Spartan Trading Company et al. - Multi-Million Dollar Securities Fraud Final Judgments
Summary
The SEC obtained final judgments exceeding $2 million against Spartan Trading Company and the estates of its founders for an alleged offering fraud. From 2019 to 2023, defendants raised over $3.7 million from Twin Cities investors under false pretenses of pooled investing while providing fictitious positive return statements and diverting over $1.9 million for personal withdrawals.
What changed
The SEC obtained final judgments against Spartan Trading Company LLC, the Estate of Richard Myre, and the Estate of Dale Dahmen in connection with an alleged multi-year offering fraud. The court entered a consent judgment against the Myre Estate, an amended default judgment permanently enjoining Spartan Trading from violating Securities Act Section 17(a) and Exchange Act Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, and a default judgment against the Dale Dahmen Estate. Total disgorgement and prejudgment interest exceeds $2 million.\n\nInvestment advisers, fund managers, and securities firms should review compliance programs for investor disclosures, performance reporting, and controls against unauthorized fund withdrawals. This enforcement demonstrates continued SEC focus on unregistered investment fund fraud and materially false statements to investors.
What to do next
- Comply with permanent injunctions against securities violations
- Pay disgorgement and prejudgment interest as ordered by the court
Penalties
Disgorgement $1,319,823.02 (Spartan Trading); Disgorgement $648,747.15 plus prejudgment interest $51,034.69 (Dale Dahmen Estate); joint and several liability up to $695,000 (Spartan Trading and Myre Estate)
Archived snapshot
Apr 16, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Spartan Trading Company, LLC; Estate of Richard Myre; and Estate of Dale Dahmen
U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Litigation Release No. 26528 / April 15, 2026
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Spartan Trading Company, LLC, et al., Civil Action No. 23-cv-1997 (JWB/DTS) (D. Minn., filed June 29, 2023)
SEC Obtains Final Judgments as to Spartan Trading Company, LLC and the Estates of its Founders in Alleged Multi-Million Dollar Offering Fraud
On April 13, 2026, the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota entered a final judgment by consent against the Estate of Richard Myre and an amended default judgment against Spartan Trading Company, LLC in connection with an alleged offering fraud in Minnesota. The Court previously entered a default judgment against Relief Defendant the Estate of Dale Dahmen, and, upon the SEC’s motion, dismissed charges against Relief Defendant the Estate of Dominick Dahmen. Entry of the final judgments concludes the SEC’s litigation.
The SEC’s complaint alleged that from 2019 to 2023 Spartan Trading, an unregistered investment fund founded by Myre, Dale Dahmen, and Dominick Dahmen, raised over $3.7 million from dozens of investors in communities surrounding the Twin Cities. According to the complaint, the investment fund was a sham that defrauded investors in multiple ways, including Spartan Trading, Myre, and the Dahmens raising money on the premise of pooled investing but then failing to make promised investments in stocks. Spartan Trading and Myre were also alleged to have provided investors with statements that falsely represented that Spartan Trading was earning consistently positive returns when, in reality, Spartan Trading engaged in very little investment activity at all and often lost money on the trades it did make. The complaint further alleged that Myre and the Dahmens regularly withdrew money from Spartan Trading, receiving more than $1.9 million of investor money.
Without admitting or denying the allegations made in the complaint, the Myre Estate agreed to the entry of the final judgment, which orders the estate liable, jointly and severally with Spartan Trading, for disgorgement of ill-gotten gains and prejudgment interest. The amended default judgment against Spartan Trading permanently enjoins it from violating Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 and orders it liable for disgorgement plus prejudgment interest totaling $1,319,823.02, of which up to $695,000 is owed jointly and severally with the Myre Estate. The default judgment against the Dale Dahmen Estate ordered it to pay disgorgement of $648,747.15 plus $51,034.69 in prejudgment interest.
The SEC’s litigation was conducted by BeLinda Mathie and supervised by Benjamin Hanauer and Eric Phillips, and the investigation was conducted by Lee Farnsworth and Larry Brannon and was supervised by Amy Flaherty Hartman, all of the SEC’s Chicago Regional Office.
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