departure in a general manner and did not
2 create a duty to disclose his alleged misconduct. There is no suggestion that he did not engage in
3 misconduct that would pose a risk to his ability to stay at the Company. I therefore grant the
4 defendants’ motion to dismiss as to these statements. 7
5
7. Statements Regarding Corporate Culture and Other Topics
6
Last, the plaintiffs allege that statements regarding corporate culture are misleading.
7 These statements refer to topics such as the Company’s commitment to diversity and Wynn’s
8 comfort with the Company’s “pace of . . . growth” in Massachusetts. ECF No. 122 at 80, 116.
9 The defendants argue that these statements are puffery, and I agree. I grant the defendants’
10 motion to dismiss on this basis.
11
B. Whether the Post-Purchase Statements Are Actionable
12
The defendants argue that even if the statements in response to the WSJ article were
13 false, they are not actionable because they were made after the plaintiffs had purchased their
14 shares in the Company. They argue that because reliance on a misstatement in connection with a
15 purchase or sale of securities is an element of a Rule 10b-5 claim, actionable statements must
16 occur before investors purchase the securities. The plaintiffs respond that the post-purchase
17 statements are actionable because they are suing “on behalf of a class of purchasers allegedly
18 defrauded over a period of time by similar misrepresentations.” ECF No. 146 at 38. They
19 contend that the Company’s “January 2018 denials continued the same theme as the 2016 Press
20 Releases disputing the credibility of allegations of misconduct as being instigated by Elaine
21 Wynn to gain an unfair edge in her divorce.” Id. at 37.
22
23
7
The defendants also argue that the statements regarding Wynn’s possible departure are
forward-looking and thus protected by the PSLRA’s safe harbor provision. Given my conclusion
that the statements are not misleading, I need not consider that argument.
24
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1
“As a matter of law, conduct actionable under Rule 10b–5 must occur before investors
2 purchase the securities.” Binder v. Gillespie, 184 F.3d 1059, 1066 (9th Cir. 1999) (quotation
3 omitted). But when the alleged misrepresentations are part of a “common course of conduct,”
4 “the questions common to all investors will be relatively substantial.” Blackie v. Barrack, 524
5 F.2d 891, 902-03 (9th Cir. 1975) (quotation omitted). A “common course of conduct” is alleged
6 where “misrepresentations are interrelated, interdependent, and cumulative.” Id. at 903
7 (quotation omitted). For example, “the test is more than satisfied when a series of financial
8 reports uniformly misrepresent a particular item in the financial statement.” Id.
9
At this early stage, the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that the 2018 statements were
10 part of a common scheme. They have alleged that the 2018 and 2016 statements deny some of
11 the same misconduct allegations by portraying them as fabricated by Elaine Wynn. The issue
12 raised by the defendants may be more relevant at the class certification stage, and if so, it can be
13 addressed at that time by naming an additional plaintiff. But at this stage, I deny the defendants’
14 motion to dismiss on this basis.
15
C. Whether the Defendants Are the Maker of a Statement
16
The defendants next argue the SAC does not allege that any individual defendant was the
17 maker of a statement under Janus Capital Group, Inc. v. First Derivative Traders, 564 U.S. 135
18 (2011), because the SAC does not allege with specificity that any individual defendant had
19 ultimate authority over a statement. The plaintiffs respond that defendants Wynn Resorts, Wynn,
20 Sinatra, and Maddox are liable for the statements in the 2016 press releases and the response to
21 the WSJ article. The plaintiffs assert that Cootey is also liable for the 2016 press releases. They
22 argue that the SAC sufficiently alleges that these defendants were senior executives involved in
23
25
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1 day-to-day affairs, their statements responded to allegations made against Wynn, Sinatra, and the
2 Company, and Sinatra played a significant role in drafting these statements.
3
In Janus, the Supreme Court held that a person can be held liable under Section 10(b) of
4 the Exchange Act only if he or she is the “maker of a statement.” Id. at 142-43. “[T]he maker of
5 a statement is the entity with authority over the content of the statement and whether and how to
6 communicate it.” Id. at 143. “One who prepares or publishes a statement on behalf of another is
7 not its maker. And in the ordinary case, attribution within a statement or implicit from
8 surrounding circumstances is strong evidence that a statement was made by—and only by—the
9 party to whom it is attributed.” Id. at 143-44.
