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.

  • USMA

    Yun is also a West Point grad. Somehow “Duty, Honor, Country” became “Greed, Dishonesty, Immorality”. Very sad.

  • Reality Check

    I hope Kannam is smart enough to realize that it is only a matter of time until his co-defendants start abandoning him. Based on some of the comments by lawyers and some of the posts above, it has already started.

    Job 1 for each defendant is to protect themselves and minimize reputational and monetary damage. Job 1 does not include falling on the sword for the collective or any other individual defendant.

    The prisoner’s dilemma game comes to mind.

  • Anonymous

    That is an intersting point. There are so many defendants and companies listed in the lawsuit. I wonder if any of them knew about each other prior to the lawsuit?

  • Reality Check

    Anonymous 9:32a

    If in fact there was fraud as Wes alleges, do you agree that this is a classic case of prisoners’ dilemma game theory? (where jail time is substituted with monetary and reputational damages) see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoners_dilemma

    I also think your point about wondering if all the defendants knew about each other is excellent. If not, there would be no rational basis for group cooperation, and everyone should be motivated to “defect” (e.g. minimizing their own potential penalties regardless of the effect on others).

    There is also a strong comparison to the Galleon case which is currently in the news. A central figure together with a whole bunch of unrelated folks were indicted for insider trading, and then they started defecting one by one. Obviously the Wes case is not insider trading and it is civil versus the Galleon case which is criminal.

    All of this is predicated on whether Wes’ allegations turn out to be true, in whole or in part.

  • William Seelbach

    A full investigation is warranted. There is enough evidence in the form of emails that leaves a flagrant paper trail. Kannam abused his position and stole money from the University that could have been used to improve Wesleyan’s education. Instead that money went to a greedy, selfish, criminal. I’m sure Kannam stole over $3.0 million by breaking the law while at Wesleyan. This story makes me ill.

  • Silvia Trocano

    There are a few people posting here – “alum2, etc. who are obviously either Kannam or Ralph Gill or someone else being indicted in this case. The evidence is so obviously against Kannam, that only an idiot or someone guilty would support him. As I understand it, RALPH GILL himself has had a very questionable past including several ARRESTS for crimes in the past. We should not be swayed by people posting defending Kannam because they are likely those being linked to the crime. The evidence is too strong against Kannam.

  • Eliot Spitzer

    Guys/gals, where there is smoke there is fire. My bet is that Kannam and those involved should all be indicted and brought to justice. Good honest alumni and others who donated to the Wesleyan endowment fund have just been ripped off big time. This is intolerable.

  • Overzealous?

    Perhaps a slam dunk victory here can save some face Administration is going to lose in the Dr. Morgan affair. On the other hand, an unconvincing win or ‘slap on he wrist’ to Mr. Kannam will make he institution lose even more face and respectibility. Seem to be betting he entire farm here.

  • Ralph Gill’s Parole Officer

    Reality check, you have scored the winning try here. I am sure that Kannam/Gill were in cohoots together. Now that they have both been exposed for the heinous crimes they committed, it is time for the backstabbing to start. Believe me, Gill will start squawking like a parakeet.

    By the way, did you see this link? http://www.newhavenregister.com/articles/2001/05/21/import/1840617.txt

    GILL IS PROMOTING GREATER GROWTH WITH ENDOWMENT FUNDS. STRANGE THAT HE SHOULD DO THIS WHILE HIS BUDDY KANNAM RANSACKS ENDOWMENT FUNDS. IT IS A SCHEME! GILL PROMOTES ENDOWMENT FUNDS AND THEN HIS BUDDIES STEAL FROM THEM. COINCIDENCE? NO WAY!!!

  • Ralph Gill’s Parole Officer

    I am incensed that these so-called elite MBAs who worked at investment banks are still trying to rip off hard working people and those honest students who need financial aid for higher education. Gill, Kannam, Madoff, Skilling, Boesky are all cut from the same cloth. Smart-ass, insecure, greedy con men who steal. They all need to go to jail.

