On August, 8, 2014, the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) announced charges against Julian Brown and his firm Alliance Investment Management Limited (AIM).  According to the SEC allegations, Julian Brown purported to be the "custodian" for assets under the management of Nikolai Battoo. The SEC obtained a court-ordered freeze over Battoo's assets after charging him in 2012 with defrauding investors around the world by hiding major losses while falsely boasting that their investments were performing remarkably during the financial crisis. 

According to the SEC's complaint filed against Brown and AIM in federal court in Chicago, they misrepresented themselves to investors as Battoo's custodian when, since at least 2009, their firm did not have custody of most of the assets listed on investor account statements. Brown and AIM allowed Battoo to create false account statements on AIM letterhead that vastly overstated the value of investors' assets by more than $150 million. Brown and AIM then routinely provided the false account statements to auditors and others acting on behalf of Battoo's investors.

The SEC further alleges that Brown and AIM permitted Battoo to misappropriate at least $45 million of investor funds by transferring money at Battoo's behest from investor accounts to Battoo's direct control. Battoo used investor funds to pay AIM and Brown more than $5 million in return for their critical assistance.

The SEC's complaint alleges that Brown and AIM violated Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5, and aided and abetted Battoo's violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws.