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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has settled charges against CHS Inc. that accused the cooperative of lax oversight, which resulted in a rogue employee fraudulently manipulating freight contracts.

This individual freight trader's actions led to the agriculture firm reporting inflated net profits over five years, including by more than 40% in 2017.

CHS said Tuesday it welcomes the resolution.

"We are pleased to have this matter resolved and appreciate that we could effectively partner with the SEC and display the level of cooperation the SEC noted in its order," Inver Grove Heights-based CHS said in an emailed statement.

CHS added that it has implemented "internal controls and oversight" to ward off the type of value manipulation of contracts in their grain marketing sector.

The company fired a senior rail freight merchandiser, David Pope, after officials discovered Pope had intentionally ballooned the value of rail contracts, including for a 110-car train, that shuttled grain around the country.

From 2014 to 2018, Pope was "solely responsible" for providing values for both the shuttle contract quantities and values used as derivatives to pay shareholders, according to the SEC.

In its order from last Friday, the regulatory agency said CHS provided "insufficient internal accounting controls" over the trader's work.

"No CHS employees were tasked with confirming the accuracy of the information provided by [Pope]," the SEC report said.

The federal agency also credited CHS for self-reporting the misconduct after a vice president first recognized "grossly overstated" values from the trading desk's bid sheet.

Pope told investigators hired by CHS that the valuations were based on his "personal views." Investigators later found "fictitious" contracts.

As previously reported by the Star Tribune, the company overstated pretax profit from 2014 to 2018 by $190 million, roughly a 12% boost from its actual profits of $1.6 billion net revenue during that time.

On a restatement with the SEC in 2018, CHS noted that rather than the $127 million in net revenue for 2017, the company actually drew in just over $70 million in profits — an overstatement of 44%.

In addition to firing Pope, the company clawed back incentive compensation from more than two dozen employees as a result of the fraud investigation.