  • Elizabeth Harper ’88

    Appalling news. I will petition that Kannam and all his cronies like Ralph Gill are thrown in jail. Didn’t Ralph Gill go to Yale twice? How did he get in? He is one of the most eloquent crooks I have ever read. Please see his ridiculous post above. Go to hell Mr. Gill! [but give us our millions of dollars you stole first]

  • Bail Out

    They all have different lawyers as you can see. Each lawyer will advise his client on how best to protect themselves. I can guarantee that lawyers have already met separately (and unbeknownst to each other) with Wes Reps to cut a deal, and get themselves removed as defendants. Its the only rational thing for defendants to do. Why go down on the SS Kannam?

  • The Barrister

    This lawsuit by Wesleyan is brilliant. Based on all I have read, including some very insightful posts on this blog, I would have to say that Wes has set up a classic squeeze play on the defendants. You can bet that the Fat Lady will sing well before anyone goes into a deposition in this case.

    There is a good reason that no counter claims have been filed.

  • J. Rhys-Jones ’98

    If just one dime was pilfered, that’s one dime less in the endowment. I hope Mr. Blumenthal escalates his involvement in this debacle. The only thing worse would be stealing from an orphanage. Peoples lives and futures depend on the endowment. To take advantage of access to charitable funds is abhorrent. I hope Wesleyan does not settle and goes all the way through trial. Its imporant that corruption of this type be exposed and made pubic to insure that it does not happen again.

  • Eliot Ness

    Kannam is as crooked as a question mark. His emails really describe the kind of slimy, dishonest, lying, cheating person he is. I’m sure he does a lot of illegal things other than trying to rip off the Wesleyan endowment fund. What’s so ironic is that he is so naive and gets caught sending incrimating emails. What a fool.

  • Your Empty Checking Account

    Who has to cough up the $3 million? Just Kannam or all the defendants collectively? Do they just have to post 10%? Can they pledge assets? What if the don’t have the funds? Are they in contempt of court?

  • The Truth

    Hey BAIL-OUT, have you seen Ralph Gill’s lawyer? He makes Barnaby Jones look like Barack Obama. I mean Gill’s lawyer physically looks like that fat cop who played with Bruce Willis in the movie Diehard I! Really pretty pitiful. I would think he could cough up some chump change to hire someone who actually received a law degree by going to school and not through the junk mail.

  • Angry Wesleyan Student

    What gives here? Kannam rips off our university and shreds our endowment fund by double charging for expenses to do personal things and doing a bit of insider trading and earning a salary but spending his time doing something else? I think for the sake of WESLEYAN’s reputation that he is brought to trial and all the evidence and witnesses against him and this Ralph Gill character be summoned to testify. I am incensed, as a Wesleyan student that we tolerate such illegal and unethical practices. How can I walk around after graduating and say “I went to Wesleyan” without people saying, “oh isn’t that the place where someone ripped off your endowment fund? What kind of a school is that?” Kannam, Gill and your spouses and whoever might be involved need to be tried and sentenced to the full extent of the law!

  • Kannam’s Wallet

    Help!

  • Bjoern

    Money, money, money
    Must be funny
    In the rich man’s world
    Money, money, money
    Always sunny
    In the rich man’s world
    Aha-ahaaa
    All the things I could do
    If I had a little money
    It’s a rich man’s world

  • Kannam’s Wallet

    Strange how Kannam is being accused of stealing so much money. Why, I have been empty for years! The only thing inside of me is: two old condoms, one Viagra pill, three dollars, some pubic hair, a forged check, lice, old dirty tissue, expired or overdrawn credit cards, folded paper with my bookie’s name and number as well as phone number of my K’s lover.

  • Yo Angry Wesleyan Student

    the lawsuit by your Administration is not claiming that any endowment funds were misappropriated.

    They ‘just want the money back’ that Kannam was paid since he was working other jobs while at Wesleyan. Do I have that right Elliot Ness or are you now alleging criminal wrongdoing? If that is the case and you are now alleging criminal wrongdoing why didn’t you press criminal charges first and then civil?

  • To: Yo Angry Wesleyan Student… From: Angry Wesleyan Student

    Funds used in the endowment or used to manage the endowment, whatever….$3.0 million is a lot of beans to WASTE on an investment in assets. Criminal versus Civil charges – what is the difference? I am just a poor history major and don’t have a clue about the law. Heck, I watch Judge Judy and the People’s Court to get my legal edification!

