<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, sand hill capital]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, sand hill capital]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/sandhillcapital http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/sandhillcapital <![CDATA[VC bust proves sports teams a better bet than startups]]> The Securities and Exchange Commission has caught up with William "Boots" Del Biaggio, a venture capitalist once dubbed a "young financial god," on charges of defrauding clients and banks out of $65 million — in part so he could buy a sports team.

Del Biaggio hasn't exactly copped to the charges. But he did agree not to make additional violations of securities laws — a usual step in reaching a settlement. The SEC will decide later how much he has to repay investors and cough up in fines. He also faces separate criminal charges.

What did he use the money for? The government's complaint says that Del Biaggio faked collateral documents to borrow $25 million in banks so he could buy a stake in the Nashville predators, a hockey team. He also raised a venture-capital fund, Sand Hill Capital Partners III, which the government says he used as a "checkbook" to pay off gambling debts and redecorate a palatial Bay Area home. Del Biaggio resigned form SHCP shortly before it filed for bankruptcy protection this summer.

What's curious about Del Biaggio's two crimes: He could have gotten away with them if he had just committed them simultaneously. If only he had told investors he needed to raise money to buy a sports team rather than invest in startups, he might be doing okay now. Jim Balsillie, a Canadian billionaire and founder of smartphone maker Research In Motion, wants to buy Del Biaggio's stake in the Predators. Unlike boom-and-bust startups, sports teams will always be worth something.

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<![CDATA[Sneaky ad startup Jellycloud deflates, taking $50 million-plus with it]]> The online-ad network market is clogged with startups; most are bound to fail. But no death may be greeted with more joy than Jellycloud, the latest incarnation of Gator, a startup whose software was caught spying on users. A tipster tells us Jellycloud, with 36 employees, went under this weekend, with liquidators repossessing their furniture. A hard death, after a questionable birth.

Gator had changed its name to Claria, and raised some $40 million to launch a personalized homepage which never caught on. In the sneakiest move of all, it then raised $11.5 million under a new company name, JellyCloud, with the same set of executives as Claria — Scott Vandevelde and Scott Eagle among them. Was Jellycloud just Claria reborn? It's now a moot point, if our tipster's report is accurate. And a painful mistake for US Venture Partners, SoftBank, Sand Hill Capital and Crosslink Capital — who have managed to lose $11.5 million in just five months.

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<![CDATA[Another branch catches "Boots" Del Biaggio on his long, public fall from grace]]> After successfully starting up Heritage Bank with his father in 1994, William "Boots" Del Biaggio III founded Sand Hill Capital in 1996. The firm's first fund, Sand Hill I, returned a ninefold profit, cementing Del Biaggio's reputation as a "young financial god," according to the Mercury News. How long ago that success must seem to "Boots" now. Yesterday, entertainment giant AEG joined a long line of accusers, filing a suit that claims Boots scammed the company out of a $7 million loan, using fake bank accounts at San Francisco investment bank Merriman Curhan Ford as collateral.

In April, Security Pacific Bank of Los Angeles made similar claims, suing Merriman and accusing Del Biaggio of tricking them into a $5 million loan. Sources told the Mercury News that Del Biaggio, who quit Sand Hill capital shortly after the scandal broke, now faces an SEC investigation. He's already declared bankruptcy, claiming he owes as much as $70 million and possesses a net worth of $50 million. It's a long, hard fall for one of San Francisco's more public financial figures. In the late 1990s, after financing inital public offerings for ShopNow.com and VerticalNet, Boots — living in a palatial estate in the Almaden Hills — was even considered a potential San Francisco mayoral candidate.

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