NOTE: Stipulations of Fact and Consent to Penalty (SFC); Offers of Settlement (OS); and Letters of Acceptance Waiver, and Consent (AWC) are entered into by Respondents without admitting or denying the allegations, but consent is given to the described sanctions & to the entry of findings. Additionally, for AWCs, if FINRA has reason to believe a violation has occurred and the member or associated person does not dispute the violation, FINRA may prepare and request that the member or associated person execute a letter accepting a finding of violation, consenting to the imposition of sanctions, and agreeing to waive such member's or associated person's right to a hearing before a hearing panel, and any right of appeal to the National Adjudicatory Council, the SEC, and the courts, or to otherwise challenge the validity of the letter, if the letter is accepted. The letter shall describe the act or practice engaged in or omitted, the rule, regulation, or statutory provision violated, and the sanction or sanctions to be imposed.
Faithauer misappropriated approximately $853,795 from customers for his own personal benefit. Faithauer misappropriated the funds by forging customers’ signatures on checks, distribution forms and withdrawal slips without their knowledge or authorization and by converting insurance premiums and funds surrendered froma customer’s fixed annuity.
Faithauer borrowed $90,000 from a customer contrary to his member firm’s written procedures that prohibited registered representatives from borrowing money or securities from customers under any circumstances. Faithauer failed torespond to FINRA requests for information.
Solta improperly priced various natural gas options positions in her proprietary trading book which she knew, or should have known, did not accurately reflect the commodities’ market values. Solta’s mismarking of the natural gas options positions had the effect of improving her profit and loss totals in her proprietary trading book at her member firm.
Fest and Thomason did not provide customers with complete written disclosure of material terms of transactions before they entered into them, including surrender charges paid, sales charges incurred on new investments and optional riders selected on annuities.
Fest’s and Thomason’s member firm required that registered representatives obtain a customer’s signature on transaction documents after they were completed to evidence that the customer was aware of the disclosures in those documents. Fest had clients sign blank transaction documents, which he had Thomason complete later with inaccurate information, including inaccurate sales charges and incorrect rationale for transactions,and submitted the documents to his firm without the clients’ review.
Fest provided inaccurate and misleading information to FINRA staff during on-the-record testimony and attempted to persuade Thomason to corroborate his inaccurate testimony. Fest’s pattern of recommending short-term unit investment trust trading in his customer’s accounts was unsuitable
Hoshowski borrowed $137,000 from his member firm’s customers without prior written notice to, or prior approval from, his member firm. Hoshowski engaged in private securities transactions and failed to provide prior written notification to the firm. The aggregate value of all notes sold totaled approximately $1.06 million.
Hoshowski failed to respond to a FINRA request to provide testimony.
Scaffe borrowed funds from member firm customers when the firm expressly prohibited its representatives from borrowing funds from customers and included such prohibition in its compliance manual. Scaffe signed annual compliance questionnaires on which he acknowledged that he had received or had access to the firm’s compliance manual and did not request or obtain permission from his firm to borrow funds from customers, nor could he under the firm’s procedures. Scaffe failed to respond to FINRA requests for a written statement.
Eldredge participated in private securities transactions without giving prior written notice to,or obtaining prior written approval from, his member firms.With respect to one of those private securities transactions, Eldredge’s investment recommendation was unsuitable in that the customer funded the transaction by mortgaging his personal residence. Eldredge engaged in outside business activities without providing prompt written notice to one of his member firms.Eldredge failed to provide FINRA with requested documents.
approved registered representatives’ participation away from the firm in raising capital for a company by selling its stock, but imposed conditions on their participation and required that the stock certificates not bear restrictive legends;
failed to take reasonable steps to monitor or determine compliance with these conditions, including conducting an inquiry of “red flags” that suggested violations of federal securities laws; and
Fischer failed to detect and prevent the representatives’ distribution of unregistered securities in their capacity as underwriters.
Although Fischer was aware these transactions constituted private securities transactions for compensation, he did not cause the firm to record the transactions on its books and records and supervise them as if they were firm transactions. Further, Fischer failed to supervise the registered representatives in a manner reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable laws, rules and regulations. Acting through Fischer, the Firm failed to supervise and record the representatives’ private securities transactions.
First Financial Equity Corporation: Censured; Fined $20,000
George Edward Fischer: Fined $20,000; Suspended 15 business days in Principal capacity only
Pereira falsified customer signatures on copies of financial planning service agreements and on an insurance illustration form, and submitted the falsified documents to his member firm. The customers had not authorized Pereira to sign their names on the subject forms, but the customers had previously signed original forms that were submitted to the firm, and the forms Pereira falsified were copies of the originals that he submitted to his principal.
Hubert William Pereira: Fined $5,000; Suspended 4 months
Henjum guaranteed a customer against trading losses without the customer’s or his member firm’s prior written authorization. Henjum reimbursed the customer approximately $19,200 from his personal funds for trading losses incurred.
James Frederick Henjum: Fined $5,000; Suspended 20 business days
advised a customer to open an account at another FINRA member firm to reduce his options trading transaction costs,
accepted discretionary trading authority from the customer for the account, and
executed transactions in the customer’s account at the other firm using the customer’s login and password.
May did not
advise his member firm in writing that he had discretionary trading authority for the customer’s account at another member firm prior to placing an order in the account, and
did not notify the firm where the account was opened that he was associated with another FINRA member firm.
Jason Spencer May: No Fine in light of financial status; Suspended 60 days
Patrick altered public customers’ Withholding Certificate for Pension or Annuity Payment Forms (IRS Form W-4P) by affixing invalid copies of the customers’ signatures. Patrick similarly altered her member firm’s internal documents regarding public customers, thereby causing the firm’s books and records to be inaccurate and not in compliance with Section 17(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of1934 and SEC Rule 17a-3. Patrick failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
McCoy converted funds belonging to an elderly public customer totaling approximately $44,000 without her knowledge and consent by contacting the mutual fund company that held her funds and requesting numerous redemptions. McCoy converted additional funds belonging to the customer totaling $34,000, without her knowledge and consent, by forging her checks and making them payable to a company he controlled that was disclosed to his firm as an outside business activity.
Ross willfully engaged in pre-arranged or other manipulative trades primarily for a barred individual’s benefit. Ross traded shares of the security on one side of the market with one firm and then traded almost the same number of shares on the opposite side of the market with another firm. There were numerous calls between the individual and Ross within two minutes either immediately before or immediately after Ross affected the inside market. The trading created the false appearance of trading volume and market interest in the company and allowed Ross and the individual to artificially affect the security’s market price.
Martin Dennis Ross: Fined $25,000; Suspended 2 years
The Firm's anti-money laundering (AML) program required the firm and Ayme to
monitor for potentially suspicious activity and AML red flags,
investigate potentially suspicious activity and
report suspicious activity by filing a Form SAR-SF with the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Network.
The Firm and Ayme
failed to adequately implement or enforce its AML program and to otherwise comply with their AML obligations since they did not identify and analyze numerous transactions to determine if they were in fact suspicious, which would require them to be reported on a Form SAR-SF;
permitted suspicious activities to occur undetected and unchecked; and
failed to file SAR-SFs as appropriate.
The Firm conducted tests for compliance with applicable AML laws, rules and regulations, but these tests were not independent since they were conducted by a firm employee who performed AML functions as part of his regular job responsibilities.
Also, the Firm
acted as the placement agent for contingency securities offerings and failed to establish escrow or separate bank accounts in connection with the offerings, and investors were directed to transmit their funds directly to the issuers prior to the contingency being satisfied;
failed to satisfy the minimum contingency for one offering by the closing date, but the offering was not terminated, investor funds were not returned and the offering period was extended; and
raised additional funds but failed to send written reconfirmation offers to subscribers disclosing the extension of the offering prior to the closing date, thereby willfully violating Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act, Rule 10b-9 thereunder and NASD Rule 2110.
Finally, the Firm used the instrumentalities of interstate commerce to conduct a securities business while failing to maintain its minimum required Net Capital.
Mesirow's clearing agreement with correspondent firms impermissibly allocated the detection and reporting of suspicious activity with respect to trading activities of introduced customer securities accounts to the introducing correspondent firms. The Bank Secrecy Act imposes an independent obligation to detect and report suspicious activity on all broker-dealers. Consequently, the firm’s AML program was not reasonably designed to detect and cause the reporting of suspicious trading activity in customer accounts.
As an employee of his member firm’s banking affiliate, Harbison withdrew $4,540 from a customer’s account without the customer’s permission. Harbison made the withdrawal by cashing a Debit Memo and using a special number that only he knew through his work for the affiliate bank, which allowed him to withdraw the funds from the customer’s overdraft line of credit.
Betten engaged in outside business activities, for compensation of approximately $251,616.18, without providing prompt written notice to his member firm on the annual certification statement or in any other written form. Betten falsely asserted on annual certification statements that he was not engaged in any undisclosed outside business activities.
Michael Andrew Betten: Fined $10,000; Suspended 4 months in all capacities
Reilly operated a securities business from an unregistered branch office, causing his member firm to violate the restriction on business expansion contained in its membership agreement with FINRA. Without requisite supervision, Reilly and others regularly used the branch office to cold-call prospective investors, open new customer accounts and/or cause securities transactions to be effected in customer accounts. Reilly was actively engaged in the management and operation of the branch and exercised control over the operations at the branch office. By actively engaging in the management and operations of the branch
office, Reilly acted in the capacity of a general securities principal
without being so registered at that time.
One individual, without requisite supervision, used the branch office to improperly solicit potential customers and made false representations, including unwarranted price predictions, omitted material facts and used misleading telemarketing scripts that a registered principal had never approved.
Reilly caused his firm to violate NASD Rule 1017(a)(5) and NASD Interpretative Material 1004.
Michael M. Reilly (Principal): Fined $12,500; Suspended 45 days; and Agreed to fully and promptly cooperate with FINRA in any and all investigations and/or disciplinary proceedings, of any person or entity, concerning conduct at and/or relating to his member firm during the time he was associated with the firm and, in connection with his cooperation, promptly produce information and documents FINRA requests and appear and testify completely and truthfully at any FINRA interview and/or disciplinary hearing.
Damon exercised discretion in customers’ accounts without having obtained written customer authorization that her firm would find acceptable. Damon exercised time and price discretion after the business day on which the customer granted such discretion without the customer’s written authorization.
Michelle Ruth Damon: Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Branch offices utilized communications that failed to provide either adequate balancing language or a sound basis for evaluating the information provided. The communications contained statements that were promissory of successful investment results and contained exaggerated, misleading or unwarranted statements. The firm’s communications contained oversimplified and incomplete comparisons, failed to disclose the member firm’s name, and failed to provide required Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or Securities Industry Protection Corporation (SIPC) disclosures in conformance with SEC and/or SIPC rules.
Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated: Censured; Fined $120,000
Harte failed to supervise registered representatives who engaged in the sale of unregistered securities. Harte failed to take adequate measures to ensure that the registered representatives and employees he supervised complied with the requirements of Section 5 of the Securities Act.
Patrick Francis Harte Jr. (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 6 months in Principal capacity only; and Ordered to requalify as a Principal before functioning in any principal capacity
Illies forged customers’ signatures on customer financial forms that he had forgotten to have the customers sign. The customers’signatures were forged on documents relating to transactions that the customers had requested and/or authorized. When his member firm inquired whether he had forged customer signatures, Illies denied doing so on several occasions.
Patrick James Illies: No Fined in light of financial status; Suspended 9 months in all capacities
Although it had an established Customer Identification Program (CIP), its internal controls for ensuring compliance were not sufficient to detect or prevent multiple failures to obtain and verify required customer identification information.The Firm failed to obtain required customer identification information for certain accounts, failed to confirm that sufficient documentary and/or non-documentary verification information was obtained prior to approving the accounts, and failed to restrict transactions in certain deficient accounts 30 days o rmore after opening.