10
For purposes of the motions to dismiss, the SAC sufficiently alleges that Wynn, Sinatra,
11 and Maddox made the Company’s statements in the response to the cross claim and WSJ article,
12 and Cootey also was a maker of the Company’s statements in response to the cross claim. The
13 SAC alleges that these defendants were among the Company’s most senior executives, were
14 involved in the Company’s day-to-day affairs, and “were provided with copies of the Company’s
15 SEC filings and press releases . . . prior to or shortly after their issuance and had the ability and
16 opportunity to prevent their issuance or to cause them to be corrected.” ECF No. 122 at 12, 159,
17 163, 166, 169. Attribution to these defendants is also implicit from the circumstances because
18 the statements directly responded to allegations against the Company, Wynn, and Sinatra. As to
19 Cootey, he was the CFO when the 2016 press releases also responded to allegations of improper
20 use of corporate assets. Therefore, I deny the defendants’ motions to dismiss on this basis.
21
As to Wynn’s statement in which he separately responded to the WSJ article, the SAC
22 sufficiently alleges that Wynn made the statement, but it does not sufficiently allege that Sinatra
23 and Maddox were makers of that statement. His statement was written using the first person, and
26
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1 it is not plausible from the SAC’s allegations that Maddox and Sinatra would have authority over
2 the content of Wynn’s own statement refuting misconduct allegations against him. The
3 allegation that Sinatra was involved in its preparation is not enough to render her a maker of the
4 statement. The SAC alleges that the Company gave Wynn’s statement to the WSJ and that
5 Company employees participated in drafting it, so the SAC sufficiently alleges that the Company
6 also made the statement because Wynn had apparent authority to make it. See Glickenhaus &
7 Co. v. Household Int’l, Inc., 787 F.3d 408, 426 (7th Cir. 2015) (“Nothing in Janus undid the
8 long-standing rule that [a] corporation is liable for statements by employees who have apparent
9 authority to make them.” (quotation omitted)). For similar reasons, the Company is also liable as
10 a maker of the other statements at issue. I thus grant in part the defendants’ motions in that the
11 SAC does not sufficiently allege that Sinatra and Maddox were makers of Wynn’s response to
12 the WSJ article, but I deny the motions with respect to the other statements. 8
13
D. Scienter
14
The defendants argue that the plaintiffs fail to plead scienter. Plaintiffs “must prove that
15 the defendant acted with scienter, a mental state embracing intent to deceive, manipulate, or
16 defraud.” Tellabs, Inc. v. Makor Issues & Rts., Ltd., 551 U.S. 308, 319 (2007) (quotation
17 omitted). To show that a defendant acted with scienter, “a complaint must allege that the
18 defendants made false or misleading statements either intentionally or with deliberate
19 recklessness.” Zucco Partners, LLC v. Digimarc Corp., 552 F.3d 981, 991 (9th Cir. 2009), as
20 amended (Feb. 10, 2009) (quotation omitted). “‘[D]eliberate recklessness’ is more than
21 ‘mere recklessness or a motive to commit fraud.’” Nguyen v. Endologix, Inc., 962 F.3d 405, 414
22
23
8
The plaintiffs argue that even if Sinatra was not the maker of a statement, she is still liable
under Rules 10b-5(a) and (c). However, Sinatra and the defendants moved to dismiss only the
plaintiffs’ Rule 10b-5(b) claims, so I do not consider the plaintiffs’ argument.
27
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1 (9th Cir. 2020) (quoting Schueneman v. Arena Pharm., Inc., 840 F.3d 698, 705 (9th Cir. 2016)).
2 Rather, “deliberate recklessness is an extreme departure from the standards of ordinary care . . .
3 which presents a danger of misleading buyers or sellers that is either known to the defendant or
4 is so obvious that the actor must have been aware of it.” Schueneman, 840 F.3d at 705 (quotation
5 omitted).
6
Under the PSLRA, the plaintiffs must “state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong
7 inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind.” 15 U.S.C. § 78u-4(b)(2)(A).