  • Anonymous

    So what is the next step? Does Wesleyan have to lodge a formal complaint? What does Kannam have to do besides book a business class prison cell? Once this is all over, Kannam’s only job will be shoveling doo-doo from the local outhouse in the neighborhood where he grew up. You know, like the one in the movie SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE.

  • To: A Faithful Reader

    Kannam deserves a fair shake?! What the hell do you want him to do to prove he is guilty, put a gun up to your face and demand you hand over cash? Why not join us in the real world please.

  • Con Men!

    Kannam and Gill worked at Wood Gundy together

  • Questioner

    Does Wesleyan have a claim on monies that Kannam allegedly earned through outside employment?

  • Two Hats

    ‘The power of wearing two hats is key — our secret weapon,’”

  • Whoo

    “Another board seat ($=equity)…Whoo, whoo, whoo, whoooooo! They’re adding up,”

  • Oucheroo!!
  • Good Find

    What an outstanding find about Adelphi.

    Kannam better hope that Attorney General Blumenthal doesn’t read this post. $3 million might just be a starting point for damages.

  • Cross Dresser Capital Associates

    I agree. If the Attorney General enters the fray, the full resources of the State of Connecticut will be directed toward prosecuting Mr. Kannam and Mr. Gill. This would be a nightmare for all of the defendants. Ouchernooni!

  • Hats Galore

    Looks like Mr. Gill has been hanging out in higher education for some time, just like Mr. Kannam.

    Gill was formerly the Executive Director of New Haven University’s MBA Executive Program. Doesn’t look like he lasted very long though. Also, it seems that the University has erased any mention of him on their website. What happened? The only remnant of Mr. Gill’s time at UNH is a BusinessWeek and Hartford Courant mention in 2004.

    This means that Mr. Gill was wearing two hats at the same time Mr. Kannam was wearing two hats. I wonder if Mr. Gill and UNH had problems with the Two Hat tap dance too?

  • Four Hats

    Now that is a lot of hats!!! or would it be three hats? One hat is a shared Cross Border’s hat. Would that be a Cross Dressing hat? I am confused. Two many hats in the ring. Ole’

  • No Hats

    I guess Kannam is down to no hats now. “Wearing no hats is not key” No more “golf outings of the century. $=lawyer fees. Lotta overhead now!

  • Another Hat Found

    This sounds like Cross Border was a real business serving Canada. Very strange.

    Ralph Gill

    Ralph Gill serves as financial advisor to Gill Advisors. Ralph is the Co-Founder of Cross Border Capital Advisors, a firm providing U.S. asset management services to the Canadian market and specializing in structured alternative assets. Ralph was an investment banker at Merrill Lynch, CIBC World Markets and Morgan Stanley. His real estate experience includes experience as a financial analyst of the Resolution Trust Corporation Oversight Board, and work as an Associate in the Real Estate Group at the law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell in New York.

    Ralph earned his B.A. in economics and M.B.A. from Yale, and his law degree from Oxford. He has held adjunct faculty positions at Yale and Georgetown universities.

    http://www.gillinc.com/company/advisors.cfm

    Accessed via Google cache. The original has been recently deleted.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    ‘The power of wearing two hats is key — our secret weapon,’”

    Two Hats, this is an outstanding quote you posted above. Should be used at the beginning of TIME magazines next issue where they place famous quotes for the week. Is Kannam guilty? Your God damn right he is. Yes, in our stupid legal system we must let due dilegence prevail. But come on, give me a break. He is as guilty as Hitler and in his own little way, just as bad. Fry the bastard and let true justice prevail.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    Kannam and Gill is beginning to sound like a nice name for cell block 13. Either that or the name of two practicing proctologists whose medical practice is to screw people in the ass.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    REDUX: Kannam and Gill is beginning to sound like a nice name for cell block 13. Either that or the name of two practicing proctologists whose medical practice is to screw people in the ass.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    NO HATS SAID: “I guess Kannam is down to no hats now. “Wearing no hats is not key” No more “golf outings of the century. $=lawyer fees. Lotta overhead now!”

