B.C. court orders alleged U.S fraudster to explain millions sent to disbarred lawyer
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Supreme Court has ordered a man accused of participating in a multimillion-dollar securities fraud in the United States to explain the source of “large sums” of money sent to a Vancouver lawyer.
The court ruling released Tuesday says Kevin Miller was the subject of a 2015 complaint by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for his alleged role in a “pump and dump” scheme involving the shares of a company called Jammin’ Java Corp.
The ruling says the commission alleged the company’s shares shot from 17 cents American per share to more than US$6 per share between December 2010 and May 2011, reaping $78 million in illicit trading profits.
The court ruling says Miller settled the U.S. case in 2017, agreeing to disgorge more than US$800,000 in alleged ill-gotten gains and interest, but he didn’t admit or deny the commission’s allegations as part of the settlement.


