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.

  • Wesleyan class of ’11

    Johnny Cochrane [post] you made me think. Yes, this is what we fear. Guilty people being set free and justice not served.

  • The Six Thinking Hats

    “…Please keep that in mind. There may very well be a quite innocent explanation for all the e-mail quotes and relationships… [posted by Not Guilty, But Innocent]

    HAHAHAHAHA! Get real, Dude! Have you lost the plot????!!!!!

  • Richard ’12

    I’m deeply disturbed by this article and the comments. I matriculated here at Wesleyan because I thought I’d receive a great eductation from a high quality institution which hired the best, most honest professionals. Now it seems some individuals have not met this criteria and might get off with a slap on the wrist. I know they have their point of view, but based on all the above comments this blog and the quotes from Mr. Kannam’s emails, it seems evident that he is very guilty at violating many of the written and unwritten ethical standards of our school, regardless of what the black and white code of conduct says. I am very disappointed Wesleyan has let this happen.

  • A senior student

    Wesleyan’s reputation will suffer badly and I am very uneasy about this in the job market.

  • In other news today..

    The endowment fund just dropped by 20 million based on its current investment positions.

  • Archie Bishop ’90

    NOT GUILTY BUT INNOCENT, you must be Kannam or Gill or someone related to either of these sleeze balls. Given the evidence about him in articles from the Argus as well as quotes from his emails, Kannam is as guilty as you are a blubbering idiot. So, if you are Kannam or anyone involved in the scandal, shame on you. If you are just a clueless first year law student, I feel sorry for you. If you are just uninformed, I suggest you read through the Argus articles about the Kannam saga before reacting.

  • Paul Revere

    “The endowment fund just dropped by 20 million based on its current investment positions.????!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

    Thanks Kannam for all you’ve done

  • William Winthrop, Avon CT

    Biggest Scandal to Hit Wesleyan. It will tank the school’s reputation. People will associate Wesleyan with a place that hires corrupt losers like Thomas Kannam.

    Now we can safely say that we are most high school candidate’s second choice for college.

    Rankings:

    Ivy Leagues…
    Amherst, Bowdoin…
    Stanford….
    Ohio State University

  • Sleuther

    What’s the deal with Canada and Kannam and Gill? Is Cross Borders a Canadian firm?

    Ralph Gill denied in his posting that it was nothing other than an idea that never came to fruition. Yet Gill’s biography posted above clearly shows that it was an established entity, at least in Canada. It shows that it was involved in very complex financial transactions.

    Are these guys US citizens? It is interesting that this blog seems to have revealed the Canada connection. I wonder if Wes’ General Counsel knows this?

    Will the court make them surrender their passports?

    Are they judgment proof if they move to Canada?

  • Royal Mounted Police

    Sounds like Gill and Kannam are trying to escape to Canada before the shit hits the fan.

  • Extradition Man

    Let them come here. I’ll get them and send them back to Connecticut to face the truth.

  • Court Action Today

    There was court action today in this case. A defendant showed up and apparently asked the court to rule on a previously filed motion

    02/04/2010 D APPEARANCE
    Appearance
    02/05/2010 CLAIM/RECLAIM
    Claim/Reclaim

    The only motions that are arguable are Wes’ $3 million prejudgment remedy and Wes’ disclosure of assets request

    A claim/Reclaim is the method which a litigant requests the Court to consider a motion that has been filed and not ruled upon previously.

    Anyone know what’s up?

    Did Kannam show up and ask the court to rule against the $3 million remedy “I got no money homes. I be broke”

    Or is he fighting the asset disclosure request?
    “I have no assets. They’re all pledged to my lawyer”

  • Assets have “crossed the border”

    if Kannam gets off with a judgement and no criminal he’s home free

  • Who was minding the store

    while prez is wearing film professor hats and huffington post syndicated columnist hats??

  • Whistle While Your Work

    To “Who was minding the store”

    Obviously Prez Roth was minding the store as he uncovered the alleged corruption.

    And kudos to him for creating the right type of environment for a whistleblower to come forth without fear of reprisal.

    Keep up the good work Prez Roth

  • Jai Ho Ouchernooni

    A brand new New York Times article!

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/06/nyregion/06wesleyan.html

    Lots of new stuff. Belstar’s lawyer throws Kannam under the bus (if you believe that Kannam was prohibited from outside work).

    Who is Ratan Tata?

  • Just a Slumdog

    From NYT article

    “In India, for instance, Mr. Kannam, who was born in Southeast India, told Wesleyan that he was attending a conference in which the host was a man named Ratan Tata. “Not only was no such conference held,” the lawsuit said, “but Ratan Tata is, in fact, an official adviser to Belstar Group.”