Perrin, Holden and Davenport Capital Corporation, dba PHD Capital: Censured, Fined $30,000; Required to have its registered representatives register for three hours of AML training within 60 days of issuance of this AWC, and complete such training within six months of issuance of this AWC.
Dunne posted electronic messages on an Internet message board concerning a company which constituted advertisements on his member firm’s behalf. Dunne posted the advertisements without a registered principal’s prior approval and none of the advertisements named the firm or reflected Dunne’s relationship with the firm.
The advertisements constituted purchase recommendations for the company and
failed to provide, or offer to furnish upon request, available investment information supporting each recommendation;
failed to disclose that
Dunne’s firm was a market maker in the company;
that the firm and/or its officers or partners had a financial interest in the company,
the nature of the financial interest; and
failed to provide a fair and balanced assessment, referring only to the company’s upside without any disclosure of the risks.
Dunne opened securities brokerage accounts at other firms, failed to notify the firms in writing that he was associated with other firms, and failed to notify his member firms in writing that he opened accounts at other firms.Dunne falsely represented to his member firms that he had no outside brokerage accounts and did not use or participate in chat rooms,message boards or other unapproved electronic communications.
Peter Christian Dunne: Fined $25,000; Suspended 1 year
Hackstedde and Sindelar acquired unregistered and non-exempt shares from an issuer with a view to distribution and, therefore were statutory underwriters. They distributed,or caused the distribution of, unregistered and non-exempt securities to the public.
Peter Herbert Hackstedde: Fined $301,896.93 (includes $286,896.93 disgorgement of profits) Suspended 30 business days in all capacities Ross William Sindelar: Fined $418,904.91 (includes $$403,904.91 disgorgement of profits) Suspended 30 business days in all capacities
Leeper misappropriated approximately $31,663.01 from customers by writing checks against their brokerage accounts and forging their signatures. Leeper deposited the checks into her personal bank account and converted the proceeds for her own use and benefit. Leeper failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
prepare accurate net capital computations by erroneously treating a portion of a receivable as an allowable. As a result, the firm failed to file accurate Financial and Operational Combined Uniform Single (FOCUS) reports;
treat an arbitration award as a liability. As a result, the Firm effected transactions in securities while failing to maintain its minimum net capital requirement; and
prepare accurate net capital computations and filed an inaccurate FOCUS Part IIA Report.
Sicor Securities, Inc. Censured; Fined $10,000 (jt/sev with Merrick); Fined $20,000 additional
Gregory Lunar Merrick: Censured; Fined $10,000 (jt/sev with Sicor Sec. Inc.)
Leary submitted false expense reports to his member firm requesting reimbursement of expenses he represented as bona fide business expenses that he had incurred and paid relating to his employment at the firm. The expense reports were false in that they included expenses that Leary had not incurred and paid, or had not incurred in furtherance of his firm’s business. In connection with certain expenses on the reports that were not legitimate business expenses, Leary submitted receipts and/or other documentation purporting to substantiate the expenses that he either had fabricated or knew did not document bona fide business expenses. As a result of Leary’s false expense reports, his firm adjusted the type and amounts of income it reported for him in one year.
Simone exercised discretionary authority in a deceased customer’s account without the customer’s written discretionary authority and without his member firm’s written acceptance of the account as discretionary. The discretionary transactions generated approximately $8,000 in commissions and an approximate loss of $170 in the customer’s account; excluding fees and commissions, the account would have realized a gain of approximately $5,800.
Steven John Simone (Principal): Fined $10,500 (includes $8,000 in disgorged commissions); Suspended 20 business days
Nelson falsified account-related documents by whiting out information, taping over dollar amounts, writing dates and dollar amounts in pencil, tracing signatures, and cutting and pasting signatures. Nelson submitted the falsified documents to her member firm as authentic. Nelson failed to respond to a FINRA request to appear for an on-the-record interview.
Hacket placed day trades in his personal brokerage account that he maintained at the firm,which resulted in a margin deficiency in that account. Hackett had insufficient assets to satisfy the margin deficiency and, in an effort to satisfy the margin deficiency, accessed one of the firm’s back-office systems and transferred approximately $6,129 from the firm’s general ledger account into his personal account. He failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Freeman misused funds that were not his by charging personal expenses on his corporate credit card, in violation of his member firm’s policies, and not making payment when it was due. Freeman’s member firm did not authorize the charges and paid the outstanding balance of approximately $2,000 on Freeman’s corporate card after he failed to pay the bill for over six months.
Timothy Terrence Freeman: No Fine in light of financial status; Suspended 3 months in all capacities
The Firm failed to establish, maintain and enforce a supervisory system and procedures reasonably designed to preserve and review its business-related electronic communications. The Firm’s electronic media storage system was deficient in that electronic business-related communications could be deleted from the system prior to being preserved in the requisite non-rewriteable, non-erasable format.
The Firm allowed its associated persons to use outside email addresses to send or receive electronic business-related communications, but the firm’s system did not preserve communications from outside email addresses unless the communications were sent from or forwarded to a firm-provided email address, and the firm did not require its associates to route all business-related communications from outside email addresses through its system. The Firm did not have written procedures in place to ensure that its associated persons were routing all electronic business-related communications sent from or received in outside email addresses through the system.
The Firm failed to properly implement its AML compliance program, insofar as it did not monitor corporate accounts brought to the firm from a defunct broker-dealer by registered representatives for red flags and did not identify potentially suspicious activity for further due diligence.
A registered representative at the firm sent business-related emails from a non-firm email address that were not maintained on the firm’s server in a non-rewritable, non-erasable format, but were obtained from the representative’s computer, where they could have been deleted or lost.
Miller made a recommendation to an elderly customer that the customer invest in shares of a real estate investment trust (REIT). The customer withdrew funds from existing investments and gave Miller over $1 million to purchase REIT shares.
Miller only invested a portion of the customer’s funds in REIT shares and misappropriated $433,543.22 of the funds by depositing the checks into his personal bank account for his personal use, including gambling, mortgage payments, credit card bills and other personal expenses. Miller failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
FINRA's National Adjudicatory Council (NAC) imposed the sanctions in a remand decision after Sears had appealed a NAC decision to the SEC. The NAC based its sanctions on findings thatSears effected unauthorized securities transactions in customer accounts andparticipated in outside business activities without providing written notice to her member firm.
Wanda Pittman Sears: No Fine in light of financial status; Suspended 6 months for unauthorized trading; Suspended 6 months for engaging in outside business activity (suspensions to be served concurrently)
Pacella participated in the sale of unregistered securities. Before entering sales orders, Pacella relied on his member firm’s compliance department to review whether the shares were freely tradable. The compliance department conducted its tradability review in the ordinary course of business and incorrectly approved the securities for public resale, even though the shares were restricted. Pacella had or should have had the company’s Articles of Incorporation and press release, thereby allowing him to determine that the securities were not registered for public sale and not subject to an exemption.
Isabella fraudulently induced customers, most of whom were retired or nearing retirement, to entrust him with their retirement savings and purchase securities from him by promising that he could achieve sustained annual rates of return of at least 10 percent each and every year, which would allow for consistent annual withdrawal, ranging from 7 percent to 13.5 percent fromtheir investment portfolios without depletion of principal. Many of the customers relied on Isabella’s fraudulent representations when determining to invest their retirement funds with him, and based their decision to retire sooner than they had otherwise planned, at least in part, upon the representation that they would receive enough monthly income from their retirement accounts to live on for the rest of their lives.
Isabella made unsuitable investment recommendations and effected transactions in customers’ accounts without having reasonable grounds for believing that the transactions were suitable for the customers in view of the over-concentration in equities, the related fees incurred, and in light of the customers’ financial situations, investment objectives and needs. Isabella’s promised returns and withdrawal rates proved to be unsustainable, resulting in the depletion of the customers’ retirement savings and forcing some to return to employment. Isabella falsified records maintained by his member firm concerning his customers’ financial situations and goals, and as a result, the customers did not receive the firm’s promised benefit of having an investment manager selected based on their individual needs and financial situations.
Isabella inappropriately obtained confidential contact and employment information about a company’s employees, without their knowledge, authorization or consent, from personnel in the company’s human resources and other departments, and rewarded the contacts for their assistance with gifts.
In addition, Isabella used a false professional designation on correspondence with customers.
Isabella provided false testimony during a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Andersen exercised discretion in customers’ accounts without first having obtained written customer authorization that his firm would find acceptable and, without the customer’s written authorization, exercised time and price discretion after the business day on which the customer granted discretion.
Donald Louis Andersen: Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
failed to maintain and preserve all of its business-related electronic communications;
did not have a system, written procedures or policies relating to the retention of electronic communications in place and, as a result, failed to maintain and preserve electronic communications;
increased the number of registered representatives associated with the firm and failed to file an application with FINRA and obtain FINRA’s approval for the material increase in sales personnel;
conducted business at locations that constituted branch offices that were not registered with FINRA; and
failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system, and failed to establish, maintain and enforce written supervisory procedures that were reasonably designed to achieve compliance with all applicable laws, rules and regulations regarding business-related electronic communications, material business expansions, proper registration of branch offices, a principal approval of advertisements prior to use, and maintaining records of the firm’s Web sites and advertisements.
Fortune Financial Services, Inc. Censured; Fined $125,000; Prohibited for 90 days, commencing five business days after issuance of the AWC, from registering any associated persons, except for individuals who perform only compliance and/or supervisory duties. Termination of this prohibition is contingent upon satisfaction of the following undertakings:
The firm shall, within 10 business days after the end of the 90-day prohibition, certify in writing to FINRA that it complied with the prohibition, and,
within 90 days of the issuance of the AWC, the firm shall certify to FINRA in writing that the firm currently has systems and procedures in place that are reasonably designed to achieve compliance with laws, rules and regulations concerning the preservation of electronic mail communications.
Brian Lee Daniels (Principal): Fined $25,000; Suspended 9 months in Principal capacity only
Swiman improperly obtained approximately $607.21 from his member firm by submitting inaccurate travel and expenses reports and seeking reimbursement for expenses not related to firm business. Swiman subsequently reimbursed the firm. By submitting the inaccurate expense reports, Swiman caused his member firm to maintain inaccurate books and records.
Gary Steven Swiman: No fine (in light of financial status); Suspended 2 years
The Firm failed to establish and maintain supervisory systems and failed to establish, maintain and enforce written procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws and regulations.
Investment Professionals, Inc.: Censured; Fined $40,000; Required to amend or supplement its written supervisory procedures to adopt additional procedures designed to prevent unauthorized changes of address for customer accounts and to prevent changes of address that were not in compliance with the firm’s prohibitions,restrictions, procedures or policies.
Unruh forged a customer’s signature on an acknowledgment form. After flagging the order for shares of a bond fund because they did not match the primary investment objective on the new customer’s profile form, Unruh’s member firm instructed him to obtain a signed letter from the customer acknowledging that she understood that the bond fund that Unruh recommended was contrary to her conservative risk and capital preservation investment objectives specified in her new account documents. Instead of obtaining the requested acknowledgement letter from his customer, Unruh drafted a letter, signed his customer’s name and submitted it to his member firm. Unruh offered a false explanation in response to a FINRA request for information.
Jeffrey Robert Unruh: Fined $10,000; Suspended 18 months
Jordan, a former research analyst with Wells Fargo Securities, LLC ("Wells Fargo") was named in a three count FINRA Complaint alleging that three research reports Jordan authored on Cadence Design Systems, Inc. ("Cadence") did not disclose certain conflicts of interest and that she thereby violated NASD Conduct Rules 2711(h)(1)(A), 2711(h)(1)(C), 2210(d)(1)(A), and 2110.
The First Cause alleged that Jordan failed to disclose in the Cadence Research Report dated February 4, 2005, that she had applied for the position of Corporate Vice President of Investor Relations with Cadence and scheduled employment interviews with members of Cadence’s senior management team.
The Second Cause alleged that Jordan failed to disclose in the Cadence Research Report dated March 2, 2005, that she had interviewed with senior members of Cadence’s management team.
The Third Cause alleged that Jordan failed to disclose in the Cadence Research Report dated April 28, 2005, that she had accepted Cadence’s employment offer to become its Vice President of Investor Relations; and that she failed to disclose the financial interest she acquired under the terms of the Cadence employment offer.
Jennifer Anne Jordan: Following Appeal, FINRA's National Adjudicatory Council (NAC) increased the sanctions from the Office of Hearing Officers (OHO) fines of $10,000 and $2,500 to a fine of $20,000 and a 2 year suspension in all capacities.
Hinkley made material misrepresentations and omissions to customers. Hinkley engaged in improper telephone solicitations of potential customers in connection with the offer of securities, and made untrue statements of material facts and omitted to state material facts necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. Hinkley used unapproved, misleading telemarketing scripts in connection with the solicitations. The Hinkley failed to respond to requests from FINRA to appear for testimony.
Brake shared commissions with an unregistered person, a former employee of his member firm who asked him to submit variable annuity purchase applications on his behalf for execution through the firm. Without meeting or speaking with the prospective customer purchasers, Brake signed the applications, which caused them to reflect that he was the representative for the purchases, and then submitted the applications to the firm. Brake received commissions totaling approximately $9,000 for the purchases and paid approximately $7,850 of the commission to the unregistered person.
John Carson Brake Sr.: Fined $5,000; Suspended 15 business days in all capacities
Koma wrongfully obtained ATM cards that belonged to customers of his member firm’s affiliated bank and used them to make unauthorized withdrawals from the customers’ accounts, misappropriating $2,625 for his own personal use. Koma failed to respond to FINRA requests for information and appear for an on-the-record interview.
In connection with the sale of an annuity contract, Rutherford misrepresented to a customer that he would receive a higher return rate than what the terms of the policy offered. Rutherford provided the customer with falsified annual account statements and an altered annuity contract that reflected a higher return rate, when in fact the customer was receiving a lower rate of return. Rutherford falsified an annual account statement by increasing the account balance by over $5,000 in order to mislead the customer into believing that he received additional earnings as a result of the higher rate of return, and deposited over $5,000 of her own personal funds into the customer’s account to compensate him for the disparity in return rates.
After agreeing to reimburse another customer for any early withdrawal penalties in connection with transferring money to his annuity, Rutherford falsified an annuity confirmation statement wherein the account balance was increased to cover a surrender charge that had not been credited after the customer complained that he was charged a penalty for early withdrawal.
failed to record and maintain the time of receipt for customer orders on brokerage order memoranda, and mismarked trades as solicited or unsolicited;
did not preserve instant message communications in connection with the firm’s securities business;
failed to establish,maintain and enforce a supervisory system, including written supervisory procedures with respect to supervision of registered representatives’ and other associated persons’ activities; trading, including order tickets, order entry, best execution and trade review; review and retention of instant messages; and branch office activities;
had a deficient supervisory system regarding trades passing through the firm’s inventory account, and was unable to readily identify and match off setting transactions related to particular customer orders requiring multiple executions, and consequently, was unable to compare, and did not compare, the customer’s price to the firm’s costs to ensure than any markups or markdowns were fair and reasonable. (Since the firm did not capture and record when orders were received, it was unable to adequately review the quality of the executions of its customer orders, and failed to ensure that it accurately reported its trading capacity to the TRF).
Legend Merchant Group, Inc: Censured; Fined $150,000; Required to certify that it has reviewed the adequacy of its
procedures regarding recording and maintaining required memoranda of customer orders, including, but not limited to, times of receipt of orders; ensuring that order memoranda are accurate, including, but not limited to, designations of orders as solicited or unsolicited; preservation and review of electronic correspondence; each area of the firm’s business; ensuring, in connection with transactions passing through the firm’s inventory account that sales charges are fair and reasonable based on the firm’s contemporaneous costs, the quality of the executions of customer orders, including the timeliness of executions, and that the firm correctly reports its trading capacity to the TRF; clear delegation of supervisory responsibilities and reviews to ensure the supervisors are performing their assigned responsibilities, including, but not limited to, with respect to trading, including supervisory review of order tickets, order entry, and best execution, review of electronic correspondence, including, but not limited to, instant messages, and branch office and non-branch office activities; established systems and procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws, regulations and FINRA rules concerning the aforementioned activities.
On appeal from an Office of Hearing Officers Decision (OHO), the National Adjudicatory Council (NAC) imposed the sanctions based on findings that Nouchi and Winters caused their member firms’ books and records to contain inaccurate information about customers selling Class B mutual fund shares by entering sales charge waivers for those customers that falsely represented that these customers were disabled.
Lisa Ann Tomiko Nouchi: Fined $10,000; Suspended 90 days
Macko misused her member firm’s funds by causing funds to be credited to her personal firm brokerage account and making withdrawals totaling nearly $5,000 from that account, while failing to timely make deposits corresponding to the posted credits. Macko’s account did not have sufficient funds (NSF) to cover her withdrawals, which her member firm funded. Macko caused her member firm’s books and records to be inaccurate as the false credits were reflected in the firm’s books and records.
Lorraine Leonie Macko: Fined $6,000; Suspended 1 year in all capacities
Tomasello misappropriated $5,716 from his member firm by submitting false and misleading invoices and expense reports to the firm and improperly seeking and receiving reimbursement for bogus charges by claiming them as legitimate business expenses (further causing his member firm to have false and inaccurate books and records).
Tomasello provided gifts in excess of $100 to registered representatives at another firm.
Tomasello provided false testimony and failed to provide requested documents to FINRA staff.
FINRA's National Adjudicatory Council (NAC) found that Registered Principal Vines approved the falsification of IRA adoption agreements, in violation of NASD Rule 2110. Essentially, an employee suggested that the firm copy customer signatures from outdated forms onto current versions, rather than contact customers and obtain original signatures. As a result, customers did not receive updated disclosures of their arbitration rights.
Although neither party appealed the May 30, 2008, Office of Hearing Officers (OHO) decision, the NAC called the matter for discretionary review to examine the sanctions imposed.
The OHO Decision fined Vines $10,000; suspended him for 30 days in all capacities; suspended him for 6 months in Principal capacities; and ordered him to attend an ethics training program.
The NAC’s August 25, 2009 Decision imposed higher sanctions than those imposed by the OHO Panel because the NAC concluded that Vines’misconduct was reckless and his decision to leave the falsified forms in the customers’ files was tantamount to concealment.
Michael Lon Vines: Fined $10,000; Suspended 1 year in Principal capacity only
Paredes linked his 529 college savings plan accounts to an individual’s bank account, transferred $3,900 from the individual’s bank account to the plan accounts, without the bank account holder’s authorization or consent, and misappropriated the funds for his personal use.
failed to promptly file documents and information relating to the shelf-offerings of issuers with FINRA’s Corporate Financing Department;
sold shares in the public offerings of the stock of issuers without first obtaining a required no objections letter from FINRA;
failed to engage a qualified independent underwriter to perform due diligence and recommend the offering price during its participation in public offerings in which the firmand its associated persons had sufficient holdings of the common equity of the issuers to constitute a presumptive conflict of interest.
establish, maintain and enforce adequate written supervisory procedures to ensure compliance with FINRA rules and with SEC and Federal Reserve Board rules and regulations;
ensure that firm customers fully paid for cash transactions within the time allotted by the Federal Reserve Board Regulation T, in that the firm failed to cancel the transactions, liquidate the transactions or freeze the accounts when customers failed to make full payment on purchase transactions in cash accounts within five full business days;
review, initial and maintain daily purchase and sales blotters at the main office;
make the determination to implement heightened supervision for individuals who met its written supervisory procedures requiring a determination;
establish compliance procedures for setting commissions and markups;
establish supervisory procedures to detect excessive commissions and markups.
ensure that an individual actively engaged in managing the firm’s securities business was registered as a principal or in any other capacity;
maintain firm records in an easily accessible place and failed to promptly produce the records; and
respond to FINRA requests to produce new account forms, customer confirmations and order memoranda because they were maintained at a branch office, thereby causing his firm to be in violation of SEC rules.
Robert Wesley Stout: Fined $20,000; Suspended 20 business days in Principal capacity only
Cantrell caused unapproved advertisements that did not comply with FINRA’s standards for communications to be broadcast to the public. He failed to file with FINRA, within 10 days of first use, an advertisement concerning mutual funds and failed to include required references to his member firm’s Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC)membership.
Rodney Lee Cantrell: Censured; Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Hardy falsified new account records that the customers did not authorize and, in some cases, contained extensive false information including inaccurate birth dates, social security numbers and financial information. Hardy submitted these new account forms to his member firm, causing its required records to be inaccurate. Also, Hardy engaged in unauthorized transactions in customer accounts.
Zakai borrowed $16,000 from one of his member firm’s customers. Zakai’s member firm did not know of or otherwise approve of the loan, and, moreover, the firm’s policy prohibited such loans.
Registered Principal Mugavero borrowed $10,000 from a firm customer contrary to his firm’s written policies prohibiting registered representatives from borrowing money from customers, and he failed to notify the firm about the loan. Mugavero repaid $1,000 of the loan but $9,000 remains outstanding. Mugavero failed to respond to FINRA requests to provide personal bank records.
failed to register individuals who acted in a supervisory capacity with respect to its investment banking or securities business in the appropriate registration category;
failed to provide written notification disclosing to its customers either its correct capacity in transactions or that transactions were executed at an average price;
made publicly available a report on its routing of non-directed orders in covered securities that contained incorrect information as to routing venues;
made available a report on the covered orders in national market system securities that it received for execution from any person which included incorrect information;
failed to report transactions in TRACE-eligible securities to TRACE within 15 minutes of the execution time, and incorrectly reported long sale transactions as short sale transactions to the NASDAQ Market Center.
Also, the Firm's supervisory procedures failed to include the date that each designated supervisory personnel assumed responsibility for each area of supervision, and its supervisory system did not provide for supervision reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws, regulations and FINRA rules concerning registration and TRACE.
Scott & Stringfellow, LLC: Censured, Fined $72,500 and Required to revise its written supervisory procedures regarding the date that each designated supervisory personnel assumed responsibility for each area of supervision, as well as registration and TRACE.
Shapiro caused his member firm to charge a $100 service fee to approximately 3,000 customers who had not been provided with prior written notice of the service fee. Shapiro willfully failed to amend his Form U4 and disclose material information on his Form U4. Shapiro failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Kasin borrowed at least $100,750 from a member firm customer without the firm’s prior written approval. The customer withdrew $50,000 from a variable annuity to loan to Kasin, and Kasin prevented the firm from learning the purpose of the transaction and precluded the firm from supervising it by sending the withdrawal request directly to the annuity issuer. The withdrawal form directed the insurance company to send a check to Kasin’s personal residential address, which Kasin deposited into his bank account without notifying the firmof the transaction or his involvement.
