Wesleyan University has brought a lawsuit against former Vice President of Investments and Chief Investment Officer Thomas Kannam and nearly twenty other defendants, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, civil theft, breach of contract, fraud, statutory forgery, and unjust enrichment, among other charges. Kannam was dismissed from his position at the University on October 13. The University filed its suit in the Middletown Superior Court on November 24, requesting a hearing which could force Kannam to put aside a $3 million pre-judgment remedy that would be paid to the University if it eventually wins its case. There was no public announcement, and Wesleyan’s Director of Media Relations, David Pesci, declined to comment.

According to the University’s pleadings, Kannam violated his contract by devoting most of his energies into personal “entrepreneurial ventures,” which diverted his attention away from his duties at Wesleyan. The University also claims that Kannam improperly exploited his privileged access to Wesleyan’s financial information, some of which was proprietary, for his own benefit, and that he used the University’s funds for his own business and personal expenses.

“We deny all of the allegations in the complaint,” said Stephen J. Fitzgerald, Kannam’s attorney. “If there’s going to be a hearing on the pending application for a pre-judgment remedy, we will at that time put on our defense.”

According to the complaint, Kannam began improperly profiting from his position at Wesleyan in 2001, when he and Ralph Gill, an associate, formed Cross Border Capital Advisors, or CBCA. The University released what it claims are some of Kannam’s email correspondences, sent from both his official email address and a personal account he accessed regularly on his work computer, to support its charges.

“Through my portfolio at Wesleyan, I have a window on some very interesting stock ideas,” Kannam allegedly wrote. “If possible I’d like to cherry-pick the best and capitalize on them. Would it be possible to feed Mike’s [Zaninovich] hedge fund and get paid some incentive on the performance of our ideas? Might be the fastest way to some real dough.”

The University claims that around 2006, Kannam became the owner and Director of Investments for the Belstar Group, where he received his own healthcare plan, pension, and corporate credit card, and continued to take advantage of information about Wesleyan’s investments. Belstar’s Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer reportedly described Kannam as “our critical endowment asset.” The suit also alleges that Kannam took business trips on behalf of Belstar at the University’s expense.

Kannam is also accused of sitting on several corporate boards, including that of his father’s company, Advanced Device Technology Inc., which supplies infrared devices to the United States military, and Vietnam Capital Partners. Wesleyan says that Kannam failed to alert the University President of his involvement in these other boards, which his contract required him to do.

“Another board seat ($=equity)…Whoo, whoo, whoo, whoooooo! They’re adding up,” Kannam wrote in an email to his wife, according to the University.

The University claims that Kannam was aware that his activities represented a conflict of interest, and that he took steps to conceal them. He allegedly created presentations for CBCA under his wife’s name, and, according to the University’s complaint, worked with a partner at Belstar to “draft a letter to the University’s President from an alleged Korean dignitary,” that would conceal his involvement in outside entrepreneurial projects.

“We need to handle this discreetly at Wesleyan since there’s major turnover on our Board now and the new members that are joining take their fiduciary duty seriously in the Sarbanes-Oxley environment,” Kannam allegedly wrote to a CBCA associate in 2005. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act set higher standards for oversight by corporate boards in the wake of the Enron scandal. The suit also argues that Kannam was concerned about the arrival of a new President in 2007, and told his associates that he would have to “lay low.”

When Kannam started working at Wesleyan, his office was located in North College, the main administrative building. The University claims that he lobbied to have the Investment Office moved into its current location at 74 Wyllys Avenue in order in order to conceal his private ventures from his colleagues. The complaint claims that Kannam referred to his office as “The Taj” and used it primarily for his non-Wesleyan business.

The suit alleges that Kannam used a variety of the University’s resources for the benefit of his private ventures. He reportedly offered to have his staff at the Wesleyan Investment Office handle projects for Belstar. In 2007 Kannam allegedly reported that a hedge fund had retained the services of Wesleyan’s Quantitative Analysis Center (QAC), an interdisciplinary data analysis workshop, and that it had agreed to pay a fee of several thousand dollars. This fund was allegedly Belstar, which never paid for the services it received from the QAC. The University claims that Kannam recommended the hiring of several new employees so that he could focus more of his attention on his own ventures. Of one new member of his staff, Kannam reportedly wrote, “I’m so happy. With my extracurricular ventures heating up, he’ll help a lot.”