    In perhaps the most egregious example cited in the lawsuit under the heading “fraudulent expenses,” Wesleyan said that Mr. Kannam traveled to Britain with his wife and children in 2006 to interview for a position at Cambridge University.

    “Not only was the trip reimbursed by Cambridge University,” the lawsuit states, “but he fraudulently used his Wesleyan credit card for trip expenses, as well as submitted fraudulent and redundant cash expense reports to Wesleyan for the same trip expenses.”

    The university also accused Mr. Kannam of pressing for more staff and using them to do research for his own activities. “Send me a list of things you’d like done with the hedge fund data so that I can get my guys working on it,” Mr. Kannam wrote to a partner at Belstar Group.”

  • b

    c

  • Doubt there was any whistleblower

    If there was, then why wouldn’t the person who got tipped off by the “whistelblowr” make any mention of it, that only creates more suspicion in the ranks. It just doesnt make sense. Wouldnt it be better to take credit for discovering activities by self. I think Kanam was just blowing smoke in the face of the Administration and should just be order to repay the expenses.

  • Whistle While You Work

    Its already an established fact that there was a whistleblower

    http://roth.blogs.wesleyan.edu/2010/01/14/investment-office-update/

  • Gill’s Version

    of the events seem somehow to resonante with more clarity as believable that this office invasion was more a vengeable act of suspicion than a convenient ‘whisle blower in Sepember’ theory but then again perhaps a some wesleyan or dartmouth English or journalism professor can vouch to the “journalistic integrity” of the above mentioned blog :)

  • Rachel W. current student

    Wesleyan’s reputation tarnished big time. I know Kannam is the culprit and our school was just a victim. Or was it? Why do we hire these criminals in the first place. Kannam is like Madoff. Both corrupt and feeding on innocent hard working people. It is just awful.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/06/nyregion/06wesleyan.html?pagewanted=2

  • For God, America, Wesleyan
  • The Bottom Line – NYT

    This whole “Kannam is a lying, dishonest, irresponsible, deceitful person” is a tragedy. Obviously his lawyers are going to try and depict him as a decent person who netted Wesleyan’s endowment some solid gains. I’m sure they will try to say all the email evidence is simply circumstantial evidence, just like in the O.J. Simpson trial. It is the American legal system that MIGHT allow this scumbag to avoid the worst punishment. Then again, if I see his ugly face, I’ll call him out and let everyone know that this is the man who used his position with the Wesleyan Endowment for PERSONAL GAIN rather than to do what he was paid to do in an honest way. Kannam is a crook. a simple deceitful person.

  • Hardcopy

    The NYT Kannam Article is in today’s print edition of the NYT – February 6, 2010, on page A14 of the New York edition.

  • Jai Ho Parsing the Words

    “However, a lawyer for Mr. Kannam, Stephen J. Fitzgerald, defended his client, saying, “There’s not a single allegation in Wesleyan’s complaint that a single dollar of endowment money was misappropriated or somehow invested improperly in violation of any conflict of interest.” -NYT, Feb 6, 2010

    Read very carefully. If Kannam invested Wes dough in the funds of his fellow defendants, his lawyer could still give this quote.

    It is notable that his lawyer did not say that Kannam did not invest any University funds in any fund of any defendant involved in this lawsuit. That’s what he needed to say.

    And why does the lawyer say “in violation of conflict of interest”. There is a reason that he included that phrase. Its really not necessary to say this unless the lawyer is trying to qualify his statement.

    Finally, if Kannam’s compensation and travel was paid out of endowment funds (and there is no reason to believe that they were not – its the cost of managing the endowment), then in fact there are allegations that endowment money was misappropriated.

  • The Argus Insider

    Nice observation, Jai Ho. Kannam’s lawyer, Stephen Fitzgerald loves to play with words, as all lawyers do, and instead of revealing the truth, they cover it up. I’m sure Kannam used Wes’s endowment funds for personal gain. I’m sure he took personal pleasure trips with them, and I’m sure he double booked expenses. I’m sure he gave a lot of money to that slimy fugitive Ralph Gill too. Isn’t Ralph some sort of crimminal too? I take it he has gotten in trouble with the law? Two peas in a pod, crimminal Kannam and crimminal Gill.

  • Richard in Recovery

    Got to this blog through NY TImes article and my computer. I was curious about the case, but ended up by being impressed by a lot of smartness showing from you Wesleyan guys. I should have applied there instead of to St. John’s.