8 This “strong inference” requirement “is an exacting pleading obligation.” Nguyen, 962 F.3d at
9 414 (quotation omitted). Under this standard, “a complaint will survive a motion to dismiss
10 ‘only if a reasonable person would deem the inference of scienter cogent and at least as
11 compelling as any opposing inference one could draw from the facts alleged.’” Id. (quoting
12 Tellabs, 551 U.S. at 324). To assess whether the SAC meets this standard, I “must ask: When
13 the allegations are accepted as true and taken collectively, would a reasonable person deem the
14 inference of scienter at least as strong as any opposing inference?” Tellabs, 551 U.S. at 326.
15 Because only two sets of misrepresentations remain, I address only the relevant allegations of
16 scienter.
17
1. Allegations Regarding the Defendants’ Awareness of the Alleged
Misconduct
18
19
The plaintiffs allege that Wynn, as the alleged perpetrator, knew about his own conduct.
20 They also allege that Maddox, Sinatra, and Cootey knew about at least some of Wynn’s alleged
21 misconduct.
22 / / / /
23 / / / /
28
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1
2
a. Wynn
The SAC pleads a strong inference of Wynn’s scienter. He allegedly engaged in the
3 sexual misconduct at the center of the alleged fraud, and most of the misconduct alleged by the
4 SAC happened long before the 2016 press releases. The SAC alleges that he knew or recklessly
5 disregarded that he and the Company did not investigate his alleged misconduct and instead
6 concealed it. ECF No. 122 at 160. The SAC further alleges that his actions violated the
7 Company’s code of conduct and gaming regulations on suitability. Id. To settle some of the
8 allegations, Wynn allegedly obtained assistance from lawyers, created an entity to make
9 settlement payments, and paid settlements that sometimes used his personal funds. Id. It is
10 reasonable to infer that Wynn knew about or recklessly disregarded the Company’s failure to
11 investigate and disclose the alleged misconduct to regulators, given his status as Wynn Resorts’
12 co-founder, CEO, and chairman of the board. Id. at 159. The Company was “founder-led.” Id.
13 The SAC thus pleads a strong inference of scienter as to Wynn.
14
15
b. Maddox
The SAC also pleads a strong inference of scienter as to Maddox. It alleges that he was
16 aware of or recklessly disregarded allegations of Wynn’s sexual misconduct and the Company’s
17 failure to investigate and disclose the allegations. First, in 2008 or 2009, when Maddox was the
18 CFO, he saw and asked about an entry on a quarterly disbursement memo statement showing a
19 $700,000 payment using Company funds that was identified as a legal settlement payable to a
20 specific law firm. Id. at 34, 150, 167. According to the MGC order, Maddox “was told” that
21 Wynn and Elaine Wynn “wanted to help out a struggling employee,” and Maddox “did not
22 pursue the matter further.” Id. at 34, 150.
23
29
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1
Second, the SAC relies on the MGC order to allege that in 2014 or 2015, Wooden (then
2 the Company’s president) told Maddox that “employees in the spa were uncomfortable by a
3 request from Mr. Wynn for a sensual massage.” Id. at 149. Wynn allegedly made this request
4 “in the lead-up to a couple’s massage planned for Mr. Wynn and his wife.” Id. Maddox was
5 confused because “he did not know the meaning of ‘sensual massage’” and “never imagined that
6 any sort of misconduct could be involved.” Id. Maddox handled this matter by telling Wooden
7 to directly tell Wynn “that people were uncomfortable so ‘knock it off.’” Id.
8
Third, the SAC alleges that once Elaine Wynn filed her Okada cross claim, Maddox
9 knew about the 2005 settlement and Wynn’s underlying alleged misconduct. According to the
10 SAC, he “did not pursue the matter beyond obtaining Ms. Sinatra’s summary of the facts.” Id. at
11 31. These allegations establish a strong inference of Maddox’s scienter in making the statements
12 in response to Elaine Wynn’s cross claim and the WSJ article. His scienter as to the response to
13 the WSJ article is further supported by the allegation that in 2017, while preparing for his Okada
14 deposition, he allegedly “learned that a separate matter in 2005 may have involved some type of
15 assault” but “concluded that this characterization was likely just an aggressive litigation tactic.”
16 Id. at 151.
17
18
c. Sinatra
The plaintiffs allege a strong inference of Sinatra’s scienter. They assert that she was
19 involved in concealing allegations against Wynn. Id. at 163. She allegedly discussed the 2005
20 settlement and allegations with Elaine Wynn in 2009, attended two meetings regarding the 2008
21 settlement in which the Company paid $700,000 to a previously terminated employee who
22 alleged she had an “intimate relationship” with Wynn, and received a copy in 2014 of the Abbott
23 memorandum describing a former cocktail waitress’s allegation that Wynn raped her in 2005. Id.