Finally, the complaint accuses Kannam of fraudulently using University funds for his own expenses on “countless occasions.” The suit alleges that Kannam routinely doctored expense reports to pay for golfing outings, international travel, and even a trip to the 2008 Super Bowl. He allegedly allowed his associates to travel to conferences under the pretense that they were financial advisors to the University. He is also accused of having received “double reimbursement,” when he paid for his expenses using his Wesleyan credit card and then submitted his expenses for cash reimbursement.

The University claims that Kannam’s misconduct was discovered in 2009 and led to his termination, although two days after his departure President Michael Roth sent an all-campus email announcing that Kannam had left to “pursue other opportunities.” The trial has not yet begun, and it remains unclear how the University assembled its case. The Argus will have more updates as new information comes to light.

  • Weekend Music for the Big “K”

    Enjoy my friend. You deserve it!

    My my, at waterloo napoleon did surrender
    Oh yeah, and I have met my destiny in quite a similar way
    The history book on the shelf
    Is always repeating itself

    My my, I tried to hold you back but you were stronger
    Oh yeah, and now it seems my only chance is giving up the fight

  • Big Time Reality Check

    Well K. here it is. days before your big day in court. monday’s it for you old buddy. you’ve got a lot riding on your defense team to get this thing dimissed. if not, you are going to be writing checks like nobody’s business. depositions are a bitch. and just think, you’ll be paying for most of them. court steno’s, video cams, legal prep. it just doesn’t stop, does it? it just keeps going and going and going. where does it end? does it end?

    money will be flying out the window faster than feeding c-notes into a one armed bandit. but no one ever wins. never hits those triple 7s. its just an nondescript smoke filled casino with nameless souls pumping their life savings into a hungry machine in the hope of hitting it big. the trouble is, they never do.

    its eating away at you. its not a bad dream. this shit is for real. you know you don’t deserve it. afterall you went to the best schools and are exceptionally smart. at least that it what others say, but you do deserve it my friend, you screwed up bigtime. will your co-defendants stand with you. maybe for now, but when the going gets tough, will it be every man for themselves? they have their families and careers to worry about. you are just a footnote in their lives. their narrative does not include you.

    so once again, you are asking yourself, “am i doing the right thing?” what if i lose? what happens? where will i go? what will i do? who are my real friends? can i really win this thing? will anyone believe me? who believes in me?

    all very difficult questions and a situation that is incredible sad and unfortunate.

  • Luke R Hornblower ’05

    I spoke with Mr. Kannam on one occasion about two years ago. I was working for Western Asset Management and was curious about his fixed income allocation. I was hoping to generate a lead for our marketing folks. On the phone he was very polite and generous with his time. He gave me some good career advice.

  • Idiot Catcher

    Hornblower, you are a fool or you are a member of the defense. The content of you posting is, well, laughable.

  • aspiring rip off artist

    hey horatio, what career advice did kannam give you?

  • British/UN Global Warming Data Center

    And global warming is real Luke

  • Someone Tell Me

    How can the defense argue that Kannam, a full time salaried officer of Wesleyan, was able to seek and secure, without restriction, employment with others while hanging onto his endowment job?

    Someone tell me how the lawyers can argue this with a straight face. How can they get up and argue that Kannam had a right to outside employment, and do so without bursting into uncontrolled laughter.

    If they retreat into parsing the language of his contract and citing obscure and ambiguous elements of the law, they will be laughed out of the hearing chamber.

    Losing this first round is incredibly risky. Your whole argument for trial is blown out of the water before you even begin.

  • Wes Observer

    Trust me. Trial attorneys are wizards at their craft. They’ll argue anything and everything no matter what they personally believe in. Right v. wrong doesn’t matter. Its all about the jury and convincing them their client was wronged. Just like the OJ case, your winning strategy is your courtroom lawyer, not your legal and evidentiary argument.

  • alumnus

    observer, your spot on. lets hope that wes has real pro for the court room. the case will be won by whose lawyer connects with the jurymen and jurywoman.