    Richard, St. John’s ‘1956 (and I’m still alive and well.)

  • AlumIAm

    I too found this link from the NYT article today. All my friends are talking about this article. I’ve gotten 6 calls today so far.

    The Galleon case which i am following is interesting, but it was just straight fraud through insider info.

    This case is far more interesting. It would make a terrific movie or miniseries or even a cartoon series. You would have locations around the world. You would have folks living the high life in exotic destinations like India, the UK, the Superbowl, Torrey Pines, NYC and more. You’d have the Taj and its secrecy set up right in the middle of blue blood Connecticut. From a wedding in India with gypsies to Springsteen belting it out at the Super Bowl, to Tiger on the 18th at Torrey Pines. Wow! Champagne flowing, First Class air travel with stewardesses offering hot towels just as the aircraft banks over Mumbai’s slums. Wow, wow, wow! And a trip to the hallowed halls of Cambridge with a glimpse of Hawking and the mystery of Harry Potter and Sir Isaac Newton. WOW! It just doesn’t get any better. Kal Penn would have to star in the movie. Any one from SNL would be terrific.

    And the quotes. The quotes are awesome. They are truly priceless. They are equal to anything out of South Park. A lot of Kannam’s quotes are precisely what would come out of Eric Cartman’s mouth in South Park. It doesn’t get any better.

    I am waiting for the Wall Street Journal to pick this up. It’s only a matter of time.

  • i’m afraid

    the school administration ‘wants’ us all to believe that it and we are the victim, but you know as the expression goes ‘it takes two to tango”

  • I wonder

    if Kannam was smart enough (or dumb) to also claim IRS tax deductions for some of his “business trips” that would amount to “triple billing”

  • G-Man

    The IRS question is a potentially ominous one for Kannam.

    Expense fraud is usually a pretty clearcut issue, and this case appears to be rife with instances of fraudulent reimbursement. The statements by the defense lawyers do not seem to dispute this, rather they focus on the health of the endowment and the alleged scapegoating of Kannam by President Roth.

    If there were fraudulent expense claims and reimbursements, there are serious subsequent implications, especially the fact that expense reimbursements do not involve any kind of income tax withholding or reporting. Receiving reimbursements based on illegitimate expense claims would amount to unreported income, likely a case of tax evasion and subject to IRS oversight and penalties. If Kannam went even further and claimed tax deductions for expenses he had been reimbursed for, legit or otherwise, the offense is even more serious.

    Worse yet, if fraudulent expense claims or the ill-gotten reimbursement checks were ever sent via US mail, it may also be a case of mail fraud. A federal offense which often applies in cases like this.

    With news that an investigation by CT AG Blumenthal is pending, I suspect that his federal counterparts will be joining soon. Wesleyan’s civil case could easily be eclipsed by both state and federal criminal cases.

    Good luck Mr. Kannam. You will need it.

  • The Big House

    Its a criminal offense, not the walk in the park civil offense that he is currently facing.

  • Oh Canaduh

    How do you measure worker productivity when the workers are out of sight? Mr. Gill has some prescient observations. Can we say “Taj”?

    Blog of Tony Gill
    The Gill Blog
    Canada
    November, 2005

    “I had a fascinating chat yesterday with our financial advisor, Ralph Gill….

    One of the challenges management often wrestles with is simply if a more decentralized work environment is created, how will such a reconfiguration affect the productivity level of workers? Additionally, how will it be possible to measure worker performance when workers are out of sight? After thinking about this for a while Ralph provided an analysis I’d never previously considered, but one that really hit the mark.

    He said that a corporate world that is the midst of substantial change needn’t look any further than the world of academia for guidance, as its underlying structure has been decentralized since the very beginning. ”

    The Gill Blog gillinc.blogspot.com/2005_11_01_gillinc_archive.html
    May have to go through Google cache to access

  • Ivory Alpha

    Mr. Gill seems to be orbiting academia but never able to do anything except crash land.

    Its telling that he spoke about the decentralization of academia.

    I wonder if he had anything to do with prompting Mr. Kannam to create the Taj, otherwise known as “Cross Borders World Headquarters”?

  • Endowment Alpha

    Let’s see. Mr. Gill states that Cross Border Capital Associates did not exist, but then by his own hand, he writes on http://www.gillinc.com that Cross Borders is some big Canadian firm? Who should we believe? The Wesleyan Gill or the Canadian Gill?

  • Redacted

    http://www.gillinc.com
    You have to go to Google Cache to bring up Gill’s bio. Seems he was one of their top advisors.

