In March 2023, beleaguered rocket company Virgin Orbit thought it had found a lifeline.
A Texas-based investor named Matthew Brown reportedly offered to invest $200 million in the rocket firm, which was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.
But in a complaint filed on Monday, the SEC alleged that the offer was a sham and that Brown had a negative net worth at the time.
The regulator has filed charges that accuse Brown — who it says resides in the Dallas-Fort Worth area of Texas — of engaging in a “fraudulent scheme” to submit and publicly tout a “bogus” $200 million bailout offer for Virgin Orbit, which went bankrupt in April 2023.
Brown could not be reached for comment by Business Insider.
Backed by British billionaire Richard Branson, Virgin Orbit had raised millions of dollars to compete with Elon Musk’s SpaceX in the private space industry, which the World Economic Forum estimates will be worth $1.8 trillion by 2035.
But the company was left scrambling for funding after a failed rocket launch in January 2023.
In its complaint, the SEC said Brown misrepresented his personal wealth in conversations with Virgin Orbit, including sending a fabricated screenshot of his company’s bank account with a balance of over $182 million dollars, when the actual balance was less than $1.
Brown also appeared on CNBC shortly after entering into discussions with Virgin Orbit despite signing an NDA.
He told the channel he planned to close the deal “in the next 24 hours,” and he would “basically be the owner” of Virgin Orbit as a result of the investment, according to the complaint.
The SEC says that Brown also told Virgin Orbit that he had graduated from Southern Methodist University in Dallas with a law degree. “Brown had never graduated from college, let alone attended law school,” the SEC wrote.
When Brown’s offer leaked to the media, shares in Virgin Orbit went up by over 33%.
The SEC said that the deal collapsed after Brown attempted to request the inclusion of a “break up fee” if the transaction did not close and refused to respond to Virgin Orbit’s due diligence inquiries.
The company, once valued at $3.7 billion, filed for bankruptcy less than a month later.
The SEC seeks a civil fine for Brown and a permanent ban on purchasing or selling securities.
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