  • anon

    Kannam’s goin’ down faster than the Titanic.

  • anonymous

    No one asks for a prejudgment remedy unless the case they have is a slam dunk, and there is a substantial risk of “disappearing assets”

  • Luke R Hornblower ’05

    If you want to learn more about global warming I encourage you to search for my mother’s articles at the LA Times website. Her name is Margot Roosevelt.

  • Luke R Hornblower ’05

    Idiot Catcher: what has been your personal experience with Mr. Kannam? Just curious.

    If I remember correctly I was frustrated with my job at Western and was thinking of leaving. He told me to hang in there until something better came along. I ended up leaving prematurely and joining a sinking ship (Evergreen Investments). That was a poor decision on my part. I left Evergreen for an opportunity in Russia but that offer was retracted when a partner died.

    I’m in law school now. I have an interview with the Securities and Exchange Commission next Friday for their Summer Honors Program.

  • Rajit Gupta

    Thomas is not pleased with his situation. He was not the only one involved. Mr. Ralph Gill was a direct partner. Please wait a few days. Thomas will bring forward several documents showing that Gill was involved and actually encouraged Kannam to participate. Gill is the real criminal here.

  • Owen Wilson

    Just so all of you readers know, Ralph Gill and his ex-wife Anne are planning to escape the law and all their financial debts by running to Toronto Canada. Just thought all of you should know that he has set up a separate operation there to escape justice here in the United States.

  • Peter ‘011

    Hey guys keep it clean. I think Thomas Kannam is a slime bag and I can’t wait to meet him one day wherever, and call him out. If I see him, I’ll say his name loud and then say “YOU ARE A FRAUD AND YOU TRIED TO RIP OFF WESLEYAN! YOU ARE A CRIMINAL, DUDE!”

  • Student President

    People, let’s all petition this Thomas Kannam affair. Kannam has disgraced all of us and has dragged Wesleyan’s name through the mud. We will organize a protest during his trial and we will rally the entire student body and the community of the college to protest against this criminal. I suspect we can call thousands to support us and elicit good articles from the WALL STREET JOURNAL and FORTUNE MAGAZINE and other notable publications. We need to put this man behind bars with slick prick Bernie Madoff.

  • A Wood Gundy alumni

    I spoke with Thomas Kannam the other day and there is NO WAY he is going to admit guilt. And guess what? The fall guy will be RALPH GILL. Thomas has a lot of emails with Ralph saying that they should work together to suck as much money as possible into their personal funds. No way Thomas will tell Gill, because it has to be a surprise in court. But just you wait and see. The fireworks will come!

  • anon

    The wisest thing that Kannam could do would be to protect his own ass and not worry about the others.

    I guarantee all the others will point to Kannam and say that he represented to them that everything he was doing was approved by the higher ups at Wes, or permitted by his so-called contract.

    Kannam is in very deep hole (halfway to China!), and it will only become deeper as his co-defendants start flipping on him.

  • The Green Mile

    anon, a great call. Fact is, Kannam needs to protect himself and get some damn insurance.

    Look at Madoff’s associates. They are all turning themselves in and ratting on everyone else, in exchange for a lesser sentence. The dam is breaking and it is EVERYONE FOR HIMSELF!!!

    I would definitely TAKE THE HIGHER GROUND and get out of there while the going is good. You don’t want to be at the short end, when they are handing out the longest jail sentences

  • Sangeet ke saath Khursi

    The best metaphor for this case is “musical chairs”. What happens when the music stops? Kannam will be standing. Even his buddy Gill and his wife Heather will find a chair.

  • Ghandi

    Sangeet, when crooks are involved, they do not care about anyone but themselves. At the end of the day, they are selfish and will lie and sell out even their best friends to save their own skins. Who the hell wants to go to jail for five years and get rammed up the ass?

  • Scared shitless

    Kannam has proven he is a liar and a deceiver. I’m sure he is talking to the prosecution right now cutting a deal on one hand, and on the other hand, telling all his friends that he is not going to say a damn word. It is classic betrayal of friendships.