O'Keefe took funds that belonged to his member firm’s bank affiliate totaling approximately $14,000 without the bank’s permission and consent by disabling the bank’s computer system that validated customer account balances and then cashing a $3,000 check. O’Keefe also raised his cash limit on his bank debit card, posted the funds to his bank checking account and then withdrew funds totaling approximately $11,000. O’Keefe failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
permitted an individual to act as an unregistered principal and permitted individuals to be registered as General Securities Representatives or Investment Company and Variable Contracts Products Representatives through the firm without being active in the firm’s securities business;
sent written communications to customers and prospective customers containing language that failed to provide a sound basis for evaluating the claims within the communications, and that omitted material information and/or contained unwarranted statements;
failed to record a
general securities principal’s approval on mutual fund and variable
annuity applications;
completed and signed a materially inaccurate FINRA
Information Request form; and
provided inaccurate information to FINRA
staff.
Acting through Wadsworth, the Firm failed to
establish and , maintain a supervisory system and written supervisory procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws and regulations;
conduct annual reviews of any of the business in which the firm engaged
review registered representatives’ business-related email correspondence with customers;
establish any written procedures providing for the review of its registered representatives’ electronic correspondence;
designate and specifically identify at least one principal to FINRA who would establish, maintain and enforce a system of supervisory control policies and procedures, a
establish, maintain and enforce written supervisory controlpolicies and procedures
obtain
required information on new account forms, and on mutual fund and
variable annuity applications.
Acting through Wadsworth, the Firm
maintained forms of various types that were blank except for customers’
signatures;
filed inaccurate Financial
and Operational Combined Uniform Single (FOCUS) reports setting forth
the firm’s net capital position that was accurate by failing
to maintain accurate financial books and records; and
did not file an
application with FINRA for approval of an ownership change until after
the ownership change took place.
The Firm failed to
implement anti-money laundering compliance procedures, including independent testing and provide training;
enforce the Customer Identification Procedures;
retain electronic communications; and
failed to provide written confirmations to customers at or before the completion of securities transactions acted as an unregisteredmunicipal securities broker-dealer.
The Firm executed municipal securities transactions without creating and retaining order tickets to properly recordthe transactions, and failed to report municipal securities trades to the MSRB.
Wadsworth Investment Co., Inc.: Censured; Fined $100,000 ($77,250 jt/sev with William Wadsworth); Required to hire an independent consultant to review its policies,
systems, procedures (written and otherwise) and training related to its
violations of federal securities laws, FINRA and MSRB rules, and
implement the consultant’s recommendations. William Frederick Wadsworth: Fined $77,250 jt/sev with the Firm; Suspended 1 month in all capacities; Suspended 1 year in Principal capacities only.
Johnson failed to observe standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade. Johnson opened a joint account for an elderly customer and Johnson’s acquaintance, funded entirely by the elderly customer’s assets. Johnson’s acquaintance, who served as the customer’s caretaker, withdrew over $14 million from their joint account. Johnson should have raised questions based on the irregularity of the transfer of funds between the accounts, including the size of the transactions and the manner in which the caretaker withdrew money from the joint account before redepositing it in accounts under his sole control.
The trading in the customer’s account generated large capital gain liabilities for Johnson’s elderly customer. Johnson made false statements while under oath during his on-the-record (OTR) testimony about his awareness of expensive gifts the caretaker had given to his sales assistant, and attempted to convince his sales assistant to make false statements during her testimony.
Gill withdrew $13,000 from a customer’s securities account without the customer’s knowledge or permission by having checks drawn on the account payable to the customer. The checks were sent to Gill’s office, where he signed the customer’s name on the receipt acknowledging delivery, signed the customer’s name on the reverse side of the checks andmade each check payable to himself. Gill signed his own name beneath the customer’s purported endorsement and then deposited the funds into his personal checking account.
Gold borrowed $44,043 from a member firm’s customer when the firm’s compliance manual generally prohibited representatives from borrowing money from customers unless the customer was an immediate family member, a registered member of the same broker dealer or a financial institution. The customer was not a “permitted” borrower.
Alan Howard Gold: Fined $5,000; Suspended 4 months in all capacities
Shakoor posted messages to an electronic bulletin board using the email his member firm assigned to him, which identified him to other users as an employee of his member firm. Since the messages discussed securities, identified Shakoor as a firm employee and were disseminated to the public, he was required to obtain a firm principal’s approval but failed to do so. Shakoor failed to disclose material information in posted messages and/or the messages were misleading because they failed to include a sound basis for the securities, and failed to disclose that he held positions in some of the securities for which he made recommendations. Shakoor posted messages that contained claims that were false, exaggerated, unwarranted and/or misleading; and posted messages containing recommendations without providing a reasonable basis, and predictions or projections of future stock.
Anthony Basir Shakoor: Fined $10,000; Suspended 6 months in all capacities
establish and maintain adequate supervisory systems within its retail brokerage operation to supervise registered representatives’ sales of a hedge fund of funds to retail customers.
adequately supervise, approve and record private securities transactions a registered investment advisor engaged in on the firm’s behalf on its books and records.
The Firm's registered representatives used marketing materials that
contained hypothetical returns,
failed to make adequate disclosure of the risks involved,
failed to provide a sound basis for investing in a hedge fund of funds, and
made exaggerated or unwarranted claims in its marketing materials.
The Firm shared portfolio trading commissions with Fourcade in violation of Rule 2830(k)’s prohibition against sharing investment company portfolio trading commissions with sales personnel involved in the retail sale or distribution of investment company shares. Notwithstanding its awareness of the payments, the Firm failed to supervise the arrangement and the payments thereunder, and failed to ensure compliance with FINRA directed brokerage rules.
acted as the placement agent for a contingency offering of securities:
failed to satisfy the minimum contingency of the offering by the closing date,
failed to terminate the offering and return investor funds,
extended the offering period; and raised additional funds, but failed to send written reconfirmation offers to investors regarding the extension and material updates prior to the closing date, and
failed to establish a proper escrow account in connection with the offering and directed a premature release of investor funds from the escrow account prior to satisfying the offering contingency requirement;
made improper payments to nonregistered foreign entities for referrals of customers:
one customer was not a foreign entity domiciled abroad,
the firm did not obtain written acknowledgment of the existence of the compensation arrangement, and
the firm failed to provide a descriptive document disclosing what compensation was being paid to the nonregistered foreign entities;
failed to implement its anti-money laundering (AML) compliance program, in that it failed to monitor transactions for red flags.
failed to preserve email correspondence relating to its securities business for at least three years.
failed to timely forward an investor’s check payment for an offering to the escrow account and, as a result, the firm held customer funds while conducting a securities business and became subject to a net capital requirement that it did not satisfy.
CP Capital Securities, Inc.: Censured; Fined $21,500
acted as the placement agent for a contingency offering of securities:
failed to satisfy the minimum contingency of the offering by the closing date,
failed to terminate the offering and return investor funds,
extended the offering period; and raised additional funds, but failed to send written reconfirmation offers to investors regarding the extension and material updates prior to the closing date, and
failed to establish a proper escrow account in connection with the offering and directed a premature release of investor funds from the escrow account prior to satisfying the offering contingency requirement;
made improper payments to nonregistered foreign entities for referrals of customers:
one customer was not a foreign entity domiciled abroad,
the firm did not obtain written acknowledgment of the existence of the compensation arrangement, and
the firm failed to provide a descriptive document disclosing what compensation was being paid to the nonregistered foreign entities;
failed to implement its anti-money laundering (AML) compliance program, in that it failed to monitor transactions for red flags.
failed to preserve email correspondence relating to its securities business for at least three years.
failed to timely forward an investor’s check payment for an offering to the escrow account and, as a result, the firm held customer funds while conducting a securities business and became subject to a net capital requirement that it did not satisfy.
CP Capital Securities, Inc.: Censured; Fined $21,500
Derby and Mullins verbally communicated a guarantee against loss to an institutional investor in connection with the sale of Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO) securities.
Dan Alexander Derby: Fined $10,000 (must be paid either immediately upon his reassociation with a FINRA member firm following his suspension, or prior to the filing of any application or request for relief from any statutory disqualification, whichever is earlier); Suspended 30 days in all capacities.
Jeffry Alan Mullins:Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 days in all capacities.
Anderson forged a customer’s signature and initials to his member firm’s documents to facilitate a variable annuity application. Anderson failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Terry used his member firm’s electronic accounting systems to record deposits, totaling $144,300, into his personal brokerage account, without actually physically depositing any funds into the account and utilized the fictitious balance to trade in securities for his own account. Terry would not have had sufficient funds with which to fund the securities transactions without the deposits.
The Firm failed to conduct searches of firm records with respect to information requests from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
The Firm failed to
establish and implement policies, procedures and internal controls reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and implementing regulations thereunder, and
make and keep adequate written reports of an annual inspection and review of its Office of Supervisory Jurisdiction.
The Firm's AML compliance officer was responsible for implementing and monitoring the day-to-day operations and internal controls of the firm’s AML compliance program and, for about two years, failed to include internal controls reasonably designed to achieve compliance with implementing regulations of the Bank Secrecy Act.
HP Securities, Inc.: Censured; Fined 10,000 ($5,000 jt/several with unnamed party); must certify to FINRA, in writing, every three months, for one year, that it has complied with its obligations under 31 CFR Part 103.100(b)(2)(i)
Currier acted in a principal capacity, including supervising brokers and reviewing trades, without having requalified to act in that capacity as required by the terms of a Letter of Acceptance,Waiver and Consent.
James Sylvester Currier (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 6 months in all capacities; Suspended 2 years in Principal Capacity only
Richmond created fictitious trade confirmations and used them to support proof of claims filed in class action lawsuits to recoup settlement claims in excess of $85,000 to which he was not entitled by falsely presenting himself as a legitimate class member.
LeBlanc borrowed $20,000 from a customer, signed a promissory note without prior written notice to his member firm and without obtaining pre-approval from the firm’s chief executive officer. LeBlanc never provided any notice, orally or in writing, to the firm concerning his borrowing arrangement with the customer and never complied with his payment obligations under the promissory note. LeBlanc falsely answered “no” on an annual firm certification form regarding borrowing money from a customer.
Jerry Wayne LeBlanc Jr.: Fined $5,000; Suspended 13 months in all capacities
Nori denied to NYSE Regulation examiners that the branch office he supervised employed non-registered cold-callers and that they used telemarketing scripts when, in fact, there were interns at the branch office engaged in those activities. In an attempt to obfuscate the facts and mislead the examiners, Nori instructed his staff at the branch office that, if asked, the employees were to tell the examiners that there were no approved interns employed at the branch office. While either possessing personal knowledge to the contrary or after learning information to the contrary, Nori failed to fully and accurately disclose to the examiners that his member firm employed non-registered cold-callers at a branch office.
John Christopher Nori (Supervisor): Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months in all capacities; Concurrently Suspended 6 months in any Supervisory capacity only; Required to Requalify as a Series 9 and 10 prior to beginning any supervisory position following his suspensions.
Kim borrowed money from a customer without his member firm’s knowledge or permission even though he had signed a firm compliance agreement in which he specifically agreed not to borrow money or securities from a client. Kim failed to disclose that he had an outside brokerage account to his member firm, made false representations to the other firm and failed to disclose his employment with a member firm. Kim failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Jung Han Kim aka Jay Kim: Barred (sanction based upon Kim's failure to respond to FINRA requests for information.)
Weems improperly accepted about $250,000 in gifts from a client of a registered representative for whom she was working, in violation of her member firm’s prohibition of employees accepting gifts that would create the appearance of compromising business judgment and a conflict of interest. Weems did not obtain her member firm’s prior written approval for an exception from the firm’s policy.
Katherine Eileen Weems: In light of Weems’ financial status, no monetary sanctions were imposed; Suspended 3 months in all capacities; Agreed to fully and freely cooperate with FINRA’s ongoing investigation, including providing truthful testimony if requested;
Carpenter was aware of and understood his member firm’s policies and procedures relating to personal use of the corporate credit card, but, nevertheless, used his corporate credit card to pay for personal expenses and for his personal use, charging a total of $9,338.48 in personal expenses to the card.