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1 at 163-64. In 2016, she allegedly described the 2005 settlement to outside counsel as “old and
2 cold” and a “one-off.” Id. at 31. The SAC alleges that Sinatra never disclosed to the MGC what
3 she knew about the allegations even though she “was intimately involved in the licensing
4 process” as the general counsel and a qualifier for the 2013 Massachusetts gaming license. Id. at
5 147. 9 The plaintiffs have pleaded a strong inference that Sinatra knew about Wynn’s alleged
6 misconduct long before she made the two sets of statements at issue.
7
d. Cootey
8
The SAC’s allegations as to Cootey’s awareness of the alleged misconduct are not as
9 strong but are still sufficient to plead a strong inference of scienter. The SAC alleges that in
10 2014—while Cootey was the CFO, senior vice president, and treasurer—the Company paid a
11 $9,000 settlement to a terminated cocktail server after she told the Company’s outside counsel
12 that Wynn raped her in 2005. Id. at 34. The SAC also asserts that “numerous incidents of sexual
13 assault” by Wynn “were alleged prior to and while Cootey was employed at the Company,
14 including as CFO.” Id. at 170. Lastly, the SAC alleges that Cootey knew about or recklessly
15 disregarded the settlements and allegations once Elaine Wynn filed her cross claim. It is
16 reasonable to infer that Cootey, as CFO, was at least deliberately reckless in disregarding
17 Wynn’s alleged misconduct by immediately making a statement publicly denying that
18 misconduct and then denying it again days later. The inference that Cootey knew about or was
19 deliberately reckless in disregarding the allegations when he made the statements is at least as
20
9
Sinatra argues that the MGC order shows she was not a qualifier, but she does not cite or quote
21 where the order explained that. In fact, the MGC order states that “[v]arious individuals,
including but not limited to Mr. Wynn, Ms. Wynn, and Ms. Sinatra, . . . filed RFA-1 applications
22 as individual qualifiers based upon their roles in Wynn Resorts, Limited.” ECF No. 133-3 at 8.
Moreover, I must take the plaintiffs’ allegations as true while considering competing plausible
23 inferences.
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1 compelling as the inference that he denied the allegations because he believed the summary of
2 events likely available to him without an investigation—Sinatra’s description of the incident as
3 an outlier and consensual. See id. at 148-49. The SAC supports a strong inference of Cootey’s
4 scienter.
5
6
7
e. Whether Awareness of Elaine Wynn’s Cross Claim Can Support
an Inference of Scienter
The defendants argue that awareness of Elaine Wynn’s cross claim cannot support
8 scienter because it was public and contained only allegations. This argument is mainly relevant
9 to Cootey and Maddox because the SAC adequately alleges that Wynn and Sinatra were already
10 aware of the sexual misconduct allegation described in the cross claim. In making this argument,
11 the defendants rely on case law that does not appear relevant. The defendants suggest that the
12 public nature of the cross claim’s allegations weakens an inference of scienter, but the
13 misleading statements at issue publicly refuted those allegations.
14
The defendants’ argument that the cross claim cannot support scienter because it
15 contained only “unproven allegations” similarly fails. The plaintiffs are not relying on the cross
16 claim to establish, for example, that Wynn sexually assaulted an employee in 2005. Rather, the
17 plaintiffs allege that the cross claim, at a minimum, informed the defendants about the
18 allegations against Wynn, and the defendants misleadingly responded to those allegations by
19 denying them. Accordingly, the defendants’ argument fails.
20
21
2. Stock Trading
The plaintiffs allege that insider trading by Sinatra and Maddox supports an inference of
22 scienter. The SAC alleges that between 2014 and 2017, Sinatra’s stock sales amounted to over
23 $16 million and Maddox’s to over $32 million. Id. at 165, 168. Maddox argues that his trading
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1 history actually negates an inference of scienter, and Sinatra argues that her trading history
2 shows that the class period sales were not suspicious.