  • Bill Of Rights

    Kannam has the right to a fair trial. The US Constitution says that everyone is guilty until proven innocent. Let Kannam have his day in court!

  • Wondering

    I am still trying to figure out what role all the other defendants played in this? Does anyone know? There must have been some sort of conspiracy, which means that the other defendants knew precisely what was going on.

    If this is the case, they will all do anything possible to save their arses.

  • In Defense of…

    You people are worthless. Kannam did a great job managing the endowment. It performed no differently than any other college endowment. Just because he was trying to make a little more money on the outside using his brilliant skills does not mean that he harmed Wesleyan in any shape or manner. My goodness, he has private school tuition for his kids, he has a lifestyle to maintain, he has to finance his wife’s books, he has expenses that the rest of us simply do not have. I do not hold it against him for trying to make a little more money. And all those so-called trips? He was simply representing Wesleyan at events that potential big money donors attend. He was actually using his own personal time to help Wesleyan. All those e-mails are simply taken out of context. Kannam and his friends were simply engaging in humorous banter, nothing more, nothing less. He is a stand up guy and does not deserve this mess.

  • Question of a Lifetime

    Do you, Thomas Kannam, solemnly swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?

  • Dishonest Executives

    Kannam’s reputation precedes him. His emails point to a deceitful, dishonest untrustworthy person.

    I’ve also heard of this Ralph Gill. Rumors abound, but there is always some truth in them.

    What I have heard is not good. Apparently, Ralph Gill has been caught lying and cheating in his professional career. I’ve also heard that he has a police record? Can someone verify this?

  • Thomas Kannam Blows

    Dear “In Defense of….” AKA Thomas Kannam…. _uck off buddy. Obviously it is you who are writing the glowing praises of a criminal. Kannam, go to jail. Do not stop at Go, do not collect $200. Go directly to jail you sack of shit.

  • Bernie Madoff Kannam

    HAHAHAHAHAH!!!

    Thomas Kannam you slimy Indian! Posing as “In Defense of!” Why you never stop deceiving do you? You give the entire 1 billion Indian race a bad reputation as lying, dishonest low life slumdogs. Go back to Bangalore.

  • Comin’ Up Real Soon!

    Has the jury reached a verdict?

    We have your Honor.

    What say you jury foreman?

    Your Honor, we the people of the State of Connecticut, after careful deliberation, have reached the following verdict.

    On Count One, we find the defendant, Thomas Kannam…….

    STAY TUNED

  • Thomas Kannam is a LIAR

    Ya, right “IN DEFENSE”

    I’m sure Kannam is a good guy. Just like Hitler was a good guy, eh Thomas?

  • In Defense of…

    Thomas Kannam will show everyone that he is innocent. He has been falsely accused. He is going to prove that everything he did was fully legal, fully known by the higher ups at Wes, and fully sanctioned in writing through his contract.

    He is a great guy, just as Luke R. Hornblower has pointed out. Hornblower would not be applying to work at the SEC and weigh in on a fraud case without knowing the truth.

    Good luck on Monday Tom.

  • Investigative Journalism

    Hey Toby, Bic, I just got into town and read your emails.

    Sounds like he got into a lot of trouble up at Oxford Law School. Our contact says he can get classmates to cite true stories where he was cheating and plagerizing on his papers. They have evidence.

    This is great and the Argus will love it. Should have everything clear within a few days. When the news breaks the mainstream press will be the first to know. They will love to see justice served on these crooks once and for all.

    Chip

  • Ellie Thomas Jones

    Go to Jail Thomas Kannam. Just drop off our $3.0 million on the way out the door you piece of shit.

  • A Friend

    Chip,

    Pretty good stuff, huh? Did you read the whole thing? We’ve also got more stuff on Kannam. His emails are funny, especially the stuff he sent J. I’ve got loads of evidence and some of it is too juicy to print. Just have to verify it and off to the NYT we go. I’ll keep you posted, and will B and Jenny.

    T.

  • ???

    Who are you guys talking about? Is that Ralph Gill at Oxford? Are you saying he cheated at Oxford? Where did he go to the graduate school? I think the Oxford school officials should know all this.

