Court Denies New Canaan Man’s Appeal in Connection with $7.8 Million Award

Calling some arguments borderline “frivolous,” a Connecticut Appellate Court has rejected a New Canaan man’s appeal of the state Superior Court’s decision to uphold the findings of the American Arbitration Association in connection with a $7.8 million award against him. Judge C.J. DiPentima in an opinion published Tuesday (embedded below) said the court was correct to deny Gregory Imbruce’s application to vacate the award. “The defendants cannot demonstrate that the arbitrator’s conduct amounted either to evident partiality, misconduct or an excess of authority,” DiPentima wrote in an opinion supported by two other judges. The decision is the latest blow to Imbruce, who has been embroiled in a longstanding legal battle that also involves two town residents who had invested with him. Investors—including New Canaan’s Brad Higgins and the late Bill Mahoney, formerly a partner at Bridgewater—had put money into three funds run by Imbruce to invest in oil and gas assets in Texas and Oklahoma.

Stamford Superior Court Confirms Finding of Civil Theft Against New Canaan Man

Superior Court in Stamford this week denied a New Canaan man’s claim that an arbitrator had been biased, upholding a ruling last fall that found him liable for civil theft, breach of contract and Connecticut state securities violations as part of a $7.8 million judgment. In a decision issued Monday, the court found no merit in Gregory Imbruce’s arguments that the arbitrator “was biased and/or partial” and denied his request to vacate the arbitration award (see the full Memorandum of Decision embedded as a PDF at the end of this article). The decision concludes a longstanding battle that also involves two town residents who had invested with Imbruce. Investors—including New Canaan’s Brad Higgins and the late Bill Mahoney, formerly a partner at Bridgewater—had put money into three funds run by Imbruce to invest in oil and gas assets in Texas and Oklahoma. Concerns over how Imbruce was managing the assets culminated in arbitration, with lawsuits filed from both sides.

$7.8 Million Judgment: Local Equity Fund Manager Found Liable for Fraud, Civil Theft

Update 5 p.m. Sept. 15

Richard Gora, attorney for Gregory Imbruce, issued this statement on behalf of his client:

“Mr. Imbruce strongly disagrees with the arbitrator’s award and expects the decision to be dismissed due to numerous factors. Specifically, while the award does not find Mr. Imbruce liable for fraud, the Article falsely states that a judgment of fraud was entered against him. The Article also falsely implies and in fact states that the arbitration involved the SEC, which it did not. As such, the Article includes statements that are wildly and factually incorrect, manipulative, misleading and intentional.