    Actually Kannam never wore any hats. He has always practiced unprotected sex without hats or coats. I’ve now seen his picture. Would you trust your 12 year old son or daughter with Thomas Kannam? I think NOT! I’d rather have Jeffrey Dahlmer baby sit for them. Kannam is disgusting.

  • Concerned Student

    Six Thinking Hats your comments are brutal but true. I’d ask you to tone them down, but they reflect how I feel inside too. Unfortunately Kannam is guilty and I do not feel like listening or reading all the bullshit his lawyers and he will say over the ensuing months. I just can’t stand liars. He should pay the $3.0 million back and get on with his useless life.

  • Abigail [Wesleyan student]

    I hear Kannam married a cow who also has insecurity problems. Are all his relatives and friends as cowardly, selfish and deceitful as he is?

  • Stuart Ross, Hartford

    This case is worrying. I’m not sure Kannam will be prosecuted. But his emails are very explicit and obvious. Unless you are a Korean who does not understand English, what Kannam writes in his emails puts a bullseye on his back . He is guilty as sin for: DOUBLE BILLING EXPENSES, USING WESLEYAN TIME TO DO PERSONAL INVESTMENTS, CONFLICTS OF INTEREST, SERVING ON OUTSIDE BOARDS. It all boils down to the fact the Kannam is an irresponsible, bad employee.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    Stuart, I could not have put it better. Kannam is a useless piece of shit. He probably ripped off his father and stole from his mother’s pocket book. Once slimy bastard, always a slimy bastard. I wonder how in hell his wife married him?

  • Sherlock Holmes

    Trustees and admin should hope funds were Your post below is brilliant, OUTCHEROO

    not criminally misappropriated!

    http://www.nytimes.com/1997/03/25/nyregion/state-sues-to-recover-funds-spent-by-adelphi-s-ex-trustees.html?pagewanted=1

  • Not Guilty, But Innocent

    Kannam, Gill and all defendants are innocent until they sit before a jury. The Constitution affords them these rights.

    Please keep that in mind. There may very well be a quite innocent explanation for all the e-mail quotes and relationships. Perhaps everything was just driven by friendship, with no financial motivation at all.

    And remember, the endowment has performed admirably under Mr. Kannam. We should all be thankful for his good stewardship.

  • The Truth

    NOT GUILTY said: “Kannam, Gill and all defendants are innocent until they sit before a jury. The Constitution affords them these rights. Please keep that in mind. There may very well be a quite innocent explanation for all the e-mail quotes and relationships. Perhaps everything was just driven by friendship, with no financial motivation at all.
    And remember, the endowment has performed admirably under Mr. Kannam. We should all be thankful for his good stewardship.”

    Bullshit, Not Guilty, But Innocent… your liberal innocence is at best, worrying.. this is why crimminals get aways scott free. Because the “so called” due process, designed to protect the innocent, actually serves as a loophole for guilty people to get away. Let’s be real here. Kannam is guilty. His lawyers will try to weave a total crap story full of excuses. The best thing Kannam can do it admit he is guilty and do the time, man!

  • Johnny Cochrane

    Hahaha, yes, obviously Kannam is guilty. It is as plain as the red dot on his forehead! I mean look at what I did for The Juice! If the glove does not fit, you must acquit! Remember that famous line? Any lawyer worth his salt can make up the most amazing bullshit to spin even the most extreme doubters. That is what we are paid for. Creating fictitious stories so that we can help guilty people get away and then we get paid huge sums or money! I’d like a crack at Kannam’s $3.0 million, wouldn’t any lawyer??!!

  • Katherine Huston

    Not Guilty But Innocent, your post: “Kannam, Gill and all defendants are innocent until they sit before a jury. The Constitution affords them these rights…” while technically true is the reason our country has become a basket case. Instead of protecting the innocent, it puts innocent lives in danger. Take the terrorists who should have been interrogated. But so-called Constitutional rights and the law prevented obviously guilty people from being prosecuted properly. I am for fairness, yes, but in this case – and I am sure I speak for many of my Wesleyan classmantes (not all I am sure though :-)), there is simply too much evidence against Kannam. I do not want him dancing and laughing all the way to the bank after ripping off my school – Kathy

  • Anonymous

    Terrific post, Kathy. Thanks for speaking your mind.

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