3
“Unusual or suspicious stock sales by corporate insiders may constitute circumstantial
4 evidence of scienter.” In re Quality Sys., 865 F.3d at 1146. I must consider three factors: “(1) the
5 amount and percentage of shares sold; (2) timing of the sales; and (3) consistency with prior
6 trading history.” Nursing Home Pension Fund, Local 144 v. Oracle Corp., 380 F.3d 1226, 1232
7 (9th Cir. 2004).
8
The plaintiffs list several trades made by Sinatra and Maddox but do not include their
9 prior trading histories. Now that the defendants have requested judicial notice of documents
10 showing their trading histories, the plaintiffs argue that these histories support scienter.
11
The trading by Maddox and Sinatra does not support an inference of scienter but does not
12 negate scienter. Maddox and the plaintiffs have not sufficiently developed their arguments.
13 “[J]udges need not paw over the files without assistance from the parties.” Orr v. Bank of Am.,
14 NT & SA, 285 F.3d 764, 775 (9th Cir. 2002) (quotation omitted). The plaintiffs have not shown
15 that the trades were inconsistent with the trading histories, and Maddox has not shown that his
16 trading negates an inference of scienter. As to Sinatra, her class period trading does not appear
17 to be inconsistent with her prior trading history, but she provided only trading volumes without
18 pricing information.
19
20
3. Collective Analysis
Considering the allegations collectively, the plaintiffs have pleaded a strong inference of
21 scienter as to Wynn, Maddox, Sinatra, and Cootey. At this stage, the plaintiffs have sufficiently
22 alleged that Wynn, Maddox, Sinatra, and Cootey were aware of information contradicting their
23
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1 statements that denied misconduct allegations. 10 The inference that these defendants were aware
2 of Wynn’s alleged misconduct at the time of their statements is cogent and compelling. Less
3 compelling are the defendants’ preferred inferences: that Wynn, Sinatra, Maddox, and Cootey
4 did not know about any alleged misconduct, even after they became aware of the Elaine Wynn
5 cross claim, or that they simply did not know that these allegations needed to be disclosed
6 despite years of experience as high-level casino executives and their status as qualifiers 11 before
7 gaming regulators.
8
Similarly, Wynn’s preferred inference does not prevail. He argues it is more plausible to
9 infer that he “sought to resolve serious potential claims made against him in order to eliminate
10 the distraction that allegations of that nature would necessarily entail, and so that he could
11 continue about the business of running a successful company.” ECF No. 140 at 16. It is at least
12 as compelling to infer that he wanted to “eliminate the distraction” of allegations and “continue
13 about the business of running” the Company, and in doing so, he sought to conceal and avoid
14 disclosure of the allegations to eliminate distractions such as bad press, regulatory investigations,
15 and civil lawsuits.
16
4. The Company’s Scienter
17
Because the SAC alleges a strong inference of scienter as to Wynn, Sinatra, Maddox, and
18 Cootey for the respective statements made by each of them, the plaintiffs have adequately
19 alleged the Company’s scienter. Wynn was the CEO and chairman of the board; Sinatra was
20
10
The plaintiffs additionally allege that the defendants’ senior positions, core operations,
21 departures, and motives to commit fraud support an inference of scienter, and the defendants
oppose. I have considered all of these allegations and arguments. The SAC has adequately
22 alleged that Wynn was motivated to conceal the allegations against him. The other allegations
are either too generalized or only sufficient for a weak inference of scienter at most.
23 11
It is unclear which defendants were qualifiers, but according to the MGC order, at least Wynn
and Sinatra were qualifiers at the time the statements at issue were made. ECF No. 133-3 at 8.
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1 executive vice president, general counsel, and secretary of the board; Maddox was president; and
2 Cootey was CFO, senior vice president, and treasurer. These senior positions are adequate to
3 impute the scienter of these defendants to the Company. See In re ChinaCast Educ. Corp. Sec.
4 Litig., 809 F.3d 471, 476 (9th Cir. 2015) (“In the context of Rule 10b–5, we have adopted the
5 general rule of imputation and held that a corporation is responsible for a corporate officer’s
6 fraud committed within the scope of his employment or for a misleading statement made by an
7 employee or other agent who has actual or apparent authority.” (quotation omitted)). I thus deny
8 the defendants’ motions to dismiss on scienter grounds.