Barris forged a customer’s signature and initials on variable annuity applications and related documents. Barris directed customers, who received an unauthorized electronic deposit of $11,280 into their bank account from the transfer agent of Barris’ member firm, to write a personal check payable to him for $11,280, and he would return the funds to the transfer agent; instead, Barris misappropriated the funds for his own use.
Browne knowingly or recklessly employed devices, schemes or artifices to defraud; made untrue statements of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, concerning a Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO) Program and CMO investments; or engaged in acts, practices or courses of business which operated, or would operate, as a fraud or deceit upon his customers. Browne effected transactions in, or induced the purchase or sale of, securities by means of any manipulative, deceptive or other fraudulent device or contrivance. Browne intentionally or recklessly made misrepresentations of material facts and omitted to disclose material facts to customers in connection with their CMO investments. Browne recommended risky and illiquid CMO positions to customers without investigating and understanding the products; Browne lacked reasonable grounds to believe that CMOs were suitable for his customers based on their disclosed investment experience, investment objectives, financial situation and needs. Browne exercised discretionary authority in customer accounts without his customers’ prior written authorization and his firm’s prior written acceptance of the accounts as discretionary.
Kevin Michael Browne (Principal): In light of Browne's financial status no fine was imposed; Suspended 1 year in all capacities
Bartley's and Donaldson's member firm entered into a “Selling Agreement” with a company to serve as a selling agent for the company’s offering and sold the unregistered offering pursuant to an exemption from SEC registration pursuant to Regulation D. Acting on the firm’s behalf, Bartley and Donaldson sold interests in the company’s offering to investors with whom neither they nor the firm had any pre-existing relationship prior to the time that they contacted them relating to a potential investment in the offering company, thus engaging in a general solicitation with respect to the offering. Bartley sent a document to prospective investors relating to the offering, which was not fair and balance, omitted material risks relating to the offering, and she failed to obtain approval from a firm principal prior to sending the document to prospective investors.
Linda Jo Bartley: Fined $15,000; Suspended 2 months in all capacities
William Arthur Donaldson: Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 month in all capacities
Paul's member firm warned him not to exercise discretion in customers’ variable annuity sub-accounts and required him to sign a warning letter to evidence his understanding of the firm’s policies regarding the use of discretion within customer accounts. Nevertheless, Paul exercised discretion in customers’ accounts without discussing the transactions with the customers.Paul had verbal authority from the customers to exercise discretion but no written permission. The transactions did not result in any fees or charges to the customers nor did the transactions yield any compensation for Paul.
Michael Keith Paul: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Chavez failed to disclose to his member firm that he opened and maintained a brokerage account at another firm, and failed to disclose to the other firm that he was a registered representative with a member firm. Chavez made material misrepresentations to his member firm about his outside business activity and made material misrepresentations to both firms regarding his outside securities account. Chavez participated in firm audits and compliance questionnaires and falsely reported that he did not participate in any outside business activities. Chavez engaged in outside business activities without providing notice to his member firm and failed to appear for FINRA on-the-record interviews.
raised over $1.5 million from investors through offers and sales of limited partnership interests in a hedge fund, and made numerous misrepresentations in connection with the offers and sales that were inconsistent with the private placement memorandum (PPM);
used over $1.3 million of the funds raised to invest in promissory notes issued by private companies in which he had a controlling interest, and made misrepresentations regarding
the fund’s investment strategy,
the concentration of investment funds in particular investments;
the use of funds, and
the amount of management fees and other expenses charged to the fund
omitted to timely disclose material facts including that he exercised sole discretion over the fund’s operations;
misused customer funds received in connection with the fund offering by obtaining debit cards linked to accounts and utilized the cards to pay for personal and non-business related expenses;
caused funds from the various accounts to be transferred to his personal brokerage account and caused monthly payments for non-business related expenses to be drafted from one of the accounts; and
failed to properly supervise the activities of a registered representative for whom he had supervisory responsibility, and failed to review the representative’s email correspondence.
Through his member firm, Respondent conducted an unregistered offering of the securities of an entity for which there was no available exemption due primarily to the offering being conducted pursuant to a general solicitation, and failed to timely disclose to investors that the firm was under common control with the issuer, in that he owned both entities.
Appeal from the Office of Hearing Officers Decision to the National Adjudicatory Council
Impellizeri omitted material information regarding OTCBB securities. Impellizeri omitted from his disclosures to the customers the potentially lucrative benefits that could accrue to his member firm from his sale of the securities because of the firm’s potential consulting arrangements with the issuers and positions in their stock.
NAC imposed sanctions:
Neal Anthony Impellizeri (Principal): Fined $25,000; Ordered to pay $7,929 in restitution to customers; Suspended 6 months in all capacities
The Firm maintained the registrations for individuals employed by or affiliated with hedge funds that were firm customers and that executed trades through the firm but who were not active in the firm’s investment banking or securities business, and did not function otherwise as registered representatives. The firm failed to establish, maintain and enforce an adequate supervisory system and adequate written supervisory procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with FINRA rules to prevent the firm from maintaining the registration of any registered representative who was not actively involved in the firm’s investment banking or securities business and not functioning as a firm representative.
Gerrior fabricated a letter purportedly from his employer insurance company that falsely represented the date he commenced working as an insurance agent, and submitted the fabricated letter to the Massachusetts Division of Insurance to support his argument that he had been licensed by his member firm before a date that would have required him to complete the prescribed continuing education.
Raymond Paul Gerrior Jr.: Fined $10,000; Suspended 18 months in all capacities
Holtrey failed to adequately supervise a registered representative who misappropriated $90,000 from customers. Holtrey failed to detect and follow up on red flags regarding the registered representative’s business with his customers, including a failure to take appropriate action as required by his member firm’s supervisory procedures to review weekly sales blotters. After receiving telephone calls from a customer and her financial advisor at another firm raising concerns about the registered representative’s activities, Holtrey failed to conduct any follow-up, bring the complaint to his member firm’s attention or initiate any process related to the complaint.
Ronald Eugene Holtrey (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 6 months in Supervisory Capacity only; Required to requalify as a principal by examination before again acting in a principal or supervisory capacity
Associates Person Goldrich took a typed list of securities-related definitions and formulas that she had created into the testing area for her Series 7 examination in violation of FINRA’s Test Center Rules of Conduct.
Sarah Rachel Goldrich: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 years in all capacities
Del Toro recommended and effected securities purchases to a customer that were unsuitable in light of the customer’s age and financial condition, and received $76,650 in commissions from the investment. Del Toro engaged in private securities transactions and failed to provide written notice to his member firms describing in detail the proposed transactions, his role therein and stating whether he had received, or would receive, selling compensation in connection with the transactions. Del Toro guaranteed the customer in writing against loss.
Lee borrowed $1,500 from a customer contrary to his member firm’s compliance manual, which prohibited representatives from borrowing money from customers. Lee failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Courter-Jann backdated her firm’s Annual Compliance and Supervision Certification, causing a record and document that her member firm was required to make and preserve to be inaccurate. Courter- Jann provided the certification to FINRA without disclosing that she had backdated it and/or that the date shown on it was not the date when she had signed it.
Suzanne Kay Courter-Jann (Principal): Fined $7,500; Suspended 30 days in Principal capacity only
establish and implement policies and procedures reasonably designed to detect and cause the reporting of suspicious customer activity;
detect, investigate and conduct due diligence when red flags associated with suspicious activity were present;
file Suspicious Activity Reports (SARS) when red flags associated with suspicious activity were present;
follow its written supervisory procedures, in that it failed to conduct appropriate risk-based due diligence for correspondent accounts of foreign financial institutions customers owned, and failed to implement adequate supervisory procedures to monitor the suspicious activity in those accounts;
perform AML customer identification reviews for customers, as required by its procedures, which would have revealed that several accounts appeared to be shell vehicles for possible securities fraud;
file SARS on individuals possibly engaged in insider trading; and
adequately test its AML compliance program and, during a two-year period, failed to conduct or document AML training.
The Firm paid transaction-related compensation to non-registered foreign finders who did not meet the requirements for compensation; failed to provide documents to its customers that disclosed the compensation being paid to foreign finders, and the customers’ confirmation statements failed to indicate that a referral or finder’s fee was being paid. The foreign finder signed account documents and no one from the firm signed the documents accepting the accounts which contained discrepancies and were incomplete. Moreover, the Firm failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to achieve compliance with rules relating to its foreign finders and foreign associates business.
The Firm failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to achieve compliance with FINRA’s advertising rules resulting in firm violations with its Web site and advertisements.
Synergy Investment Group LLC: Censured; Fined $75,000
Sanctions imposed upon withdrawal of appeal to the National Adjudicatory Council
King willfully failed to amend her Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4) with material information, and failed to fully and timely respond to FINRA requests for information and documents.
Valerie Elaine King (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended two concurrent 2-year terms in all capacities
Spencer engaged in a Ponzi scheme over a 10-year period, borrowing $1,897,718 from customers and non-customers by inducing them to sign promissory notes, representing that he would pay 10 percent to 12 percent interest and return the investor’s principal in periods ranging from six months to one year. Spencer misused the funds because he knew he did not have the liquid assets or ongoing income necessary to pay interest and return the principal, and used new investor funds to pay existing investors. In other instances, Spencer automatically renewed the obligation when the promissory notes became due. Spencer’s member firm prohibited loans from customers regardless of the registered representative’s relationship with the customer, unless the registered representative obtained prior written approval. Spencer never requested or received approval from his firm to accept the loans.
At the end of the trading day, Heynen entered fictitious sell transactions for the total amount of her long positions. The next morning her back office realized that the transactions did not match those reported with the Street and, in response, Heynen cancelled the transactions.
Heynen entered the fictitious sell transactions into her member firm’s Phase 3 order entry system, which is a back-office service provider and allows users to book transactions into the firm’s books and records without actually executing the claimed transactions. Heynen entered the fictitious sell transactions and maintained long positions to circumvent the firm’s trading account limits per security and total trading limit for her proprietary trading account.
As a result of entering the fictitious sell transactions, Heynen concealed a $76,810 unrealized trading loss from her firm. Heynen caused her firm’s books and records to reflect false and misleading information regarding securities transactions in her account and, by entering the fictitious sell transactions at prices that concealed her unrealized trading losses, she engaged in unethical business conduct.
Carol Anne Heynen: Fined $10,000 (FINRA advises that this number was arrived in following consideration of Heynen's financial status); Suspended 9 months
Carr failed to ensure that its electronic communications were archived to a non-rewriteable format in an adequate time frame, and, accordingly, further failed to timely maintain and preserve copies of internal and external electronic mail communications. The Firm failed to establish and maintain a formal system to review, retain, index or store emails that employees sent from their personal email accounts to conduct business.
Abbott presented seminars to promote the sale of reverse mortgages and solicit various types of investments from senior citizens contrary to his member firm’s prohibition of engaging in any reverse mortgage business, including the promotion and sale of reverse mortgages.
In connection with the seminars, Abbott
sent invitations that used exaggerated and unwarranted claims, and used a slide and handouts that projected unfounded claims of future performance;
issued public communications containing unbalanced discussions of reverse mortgages and making claims regarding his expertise and status in the financial industry that were misleading, false, unwarranted or lacked a sound basis;
distributed communications that provided incomplete and unbalanced discussions of investment products and omitted material information;
used communications in the seminars without a registered firm principal’s prior written and dated approval and failed to file slides used in his presentation with FINRA’s Advertising Regulation Department;
failed to disclose the broker-dealer’s name in the seminar invitations .
