                 United States Court of Appeals
                            F OR T HE D ISTRICT OF C OLUMBIA C IRCUIT
                                       ____________
No. 09-5399                                                     September Term 2011
                                                                         1:05-cv-00036-GK
                                                         Filed On: September 22, 2011
Securities and Exchange Commission,

               Appellee

      v.

Charles Johnson, Jr.,

               Appellee

Chris Benyo,

               Appellant

Michael Kennedy, et al.,

               Appellees

      BEFORE:        Sentelle, Chief Judge, and Ginsburg and Kavanaugh, Circuit
                     Judges

                                         ORDER

      Upon consideration of the petition for rehearing filed by appellee on August 12,
2011, and the response thereto, it is

      ORDERED that the petition be denied. It is

      FURTHER ORDERED, on the court’s own motion, that the opinion issued June
28, 2011, be amended as follows:

      Slip Op. p. 11, first full paragraph, beginning at line 7, delete the following:

      “Although we noted there in a dictum that none of the parties had been
      prejudiced by the error, id. at 30, we actually held objections to venue must be
      “timely and sufficient” and no party had made and preserved that objection, id. at
      31; see Freeman v. Bee Mach. Co., 319 U.S. 448, 453 (1943) (venue must be
      “seasonably asserted”).”
                 United States Court of Appeals
                              F OR T HE D ISTRICT OF C OLUMBIA C IRCUIT
                                         ____________
No. 09-5399                                                       September Term 2011

And insert in lieu thereof:

       “We noted there in a dictum that none of the parties had been prejudiced by the
       error, id. at 30: not the plaintiffs, because they had failed to make and preserve a
       timely objection to venue, and not the Government, because we ruled in its favor
       on the merits of its appeal. Here, as we have seen, Benyo preserved his
       objection to venue at every opportunity and the error in venue would be
       “harmless” to him, in the sense in which we used that term in Whittier, only if we
       were also to rule in his favor on the merits.”


                                          Per Curiam


                                                               FOR THE COURT:
                                                               Mark J. Langer, Clerk

                                                      BY:      /s/
                                                               Jennifer M. Clark
                                                               Deputy Clerk




                                              Page 2