9
10
E. Loss Causation
Finally, the defendants argue that the plaintiffs have not properly pleaded loss causation
11 for several reasons. They primarily contend that the plaintiffs’ factual allegations are
12 insufficient, the 2018 articles revealed misconduct allegations rather than fraud, and investors
13 reacted to the impact of Wynn’s alleged misconduct not to the Company’s alleged fraud. The
14 plaintiffs respond that the January 26, 2018 WSJ article and February 2018 announcement by the
15 police regarding further allegations exposed the falsity of the defendants’ misrepresentations.
16
In analyzing loss causation, “the ultimate issue is whether the defendant’s misstatement,
17 as opposed to some other fact, foreseeably caused the plaintiff’s loss.” Lloyd v. CVB Fin. Corp.,
18 811 F.3d 1200, 1210 (9th Cir. 2016). “Typically, to establish loss causation, a plaintiff must
19 show that the defendants’ alleged misstatements artificially inflated the price of stock and that,
20 once the market learned of the deception, the value of the stock declined.” Irving Firemen’s
21 Relief & Ret. Fund v. Uber Techs., Inc., 998 F.3d 397, 407 (9th Cir. 2021) (citation omitted).
22 This theory is referred to as “fraud-on-the-market.” Id. When proceeding under this theory, “the
23 plaintiff must show that after purchasing her shares and before selling, the following occurred:
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1 (1) the truth became known, and (2) the revelation caused the fraud-induced inflation in the
2 stock’s price to be reduced or eliminated.” In re BofI Holding, Inc. Sec. Litig., 977 F.3d 781, 789
3 (9th Cir. 2020) (quotation omitted). To survive a motion to dismiss, “the plaintiff’s task is to
4 allege with particularity facts plausibly suggesting that both showings can be made.” Id. at 791
5 (citation omitted).
6
To show the first element, plaintiffs commonly “identify one or more corrective
7 disclosures.” Id. at 790. “A corrective disclosure occurs when information correcting the
8 misstatement or omission that is the basis for the action is disseminated to the market.” Id.
9 (quotation omitted). A disclosure is corrective if it “reveals new facts that, taken as true, render
10 some aspect of the defendant’s prior statements false or misleading.” Id. (citation omitted).
11 Accordingly, a corrective disclosure “need not precisely mirror the earlier misrepresentation.”
12 Id. (quoting In re Williams Sec. Litig.-WCG Subclass, 558 F.3d 1130, 1140 (10th Cir. 2009)).
13
As to the second element, a plaintiff must show that “disclosure of the truth caused the
14 company’s stock price to decline and the inflation attributable to the misstatements to dissipate.”
15 Id. This analysis “includes a temporal component—a disclosure followed by an immediate drop
16 in stock price is more likely to have caused the decline.” Id. A plaintiff need not show “that a
17 misrepresentation was the sole reason for the investment’s decline in value.” Id. (quotation
18 omitted). Instead, “as long as the misrepresentation is one substantial cause of the investment’s
19 decline in value, other contributing forces will not bar recovery under the loss causation
20 requirement.” Id. (quotation omitted).
21
The plaintiffs have adequately pleaded loss causation. The SAC alleges that the WSJ
22 article and the February 2018 police announcement reported on several allegations of Wynn’s
23 sexual misconduct, thus revealing the truth to the market, and stock prices dropped after each
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1 disclosure. See ECF No. 122 at 122, 133. The facts alleged in the SAC plausibly suggest that
2 these showings can be made.
3
The defendants’ additional arguments are unavailing. First, they argue that the plaintiffs
4 have not identified corrective disclosures, but the SAC alleges that the WSJ article and February
5 2018 announcement—which reported allegations by two additional accusers from the 1970s—
6 revealed the truth and were followed by stock price drops. Id. at 122, 133. Second, the Ninth
7 Circuit has rejected the argument that “mere allegations of misconduct cannot support” a
8 securities fraud claim. ECF No. 128 at 29; In re BofI, 977 F.3d at 792 (“But short of an
9 admission by the defendant or a formal finding of fraud—neither of which is required—any
10 corrective disclosure will necessarily take the form of contestable allegations of wrongdoing.”