Daniel Allen Abbott: Fined $20,000; Suspended 60 days in all capacities
participated in private securities transactions, received compensation for his participation, failed to provide his member firm with prior written notice, and failed to receive the firm’s prior written approval;
engaged in outside business activities and failed to provide his firmwith prompt written notice.
negligently failed to advise investors and firm customers of material facts concerning a real estate venture and his involvement; specifically, that proceeds from the venture were to be applied towards defaulted bank loans for which he was personally liable.
Dowling exercised discretion in a customer’s account, and effected transactions and electronic fund transfers primarily involving the purchase of small equity positions and the writing of covered calls against these positions. Although Dowling had a power of attorney from the customer, her member firm had
not accepted the customer’s account as discretionary; and
denied her trading authority over the customer’s account.
Dowling failed to appear for an on-the-record sworn statement that FINRA requested.
Karamian changed the address of record for a customer’s brokerage account to the branch address of the firm office where he worked without the customer’s knowledge, authorization and consent. Karamian sent, via facsimile, a letter of authorization to his member firm’s cashiering department requesting a wire transfer of $281,768 from the customer’s brokerage account to a third party escrow account at a bank without the customer’s knowledge, authorization and consent. Karamian had the customer sign the letter of authorization for the withdrawal of these funds, knowing that the customer had not read the letter and did not knowingly authorize or consent to the request to transfer funds out of his account. Through a series of financial transactions, Karamian caused $261,000 of the funds transferred to be deposited into a bank account he controlled and the customer had not authorized the transfer.
Ligon paid Mongelli a $50,000 referral compensation fee when Mongelli referred brokerage customers to Ligon because he was not registered to do business in the states of residence for those referred customers, and Ligon subsequently served as the registered representative for the accounts.
Khawaja recklessly provided his customer with false and misleading bank comfort letters and failed to have a registered principal review his correspondence, in violation of the firm’s written policies and procedures.
Jereis Elias Khawaja: Fined $10,000; Suspended 2 years
While working as a loan officer with a bank affiliate of his member firm, Nuno-Amarteifio falsified documents in an effort to conceal the fact that the purpose of the loan he was processing was to finance a real estate transaction in which he had an interest. The bank’s policies prohibited loan officers from processing loans in which they had an interest.
Johnny Amartey Nuno-Amarteifio (Representative): Fined $5,000; Suspended 90 days
Washington assisted customers in opening fraudulent bank accounts and withdrawing money from the newly opened fraudulent accounts, and received approximately $4,700 in compensation for assisting in the scheme. Customers of Washington’s member firm opened the bank accounts with falsified identifying information and made initial deposits of money with counterfeit checks drawn on the accounts of the firm’s other customers. At the customers’ direction, Washington made branch and automatic teller machine (ATM) withdrawals for the customers, despite knowing that the customers deposited counterfeit checks and that fraud alerts were placed on the accounts. The bank lost a total of $43,093.81 from the scheme.
Ahlert made a $3,700 loan to a customer when his member firm had a policy that prohibited its representatives from borrowing and lending money between registered persons and firm customers and when the lending arrangement did not meet the conditions stated in NASD Rule 2370.
Kevin Michael Ahlert: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 days
Williams provided a prospective client with a piece of sales literature for a variable annuity that he had falsified by altering it.
The original time periods for charges associated with fund withdrawal had been deleted and replaced with handwritten shorter time periods, falsely reflecting lower charges associated with withdrawal of funds from the variable annuity;
the information regarding the annual contract fee and investment portfolio expenses were crossed out, falsely suggesting that they would not be imposed; and
additional charges associated with optional features were deleted, falsely suggesting that there were no additional fees for the optional features.
Williams also made verbal misrepresentations to the client about the variable annuity that were consistent with the false information in the falsified sales literature.
Michael Timothy Williams: Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 year.
XXX distributed newsletters that a principal of his member firm had not approved for distribution, thereby preventing his firm from complying with NASD Rule 2210(C)(1) by providing the newsletters to FINRA’s Advertising Regulation Department for approval;
the newsletters failed to prominently disclose the firm’s name as the broker-dealer through which he conducted his securities business; and
one of the newsletters referenced an unregistered entity through which XXX engaged in business but did not disclose the relationship between his firm and the unregistered entity.
SEMINARS
XXX distributed invitations to seminars about financial matters, including investments, and a firm principal had not approved the content of the invitations;
the invitations and XXX’ Web site misrepresented that he was the author of books;
the invitations contained misleading and exaggerated information and failed to identify his firm as the broker-dealer.
XXX conducted seminars at which he made publications available for review, and offered to distribute the publications that were purchased from a vendor of investment publications, which a principal of his firm had not approved, and thereby prevented his firm from complying with NASD Rule 2210(C)(1) by providing the newsletters to FINRA’s Advertising Regulation Department for approval;
XXX offered to distribute the publications on his public Web site. The publications contained violations of the content standards in FINRA Rules 2210(d)(1) and (2) and included statements that were misleading, inaccurate or unwarranted; and
XXX used a script in presenting material at the seminars that was outdated and misleading.
While registered with member firms, Collier failed to disclose to another member firm with which he maintained a securities account for which he had financial interest and discretionary authority, that he was associated with the member firms. Collier failed to disclose to his member firms that he maintained a securities account at another member firm.
Paul Scott Collier (Principal): Fined $2,500; Suspended 5 business days in all capacities
Patel engaged in private securities transactions without prior written notice to, or prior written approval from, his member firm. Patel sent and received business-related emails from firm customers at his personal (non-firm) email address and then deleted the emails to avoid detection, without providing copies to the firm.
Runyan affixed the signature of a public customer’s spouse to a spousal consent provision on an individual retirement account (IRA) application without the spouse’s permission and authorization. Runyan signed his name on the application as witnessing the spouse’s signature, which he had not. The application that Runyan signed on the spouse’s behalf did not contain any notation evidencing that someone other than the spouse had signed it. Runyan’s member firm maintained a compliance manual prohibiting registered representatives from committing forgery.
Preston Douglas Runyan: Fined $5,000; Suspended 4 months
RBC Capital Markets Corp allowed associated persons to function as research analysts without having Series 86 or 87 research analyst registrations. The unregistered analysts published more than 3,500 research reports, and published more than 400 research reports after FINRA informed the firm that it had made a preliminary determination to recommend disciplinary action be initiated (one of the cited reports was published 7 months after the issuance of the Wells Notice) against the firm for its failure to appropriately register its research analysts (the Wells Notice).
RBC Capital Markets Corporation: Censured; Fined $150,000
Bassari drafted a form letter about his previous employer and mailed it to former (potential) customers, which constituted sales literature without prior approval of an appropriate registered principal of his member firm. The form letter failed to provide a sound basis for statements contained in the letter, and contained other statements that were unwarranted.
Robert Bassari (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Russo failed to provide written notice to his member firm that he was engaged in outside business activities for compensation. While associated with a member firm, Russo opened an account with another member firm and failed to notify either his member firm or the executing member firm, in writing, of his association with the other firm.
Ronald Peter Russo Jr. (Principal): Fined $7,500; Suspended 60 days
Crawford borrowed $25,000 from customers and obtained this loan notwithstanding the fact that his member firm had written procedures that prohibited borrowing from, or lending money to, customers. Crawford failed to update his Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4) to disclose material information. Crawford failed to respond to FINRA requests to appear for on-the-record testimony.
Stephen Timothy Crawford: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 years
Toth asked a bank teller to process an $8,500 check payable to a mortgage company drawn on a bank customer’s account without the customer’s knowledge or consent, and forwarded the check to the company to pay Toth’s mortgage. Toth admitted to the conversion when the bank questioned her, and also admitted to asking the teller to process another check for $6,500, although she claimed she had the check voided. Toth failed to respond to FINRA requests for information and to appear for an on-the-record interview. (FINRA Case #)
Brusseau borrowed $16,800 from customers when his member firm’s written procedures prohibited borrowing money from customers under any circumstances. Brusseau neither received written permission nor disclosed the borrowing arrangement before receiving the loan. Brusseau failed and refused to provide requested information to FINRA.
Delmas made unsuitable recommendations to customers to buy inverse floater Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO) securities, and those customers lost more than $163,000 as a result. Delmas did not have reasonable grounds to believe that the CMOs were suitable for the customers in light of their investment experience, objectives and risk tolerances.
Andres Luis Delmas (Principal): Fined $15,000; Suspended 60 days
provided a draft of a research report that contained a research summary, rating and price target to the company whose stock was featured as a stock pick, and did not provide a complete draft of the research report to his firm’s legal or compliance personnel prior to sending the report to the company;
failed to disclose his ownership of securities that he profiled in research reports;
purchased securities within 30 days prior to the security being featured as a stock pick and before his firm’s legal or compliance officers pre-approved the Stock Pick section of the research report.
failed to disclose valuation methods used to determine the price target and the risks to achieving price targets;
failed to certify that the views in sections of research reports that he authored or contributed to were his own.
David Travis Weitz: Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 days
The Firm allowed representatives to effect trades for their customers and earn commissions totaling $19,506.42 while the representatives were not registered with FINRA through any member firm. The Firm paid the representatives “retention payments/advances” based on commissions generated from account activity.
Jordan caused customer telephone records at her member firm to be altered without authorization. Shortly before resigning from her firm to begin working at another member firm, Jordan deleted certain customer telephone numbers and made inaccurate updates to other customer telephone numbers to slow down other registered representatives at the firm who Jordan believed would be assigned to call her customers after she resigned. By changing customer telephone numbers, Jordan caused the firm’s books and records to be inaccurate.
Donna Rae Jordan: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 business days
Frick engaged in outside business activities and private securities transactions without prior written notice to her member firm. Frick was provided a money order by a customer in order to open an account at her member firm on behalf of the customer’s children, misplaced the money order and, in an attempt to settle the customer’s potential complaint in this matter, deposited $1,100 of her own personal funds into an account at her firm for the benefit of the customer’s children without notifying the customer or the firm. Frick used the funds she had previously deposited into the account to purchase mutual funds for the account without the customer’s knowledge, authorization or consent.
Hunt borrowed approximately $5,500 from a firm customer contrary to his member firm’s procedures generally forbidding registered representatives from borrowing money from, or lending money to, customers. Loans to or from customers other than immediate family members or financial institutions required prior review and approval by the firm’s compliance department, but Hunt failed to obtain prior approval of the loan. Hunt failed to fully and timely respond to FINRA requests for information and documents.
Herbert Tyrone Hunt (Supervisor): Fined $5,000; Suspended 18 months
Wilson fraudulently misrepresented to customers and another investor that he had an options trading account or other unspecified investment and would double their funds in four to six weeks. Wilson received $73,500 from investors, failed to apply the funds as directed and failed to return the funds with the promised returns, thereby misusing customer and investor funds. Also, Wilson misused the funds of an investor who was not a firm customer by holding the funds for 10 months before returning them in spite of his representation that the investment would be for 30 days. Subsequently, Wilson failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
While associated with a member firmin Texas, Dinwoodie sold Financial Advisory Service Agreements to customers located in Arkansas prior to his registration status in Arkansas being updated in his member firm’s system, and altered the Agreements to falsely reflect that the customers signed the agreements while located in Texas. Dinwoodie falsified other customers’ signatures on a Financial Advisory Service Agreement. Dinwoodie failed to respond to FINRA requests for an on-the-record sworn statement.
Breeze purchased a building from a customer for $850,000, with the customer (Breeze had a personal relationship with the customer outside of the broker/customer relationship) agreeing to finance the entire purchase. Breeze’s member firm’s written procedures allowed its registered representatives to borrow from customers, but prior written approval was required, and Breeze failed to obtain his firm’s written approval before entering into the borrowing arrangement with the customer.