  • Fact Finder

    I came up with some info that this RALPH GILL has a crimminal record for disorderly conduct? What is that all about???

  • Wayne Gretzky

    Seems like Canada is home base for these two masterminds. So, is it India-Canada connection? I’ll never take a flight between these two countries without demanding that everyone remove and X-ray their shoes.

  • Live From the Super Bowl

    We missed you this year Tom Kannam. Hopefully we will see you and your posse’ next year!

  • Indianapolis Colts Management

    Dear Mr. Kannam,

    While your resume is interesting, we are sorry to let you know, that we do not need a quarterback at this time. Our incumbant seems to be doing a pretty good job right now.

    If, however, a position opens up in the near future, we will not hesitate to give you a call…

    Best regards,

    General Manager, Indianapolis Colts

  • Indianapolis Colts Management

    Dear Mr. Kannam,

    Eureka, we might just have an opening for you!

    After lengthy discussions, our incumbent quarterback has decided to take “early retirement” following this year’s Super Bowl.

    While we were quite happy with his performance in 2009, our experience in the Super Bowl indicates that our organization needs to head in a different direction.

    We believe that your experience deceiving the defense, feigning people, lying and cheating will be invaluable as we prepare for the 2010 season.

    What we are looking for is a leader who lies well and who knows how to dupe people with a straight face.

    What is especially important is the ability to “read” the opposition, to be able to double-book expenses and say one thing while doing something else.

    We believe you possess these qualities and skills in abundance, due to your remarkable work decimating the reputation of a fine educational institution of higher learning.

    We hope you consider our offer seriously. It is rare to come across such as seriously defective immoral individual such as yourself, and we would love to have you on our team.

    With you, in addition to play-caller Bernie Madoff, we expect to have a stellar, championship season next year.

    General Manager, Indianapolis Colts

  • M. Mouse

    Thomas Kannam, now that you have won an unprecendented offer from the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts, what are you going to do?

    I’m going back to Disney World!!!!

  • Corporate Credit Cards How They Work

    Interesting read on corporate credit cards.

    Looks like employee has legal responsibility for the card not the organization because the types of mistakes that Wesleyan alleges in its lawsuit are common.

    http://pharmavet.medzilla.com/forum.php?lxpe=147&lxptc=1166243647-93706

  • I’m So Giddy

    We’ll set up the first NFL game in Mumbai, India. The place is so f**ked up that no one will be able to keep track of rupees vs. dollars. It’ll be the football outing of the century, and Cross Borders will be swimming in the dough. Screw wearing two hats. I just need one turban to make this work.

    I’ll call my good friend Ratan Tata, Chairman of Tata Motors, I told Wesleyan that I went to a conference of his last year. He’ll help set up the whole thing.

    WOWerooni!!!!

  • Jumping for Joy

    I’m So Giddy…. sign me up! I have been dying to try the hotdogs and curry special! And think of the hot red pepper french fries and Bollywood half time entertainment! Just think lovely actresses with accidental tit flashing! I am getting fired up. Where can I buy tickets? I tried http://www.slumdogtwohatsscrewesleyan.com, but it was a FRAUD link.

  • Hatchet job

    These comments are seriously out of control, and play right into Wesleyan’s plan to smear the defendants. The bottom line is that the endowment was properly managed and lost no more than other institutions during the economic downturn. The email fragments that have been released thus far will be shown to be cherry picked and way out of context.

    This lawsuit is just a personal hatchet job by president Roth. The case will almost certainly end with a private settlement.

  • Kannam and Gill are Guilty of Fraud

    Bullshit, Kannam/Gill a.k.a “Hatchet Job”. You know perfectly well both of you are guilty as sin. That you post here with pseudonames and act as though the public supports you is such a bush league tactic. Both of you should go to jail for all the verbal diarrhea you spout. Heck if you can’t do the time, then you should not have done the crime.

  • Simon Cowell

    Ralph Gill is a loser. Hey guys and girls, look at his post above. What a bunch of bullshit. Just regergetating a bunch of crap. Can’t understand half of it. Need to put on those stupid looking British barrister wigs to even figure out what he is saying. Say, I wonder about Kannam’s and Gill’s past? I wonder what other skeletons we can drag out of the closet that point to the fact that both of them are DISHONEST, LYING, KNIVING, scumbags.

  • Warren B.

    Bloody dreadful mess. Just like with the other corruption cases, someone [e.g. Kannam, Gill] need to be severly punished for their POOR behavior. Using personal time for work, and double billing expenses is incredibly dishonest. I would never have either working for me.

Twitter