11 (citations omitted)). Third, the defendants contend the SAC alleges that investors reacted to the
12 possibility of Wynn’s departure and imperiled gaming licenses, not fraud. However, the SAC
13 also describes media outlets’ reactions to the possibility that Wynn and others engaged in
14 “serious wrongdoing,” violated the code of conduct, misled the MGC, and were “involved in the
15 decision to cover it up.” ECF No. 122 at 126-27, 129. At this stage, the plaintiffs have
16 adequately alleged that the misrepresentations were a substantial cause of the stock price drops.
17 See, e.g., In re BofI, 977 F.3d at 790.
18
Next, the defendants argue that the March and April 2016 press releases are not tied to
19 the plaintiffs’ losses because the corrective disclosures relate only to sexual misconduct
20 allegations, rather than the Company’s regulatory compliance or Wynn’s use of Company
21 assets. 12 But taken as true, the corrective disclosures “render some aspect of the defendant’s
22
23
12
As to the Elaine Wynn-related part of their response to the WSJ article, the defendants argue in
their reply that there can be no loss causation because her cross claim “was the source of some
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1 prior statements false or misleading.” Id. (citing Pub. Emps.’ Ret. Sys. of Miss. v. Amedisys, Inc.,
2 769 F.3d 313, 322 (5th Cir. 2014)); Amedisys, 769 F.3d at 321 (“The test for relevant truth
3 simply means that the truth disclosed must make the existence of the actionable fraud more
4 probable than it would be without that alleged fact, taken as true.”). Wynn’s alleged use of
5 Company funds for a settlement is an aspect of the entire years-long pattern of sexual
6 misconduct and concealment alleged by the plaintiffs, so the WSJ article and February
7 announcement “relate back to the misrepresentation.” Lloyd v. CVB Fin. Corp., 811 F.3d 1200,
8 1210 (9th Cir. 2016) (quoting Williams, 558 F.3d at 1140)).
9
Last, the defendants contend that the SAC does not plead loss causation as to the
10 misrepresentations responding to the WSJ article. They argue that the plaintiffs do not explain
11 how a statement on the same day could artificially inflate the stock price, or how “some later
12 corrective disclosure revealed the statements were false and affected” the stock price. ECF No.
13 128 at 31 n.30. Wynn makes a similar argument regarding the timing of his statement. The
14 plaintiffs respond that it is plausible that the statements curbed the decline of the Company’s
15 stock price. The Ninth Circuit has not addressed the inflation maintenance theory, but I find
16 cases accepting it persuasive. See, e.g., In re Vivendi, S.A. Sec. Litig., 838 F.3d 223, 259 (2d Cir.
17 2016) (“[S]ecurities-fraud defendants cannot avoid liability for an alleged misstatement merely
18 because the misstatement is not associated with an uptick in inflation.”). Moreover, “so long as
19 the plaintiff alleges facts to support a theory that is not facially implausible, the court’s
20 skepticism is best reserved for later stages of the proceedings when the plaintiff’s case can be
21 rejected on evidentiary grounds.” In re Gilead Scis. Sec. Litig., 536 F.3d 1049, 1057 (9th Cir.
22
23
misconduct allegations.” ECF No. 157 at 23. This argument was not raised in their motion to
dismiss, so I will not consider it. The same applies to their argument about the hotline statement.
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1 2008). For purposes of the motions to dismiss, the plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that the WSJ
2 article and February announcement made the market aware of the defendants’ alleged cover-up
3 of Wynn’s alleged misconduct. I deny the defendants’ motions to dismiss on this basis.
4
F. Section 20(a)
5
The defendants move to dismiss the Section 20(a) claim because they argue that the
6 plaintiffs have not stated a primary claim under Section 10(b). I disagree.
7
The defendants next argue that the Section 20(a) claims fail because the SAC
8 insufficiently alleges that they controlled the Company’s day-to-day operations during the class
9 period. Similarly, Sinatra argues that the SAC fails to allege facts showing that she exercised
10 actual power or control over any primary violator of Section 10(b), and she contends that she
11 was a subordinate of the other defendants. The plaintiffs respond that the SAC sufficiently
12 alleges the defendants’ “ability to control the Company through their involvement in day-to-day
13 affairs as officers.” ECF No. 146 at 71.
14
Section 20(a) of the PSLRA establishes joint and several liability for controlling persons
15 who aid and abet securities violations. 15 U.S.C. § 78t(a). Under this section, “a defendant may
16 be liable for securities violations if (1) there is a violation of the Act and (2) the defendant
17 directly or indirectly controls any person liable for the violation.” S.E.C. v. Todd, 642 F.3d 1207,
18 1223 (9th Cir. 2011) (citation omitted). In analyzing “‘control person’ status, the issue is
19 whether the defendant exercised power or control over the primary violator, and the plaintiff
20 need not show that the defendant was a culpable participant in the violation.” Id. (quotation
21 omitted). “This inquiry is normally an intensely factual question.” Zucco, 552 F.3d at 990
22 (quotation omitted). And this inquiry involves “scrutiny of the defendant’s participation in the
23
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1 day-to-day affairs of the corporation and the defendant’s power to control corporate actions.”
2 Todd, 642 F.3d at 1223 (quotation omitted).
3
“The fact that a person is a CEO or other high-ranking officer within a company does not
4 create a presumption that he or she is a ‘controlling person.’” Id. (citation omitted). Instead,
5 “indicia of ‘control’ include whether the person managed the company on a day-to-day basis and
6 was involved in the formulation of financial statements, which is sufficient to presume control
7 over the transactions giving rise to the alleged securities violation.” Id. (quotation omitted).
8 Additionally, “actual authority over the preparation and presentation to the public of financial
9 statements is sufficient to demonstrate control.” Id. (citation omitted). “Courts have found
10 general allegations concerning an individual’s title and responsibilities to be sufficient to
11 establish control at the motion to dismiss stage.” In re Energy Recovery Inc. Sec. Litig., 2016
12 WL 324150, at *25 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 27, 2016) (quotation omitted).
13
At this stage, the plaintiffs have sufficiently pleaded the control person status of each
14 remaining individual defendant: Wynn, Maddox, Sinatra, and Cootey. Wynn does not separately
15 contest his control person status, but it is shown by allegations regarding his position as CEO and
16 the “founder-led” nature of the Company. The SAC alleges that Sinatra, Maddox, and Cootey
17 were officers involved in the Company’s day-to-day affairs. Each was allegedly involved in
18 preparing and making the alleged misrepresentations in this case. Sinatra contends that she was
19 subordinate to the other defendants, but the plaintiffs allege that she was a qualifier before the
20 MGC, she participated in drafting Wynn’s response to the WSJ article, and she had the ability to
21 stop Wynn from changing the Company’s sexual harassment policy to allow relationships
22 between supervisors and employees. ECF No. 122 at 44-45, 122. I thus deny the defendants’
23 motions to dismiss the control person liability claims.
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1 IV. Summary
2
I deny the motions with respect to statements made in response to Elaine Wynn’s cross
3 claim and the WSJ article. I grant the motions to dismiss as to statements regarding the code of
4 conduct, the Company’s full compliance with all applicable laws, regulatory and compliance
5 risks, Stephen Wynn’s unique skills and possible departure, and corporate culture and other
6 topics. I also grant the motions to dismiss claims against Sinatra and Maddox with respect to
7 Wynn’s statement in response to the WSJ article because the plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged
8 they were makers of that statement.
9
I grant the plaintiffs leave to amend only as to that statement by Wynn if they can
10 adequately allege that Sinatra and Maddox were also makers of the statement. I do not grant the
11 plaintiffs leave to amend as to anything else. This is the second amended complaint. Judge
12 Navarro’s previous order identified deficiencies in alleging material misrepresentations, the
13 plaintiffs had an opportunity to provide further allegations if they had a basis to do so, and
14 further amendment would be futile as to those statements.
15 V. Conclusion
16
I THEREFORE ORDER that the defendants’ motion to dismiss (ECF No. 128) is
17 granted in part. Defendant Stephen Wynn’s motion to dismiss (ECF No. 140) is granted in
18 part. And defendant Kimmarie Sinatra’s motion to dismiss (ECF No. 125) is granted in part.
19 These three motions are granted in part consistent with this order.
20
I FURTHER ORDER that the plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a surreply (ECF No.
21 160) is granted.
22
I FURTHER ORDER that the defendants’ motion for leave to file supplemental authority
23 (ECF No. 164) is granted.
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1
I FURTHER ORDER that the plaintiffs may file an amended complaint by September 3,
2 2021.
3
DATED this 28th day of July, 2021.
4
5
ANDREW P. GORDON
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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