James Kelly Breeze: Fined $5,000; Suspended 60 days
Lake solicited customers to invest a total of $729,500 in different investment schemes through his weekly radio talk-show and daily radio advertising spots. Lake converted $671,321 he solicited for his personal use and returned $58,179 to customers.
Stephens permitted a trainee to complete portions of the required continuing education online courses for his Certified Financial Planner (CFP) designation on his behalf.
Jason Erik Stephens: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 days
Daeger attempted to settle a customer complaint by making a $1,500 deposit into the customer’s bank checking account without his member firm’s knowledge or consent.
Jason Jude Daeger: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Dillon accepted a $19,000 loan from a customer without his member firm’s knowledge or consent, and in contravention of the firm’s written supervisory procedures prohibiting associated persons borrowing from, or loaning money to, any of the firm’s customers.
Stadelmann received $1.5million from members of the public to purchase privately held companies’ stock but used the funds for other purposes. Stadelmann engaged in private securities transactions, for compensation, without his member firm’s prior permission. Also, Stadelmann borrowed $719,000 from firm customers in violation of FINRA rules. Stadelmann failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and to appear for an on-the-record interview.
In an scheme to hold onto his title of “financial planner,”Scheidler had firm representatives assist him in submitting a plan ostensibly for each of them, for which they each agreed to pay $300, to be repaid by Scheidler. Scheidler completed the plan paperwork for each representative, submitted the completed plans and received a total of $400 from his firm for submitting the plans.
John Kenneth Scheidler: Fined $10,000; Suspended 3 months
Davis reimbursed a customer for sales commissions without notifying his member firm, and subsequently provided inaccurate information to firm compliance employees who questioned him about the reimbursement.
Joseph Donald Davis III (Supervisor): Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Aylward caused his member firm’s books and records to be inaccurate by causing the cost basis of securities positions in customers’ accounts to be changed to understate the unrealized losses in each of the positions. Aylward exercised discretion in a customer’s account without the customer’s written authorization and his member firm’s acceptance of the account as discretionary.
Pilipczak evaded his member firm’s supervisory system by concealing the sale of a customer’s variable annuity by forwarding the documentation directly to the insurance carrier and not notifying his firm of the sale,which caused his member firm’s records to be inaccurate and incomplete with respect to the transaction. Pilipczak provided a written statement to his firm in connection with the purchase of a new variable annuity transaction by the customer, falsely claiming that it was not funded by the sale proceeds from the earlier variable annuity.
Kevin Mark Pilipczak: Fined $12,500; Suspended 1 year
Altman was aware that a relative misappropriated in excess of $130,000 by depositing checks into her bank account at Altman’s employer, but Altman did not report it to anyone until she contacted her regional manager at a later date.
Mohlman offered to pay another member firm’s employee to obtain account fee and performance information with respect to his former customer accounts (the employee did not provide the requested information.) Mohlman intended to use the information to convince former customers to switch accounts to his new member firm.
Louis Gerald Mohlman Jr.: Fined $10,000; Suspended 3 months
NSM failed to preserve all of its business-related electronic communications, including communications exchanged with its clearing firm for over a year.
The Firm entered into a “selling agreement” with a company to serve as a selling agent for the company’s offering, and sold the unregistered offering pursuant to an exemption from SEC registration pursuant to Regulation D. Among other requirements, this form of Reg D (typically a Rule 506) required that the Firm have a substantive and preexisting relationship (to avoid a General Solicitation) with each investor prior to the time that, acting through its representatives, it offered the company’s investment to prospective investors. Acting on the firm’s behalf, its representatives made efforts to sell interests, and sold interests, in the company offering to prospective investors with whom neither the representatives nor the firm had any pre-existing relationship prior to the time the customers were contacted relating to a potential investment in the offering company. The customer contacts constituted engaging in a general solicitation with respect to the offering and, therefore, participated in the sale of unregistered securities. The Firm failed to maintain adequate written supervisory procedures relating to private offerings.
REDACTED electronically affixed two customer names to three solicitor disclosure statements without their specific authority, and created an email that was purportedly received from the customer, which he forwarded along with the false disclosure statements to his member firm for processing. By creating a false disclosure statement,REDACTED caused his member firm to violate the requirements of the Investment Advisors Act of 1940 and, by creating the purported email, REDACTED caused his firm’s records to be inaccurate and thereby prevented it from meeting its obligation to preserve, for a period of not less than six years, the first two years in an accessible place, all records required pursuant to SEC Rule 17a-4(b)(4).
Also, REDACTED engaged in outside business activities and private securities transactions without written notice to, or approval from, his member firm. REDACTED failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information.
Kimura misappropriated $1.29 million from relatives’ accounts that he managed. Kimura intercepted checkbooks linked to the accounts, forged checks to himself and his creditors, and concealed his activity by fabricating account statements and diverting the actual statements to a mailbox he maintained. Kimura failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Keller stole computer monitors and a telephone worth $4,400 from his member firm and pawned them for cash. Keller failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
did not have the required Series 86 or 87 (Research Analyst Qualification Exam) licenses required for research analysts when she was the principal author of or contributor to the Stock Pick sections of her member firm’s newsletter;
failed to disclose her ownership of securities that she profiled as Stock Picks because she did not treat the section as a research report;
purchased a security for her own account within 30 days prior to the security being featured as a Stock Pick, and before her firm’s legal or compliance officers pre-approved the Stock Pick section of the newsletter;
failed to disclose valuation methods used to determine the price target in any Stock Pick section and the risks to achieving the price targets in her stock picks; and
failed to certify that the views in the sections of the firm’s newsletter that she authored or contributed to were her own.
Stephanie Murch Haggerty: Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 days
Brubaker recommended that his customers invest in bearer bonds, falsely representing that the bond issuer was a non-profit entity that helped needy people and had been in existence for 15 years, when in fact, no such securities investment existed. Brubaker provided his customers with fake certificates for the bonds, and used the $180,000 he obtained from the customers for his personal benefit. Also, Brubaker misappropriated $49,000 of insurance proceeds that a customer entrusted to him after misrepresenting to the customer that the proceeds were invested in the bonds, when he had used the funds for his own benefit.
As his member firm’s national sales director, Dorsey was responsible for reviewing daily trade blotters and information received from the firm’s compliance department. Despite being made aware of “red flags” indicating that unsuitable and excessive trading was occurring in customers’ accounts, Dorsey failed to take reasonable supervisory steps to respond to these “red flags” to prevent the unsuitable and excessive trading. Dorsey continued to maintain his FINRA securities registrations through his member firm for more than two years, although he did not actively engage in the firm’s securities business.
Steven Laurence Dorsey (Principal): Fined $25,000; Suspended 1 year in Principal Capacity only; Required to requalify by exam before acting in any principal capacity.
Alexander borrowed $29,000 from a firm customer contrary to his member firm’s compliance manual, which prohibited registered representatives from borrowing from customers other than relatives; the customer and Alexander were not related. Alexander failed to repay the loan, and subsequently failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents.
While employed with a member firm, Associated Person Gerber found a registered representative’s bank account checkbook, took checks from the checkbook, made the checks payable to himself, forged the registered representative’s signature on the checks, cashed the checks and converted the proceeds of $7,360 for his own use and benefit. Gerber failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Quinn sent correspondence on his member firm’s letterhead that contained misleading and unwarranted statements concerning a potential investment. Quinn ignored red flags of possible fraud and failed to submit the letters for required supervisory approval, which exposed the firm to potential liability.
Nussbaum failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information; and failed to honor an Arbitration Settlement Agreement.
Brad Niel Nussbaum:
for failure to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information: Barred
for failing to honor an Arbitration Settlement Agreement: Fined $10,000; and he is Suspended until the Settlement Agreement is paid or otherwise satisfied in full plus 30 business days thereafter but if he fails to so satisfy within 24 months of the decision, then the suspension converts to a Bar
establish and maintain an adequate supervisory system, including written procedures, to supervise the firm’s trading and market making;
reasonably supervise individuals to detect their manipulations of the price of a thinly traded common stock;
establish and implement AML policies and procedures that could reasonably be expected to detect and cause the reporting of suspicious securities transactions, and internal controls reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and the implementing regulations thereunder.
Chicago Investment Group, LLC: Fined $150,000; Required to certify to FINRA that its AML policies and procedures are in compliance with NASD Rules 3011(a) and 3011(b), and that its system and procedures for trading and market making are reasonably designed to achieve compliance with ap
Allen borrowed $24,815.72 from public customers contrary to his member firm’s written procedures forbidding the borrowing or lending of money unless the client is a member of the registered representative’s immediate family or the client is a financial institution or other entity or person that regularly engages in financing loans, which these customers were not. Also, Allen failed to repay the loans. Allen completed and signed site inspection and compliance interview forms for his firm and misrepresented facts on the forms regarding the loans by stating that he had never borrowed money from a client.
Curtis Morgan Allen: No monetary sanction was imposed because Allen was granted a discharge in bankruptcy after the events in question; Suspended 6 months in all capacities;
In connection with the purchase of a variable annuity, Nehmad created a handwritten statement and affixed a photocopy of a customer’s signature to make it appear that the customer had signed the statement acknowledging the percentage penalties she would incur for early withdrawals. Nehmad presented the statement to her member firm, falsely representing it to be a genuine copy of a document the customer had signed.
Deborah Jean Nehmad: Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 year
Without his member firm’s knowledge or permission, Conrod
used the firm's internal information, including some confidential and proprietary materials for a proposed hedge fund;
contacted potential investors, including some firm institutional investors, regarding possible interest in investing in the proposed hedge fund; and
used the firm’s name in the proposed hedge fund’s business plan in a manner which could be reasonably misinterpreted to indicate that the firm was aware of and/or approved of the proposed hedge fund.
The materials Conrod created and utilized in communications with the public for the proposed hedge fund were not approved by a registered firm principal prior to use, were not fair and balanced, and contained statements that were exaggerated and/or unwarranted and contained promises of specific results, and/or predictions or projections of investment performance. The email correspondence Conrod utilized with the public contained false and/or misleading statements or claims.
Douglas Franklin Conrod II: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
Contrary to his member firm’s policy and approval, Boeckel borrowed $5,000 from a relative, who was also a customer of the firm, and signed the relative’s name on numerous checks without authority.
Dustin Andrew Boeckel: Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 year
Seyller engaged in outside business activities, and received $11,925.66 in compensation, without prompt written notice to his member firm. Seyller falsely asserted on an annual certification statement that he was not engaged in any undisclosed outside business activities and did not receive any referral fees. He falsely denied any involvement with equity indexed annuity sales when a supervisor directly questioned him.
Fabian Cesar Seyller: Fined $5,000; Suspended 6 months
After failing a Series 7 qualification exam, Associated Person Owenson induced a test center employee to provide him with a written exam score report that falsely reflected that he had passed, which he then gave to his member firm purporting it reflected his actual exam score. Owenson provided FINRA with materially false information, failed to provide other requested documents and provided false testimony under oath. Owenson submitted a fictitious letter to FINRA on a former employer’s stationery purportedly signed by an employee of that company which contained fabricated information.
Mazzella submitted false preliminary insurance applications for fictitious customers and a false preliminary insurance application for a customer without the customer’s authorization or consent. As a result,Mazzella received $3,379.28 in commissions from the insurance company. Mazzella failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Josephson engaged in unauthorized transactions in a relative’s variable annuity account by submitting surrender or withdrawal requests through his member firm to the issuer of the variable annuity, which caused the liquidation of $48,716.81 from the account without the relative’s knowledge or consent, and in the absence of written or oral authorization to exercise discretion in connection with the variable annuity.
In furtherance of the above scheme, Josephson
received checks payable to his relative in the total amount of $45,230.15 as a result of the unauthorized partial liquidations;
negotiated the checks and spent the funds; and
without his relative’s knowledge and consent, affixed, or caused to be affixed, her signature to surrender or withdrawal request forms and as endorsements to checks payable to her.
