It’s been a rough year on the regulatory front for the Dallas hedge fund Gryphon Partners.
In April, Jonathan Daws, a former Gryphon portfolio manager, pleaded guilty in federal court to a conspiracy charge arising from a scheme involving confidential information about government investigations of publicly traded companies.
Daws, who left Gryphon in 2002, participated in a plot hatched by notorious short-seller Anthony Elgindy that involved betting against companies being probed, then driving down the stock prices by leaking the news on the Internet. Elgindy and former FBI agent Jeffrey Royer, the scheme’s masterminds, were convicted in January after a lengthy trial in New York.
Now, sources say, Gryphon is one of several hedge funds under scrutiny in another federal investigation, one that also involves allegations of misused nonpublic information.