  • In Defense of licks balls

    Thomas Kannam you dishonest bastard. You are a fraud, a jerk and an asshole. Did you really think you could fool us at Wesleyan? You are a total shithead. Your wife must get it from somewhere else because your prick is so small you couldn’t even fuck a baby coconut.

  • A note to ???

    It is pretty common knowledge at Oxford that many students thought Ralph Gill was a homosexual. A dishonest homosexual too? Please confirm.

  • Kannam the Adulterer

    I heard Kannam had sex with several co-eds here at Wesleyan? Does his wife know that he is an adulterer? Does she know that he dipped his wick here when he said he was on some stupid business trip? And to think she only thought he was on a business trip to deceive Wesleyan, when actually he was tooting his tuba here on campus with a few of our young female classmates. Soon they will come forward and finger him, just like the Tiger Woods scenario!!!

  • Poor Lass

    I was one.

  • JRT’96

    Guys, I think I have my buddy at the WSJ lined up. They intend to look into Kannam at some point soon. He’ll have his only little Stipple portrait. Its really the only higher education fraud case at this point

  • anon

    If one more person writes that Kannam managed the endowment well, I am going to blow chunks. It is totally irrelevent to this case.

    I can also tell you if his lawyers use this as a defense, it’ll fail worse than Obama’s decision to try the 911 masterminds in the heart of Lower Manhattan.

  • Enough!

    How nice to know that Wesleyan is the bastion of modern-day McCarthyism!

    Amazing, how this liberal institution lambastes anyone who does not think they way they do —

    — i.e, that Kannam is a fornicating adulterer who screwed the university.

    Anyone who even tries to present the other side is immediately accused of being Kannam himself.

    Whatever happened to unbiased journalism and ethics in reporting — values that Wesleyan is supposed to be teaching?

    I most sincerely hope that, some day, there will be a way to track down your posts… and that your would-be employers can read your most biased blogs.

    Try to get a job then, Argus reporters who are spamming your own site to keep the story alive.

  • anon

    Dear Enough!

    While you make some good points, let me point out some things that don’t make sense

    1. This case is not about ideology. It is neither liberal or conservative, capitalist or communist.

    2. Whats the other side? That everything in Wes’ complaint is a lie and was filed to maliciously defame and ruin 20 defendants for no good reason other than sport?

  • Third World Truths

    Whew! After reading all these posts, if I am Thomas Kannam, I’m hiring the best lawyer and then trying to cut a deal so that I get as little jail time as possible. If I am Kannam, I’m gonna make sure that if I have to pay, those idiots who are my so-called “friends” pay too. That is just the Indian way.

  • anon

    Praytell, what is the “Indian way”

  • Outside Advice Giver

    The best thing for Tom Kannam to do is to cut a deal and get this case out of court pronto. If he is as good as everyone says he is, he should be able to recover nicely and “re-earn” his $3 million in a short period of time. If this thing goes to a verdict and he loses, heaven knows what his future earning potential will be. Its best that he takes his lumps and moves on with his life. He’s lucky that Wesleyan went the civil route as the charges seem to rise to a criminal standard (if true). However, civil charges are easier to prove (i.e, the OJ criminal v. civil case). If he is innocent, he is doing the right thing going to court. But innocence means that all of the Wesleyan charges are 100% not true. This is doubtful. Furthermore, the chances that codefendants rally together on a case is minimal. Most pursue their own justice without regard for anyone else (as they should).

  • Disgusted

    It is sickening to read this blog. Prior to this man’s day in court, he has been defamed in a way which will destroy his future livelihood and the fortunes of his children.

    It is my understanding that libel is not only a civil issue but may, under certain circumstance, be deemed a criminal act. I also understand that investigative authorities can identify bloggers if need be. I hope they do so in this instance.

    If the WSJ comes along, are they going to focus on the breach on contract case, or the defamation of character?

    Finally and importantly, the reason Kannam’s performance IS an issue, in a civil suit the plantiff must prove damages. If Kannam is a top performer – which no one seems to dispute – damages appear to be $20K.

    BTW – who leaked the emails?

  • anon

    They might start with Ralph Gill’s defamation of Mssrs Roth and Winakor in his post above

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