COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Investors would
get more time to sue in financial fraud cases under a Senate bill
introduced Thursday.
The bill is in reaction to questions surrounding the financial
dealings of HomeGold Financial in Columbia and Carolina Investors in
Pickens.
HomeGold filed for protection from creditors in U.S. Bankruptcy
Court this week. A week earlier, HomeGold subsidiary, Carolina
Investors of Pickens, had closed its doors on investors wanting
their money back.
Carolina Investors' money was used to support HomeGold
Financial's mortgage operations, including higher-risk refinancing
operations. Carolina Investors is HomeGold's largest unsecured
creditor with a $275 million claim.
"It is a shame, a terrible shame what has happened and should
never be allowed to happen again in South Carolina," Sen. Ralph
Anderson, D-Greenville, said.
The bill expands the time for lawsuits to be filed in financial
fraud cases. It's now three years, but the bill changes that to
three years from the time a person discovers an "untrue statement or
omission." The bill expands liability in fraud cases to people
assisting in fraudulent acts, not just those committing them.
The changes "will empower anyone who has been wronged to right
that wrong," said Sen. Larry Martin, R-Pickens and one of the bill's
sponsors.