Josephson failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Gruber permitted Helms to complete his member firm’s Firm Element Web-based courses and accompanying proficiency tests on his behalf, which Helms passed for Gruber.
Joseph Benjamin Gruber (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
Fabian received $104,000 from an individual for the purchase of real estate. That individual requested documentation of his agreement and Fabian falsified a document to create the appearance that the funds paid to him were invested in real estate, but there was no evidence regarding what Fabian did with the money, although he eventually repaid the individual. Fabian engaged in outside business activities, for compensation, without prior written notice to his member firm.
Joseph Stephen Fabian (Principal): Barred (based upon his failure to respond to FINRA requests for information)
Associated Person Glaser misappropriated funds from a customer’s account for her own use and benefit. Glaser, who was responsible for establishing direct payments and paying some of the customer’s monthly bills, set up an account on a non-firm Web site that was an online bill paying payment service without the customer’s authorization. Glaser used this online service to direct unauthorized payments totaling $8,679.27 from the customer’s securities account to Glaser’s creditors to pay for personal expenses.
Sellers borrowed $92,200 from a customer who surrendered a variable annuity to fund the loan, resulting in a $7,000 surrender charge. Sellers' member firm had written procedures forbidding registered representatives from borrowing money from, or lending money to, customers.
Leonard Duane Sellers (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 6 months
Verostko sold fixed annuities to customers without prompt written notice to his member firmof his outside business activities. Verostko could have sold the fixed annuities through his member firm; however, by conducting the transactions away from the firm, he received $100,000 more in commissions than he would have if the annuities had been sold through the firm. Verostko falsely certified to the firm that he was not engaged in any outside business activities.
Paul Anthony Verostko: Fined $10,000; Suspended 18 months
Hill issued checks totaling $479,450 from customer accounts to corporate payees representing that he was purchasing race horses for the customers; but, instead, converted $350,000 to his own use by arranging for the corporate payees to issue checks made payable to him for the same dollar amounts, less a small administrative fee. Also, Hill settled a customer complaint for $12,000 and failed to inform his member firm about the complaint.
While registered with member firms, Bonner engaged in outside business activities, for compensation, without prompt written notice to the firms. Bonner completed an Outside Activities Disclosure Form, which one firm required, and did not disclose his outside business activities. Also, Bonner engaged in private securities transactions, for compensation, without prompt written notice to, and approval from, his member firms. Bonner borrowed $900,000 from firm customers when firm procedures prohibited such borrowing.
Boardman borrowed $25,000 from the customer contrary to her member firm’s written procedures prohibiting a representative from borrowing from a customer unless the two are related. Boardman was not related to the customer and failed to repay the loan. Boardman signed questionnaires certifying that she was in compliance with the firm’s compliance manual. Boardman failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Sarah Rebecca Boardman: Boardman borrowed $25,000 from the customer contrary to her member firm’s written procedures prohibiting a representative from borrowing from a customer unless the two are related. Boardman was not related to the customer and failed to repay the loan. Boa
provide for appropriate procedures and controls and an appropriate system of follow-up and review with respect to its obligations to provide
appropriate procedures for supervision of business operations on the NYSE Trading Floor;
adequate supervision of its sole branch office, review of options accounts by a delegated person; ensure that its operational and regulatory activities were supervised and that it had systems, procedures and staff to follow-up and review all areas of its business activities, including its anti-money laundering (AML) program, suspicious activity reporting and its branch office to ensure compliance with applicable securities regulations and NYSE rules;
supervise the trading activity of its president and chairman;
ensure that electronic communications with the public were reviewed and retained;
establish an AML compliance program that detected and caused the reporting of certain transactions;
establish and implement policies, procedures and internal controls reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act and the implementing regulations thereunder;
provide for independent testing for compliance; and designate adequate and trained staff to ensure compliance with the Bank Secrecy Act;
document error accounts trades that a floor broker made;
deliver original or updated options disclosure document prior to newly approved customers or previously approved options accounts;
properly record all revenue and expenses on an accrual basis;
maintain minimum net capital compliance; and
implement adequate best execution procedures and conduct a formal analysis of best execution data.
The Firm
employed independent contractors without adequately complying with NYSE regulations;
handled options accounts activity in violation of NYSE regulations; and
failed to comply with the firm element of the continuing education rule.
Schumacher failed to
reasonably discharge his supervisory duties as president and chairman; and
document error accounts trades that a floor brokermade.
Strasbourger, Pearson, Tulcin,Wolff, Inc. and Michael J. Schumacher (Principal): Censured; Fined $100,000 jt/several with Strasbourger; Required to retain an independent consultant to conduct a comprehensive review of its policies, procedures and practices to ensure compliance with federal securities laws, NYSE/NASD rules, and to make
Prophet's customer mistakenly received a $1,200 check from her variable annuity company and gave the check to Prophet so that he could return it to the company. Instead of returning the check to the company, Prophet, without the customer’s authorization, endorsed the check and deposited it into his bank account, using the funds for his own benefit.
maintain and preserve inaccurate books and records in violation of Section 17(a) of the Exchange Act and SEC Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4 thereunder, and NASD Rules 2110 and 3110;
aid and abet a violation of Section 15(a)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by permitting a person not registered as a broker-dealer, who had been barred from the securities industry, to perform duties that required registration; and
to violate New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Rule 345(a) by permitting a person who was not registered with, qualified by or acceptable to the Exchange, to regularly perform the duties customarily performed by a securities lending representative.
agreed to pay and caused transaction-based compensation to be transmitted to a non-registered person who had been barred from the securities industry,
failed to disclose to his firm that he had agreed to pay and caused transaction based compensation to be transmitted to a non-registered person who had been barred from the securities industry, and
failed to disclose to his member firm that he had agreed to pay and caused transaction-based compensation to be transmitted to a finder.
Benedict Patrick Tommasino (Supervisor): Fined $30,000; Suspended 20 months with a consecutive 2 month suspension in Principal capacities only.
The Firm participated in private placement offerings of preferred stock that an affiliate issued, and each offering claimed an exemption from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, when the offerings were not separate and distinct, and were, therefore, subject to integration. None of the offerings that were offered and sold were registered with the SEC. As a result of the offerings becoming integrated into one offering, the exemption under Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933 did not apply and the offerings were subject to the securities registration requirements of public offerings. The private placement memoranda for the offerings failed to disclose to customers the existence of the common control of the issuer and the firm. The firm failed to provide or send written disclosure of such common control at or before the completion of the transactions with the customers.
Byers repeatedly misrepresented the existence and value of assets and investments to a customer. In order to conceal these misrepresentations, Byers solicited and accepted approximately $331,120 in loans from other customers, contrary to his member firm’s written policies and procedures, and deposited the funds into the customer’s account. Byers did not repay the loans to the customers.
Haas participated in outside business activities without providing his member firm with written notice of these activities. Haas falsified correspondence to cover up these activities and falsely certified to his firm he was not engaged in outside business activities. He failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Submitted a friend became aware that her member firm had not processed a public customer’s rollover form and fixed and a variable annuity application, so she completed a new application with a more current date. Without authorization,Friend cut out the public customer’s signature from the first application and pasted it on a new application, changed the date on the rollover form because the firm had not processed this form, and submitted both documents for processing.
Debra Ann Friend (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 4 months
United States Court of Appeals Denied Petition for Review of the Securities and Exchange Commission decision that sustained findings of violation and sanctions on appeal of a National Adjudicatory Council decision on appeal from Office of Hearing Officers decision.
Toth willfully caused the filing of a Form U4 that contained a misrepresentation of material fact.
Anderson failed to supervise a registered representative who made numerous unsuitable recommendations in a customer’s account. Anderson received adequate tools from his member firm to complete his supervisory duties but failed to detect and prevent the representative’s misconduct.
Duane Franklin Anderson (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 month in Principal Capacity only
Skigen created falsified electronic notes of his purported meetings and conversations with a customer after the customer filed an arbitration claim. Skigen provided the falsified notes to outside counsel in the arbitration case, without advising counsel or his member firm that he had falsified and backdated the notes, and misrepresented that the notes had been prepared contemporaneously with the conversations. Skigen created similar falsified notes for another customer. Skigen provided false testimony during a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Reams altered a customer’s option account agreement without the customer’s knowledge or authorization so that it would reflect that the account was approved for an additional trading strategy. By altering the agreement without the customer’s knowledge or authorization, she caused a business record of her member firm to be inaccurate.
Frances Ann Reams (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
Boccio caused his member firms to fail to maintain their required net capital and filed inaccurate quarterly and monthly FOCUS Part IIA Reports on the firms’ behalf. Boccio failed to take adequate steps to verify and ensure the accuracy of financial information that his member firms provided to him.
Frank Louis Boccio (Principal): Fined $7,500; Suspended 15 days in FINOP capacity only
Shoff sold equity-indexed annuities for compensation outside the scope of his employment with a member firm without providing the firm prompt written notice of the business activity.
Galen Mark Shoff: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
establish and maintain a system to supervise a registered representative’s activities and to adequately investigate the representative’s disciplinary background. The RR's' disciplinary history should have alerted the firm to the fact that the representative required heightened supervision, but the firm failed to establish procedures addressing heightened supervision and failed to implement the representative’s heightened supervision; and
supervise the representative by failing to ensure that new account forms that he submitted contained the required information.
Moore falsely represented to the Texas State Securities Board that the representative had not engaged in a securities business in Texas prior to the execution of an undertaking that his firm agreed to and that Moore signed for allowing the representative’s registration in Texas. Also, Moore unreasonably delegated some of his supervisory responsibilities to an inexperienced, untrained and unregistered subordinate, and failed to review firm records to learn about the extent of the representative’s activities in his customer’s accounts.
Joe Farnham Moore Jr. (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 2 years
Holder facilitated a customer’s purchase of life insurance policies in the name of the customer’s deceased son and used a false social security number on the policies. The customer forged her deceased son’s signature to execute the policies with Holder’s knowledge.
failed to evidence approval of research reports and to properly disclose securities holdings in research reports;
failed to, enforce procedures to ensure compliance with FINRA rules requiring approval of research reports, establish and maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to ensure that disclosure of securities ownership complied with FINRA rules, promulgate and enforce firm policies and procedures concerning review of employee electronic communications with the public that comported with the standards set forth in FINRA rules;
failed to request and receive duplicate statements for employee brokerage accounts in contravention of its policies and procedures;
was unable to evidence requests or approvals of dual employment for employees as required by its policies and procedures;
failed to evidence that it conducted annual branch inspections;
failed to file an accurate Annual Compliance Report for one year;
failed to report customer complaints;
unable to evidence that it timely filed Uniform Termination Notices for Securities Industry Registration (Forms U5) and that its Compliance Registered Options Principal regularly furnished the required options activity reports to the compliance officer and other senior management;
failed to file an accurate annual attestation regarding NYSE Rule 472; and
failed to make and keep accurate records of the computation of aggregate indebtedness.
Harding falsified a customer’s Individual Retirement Account (IRA) opening documents by cutting and pasting the customer’s signature from one document onto others without the customer’s authorization or knowledge.
Maria Anne Harding: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
effected the purchase of stocks for an account, for which he was directly or indirectly interested, when he knew that a hedge fund customer who had moments earlier withdrawn an order it placed with Webb for the same stock, intended to purchase the stock elsewhere;
provided false information to his member firm that he had executed a trade for a customer order when, in fact, he did not possess a customer order;
attempted to conceal his misconduct by requesting sales traders at an affiliate firm to locate a buyer for stocks he had already purchased for his firm’s facilitation account, and to locate an existing order ticket with a time stamp prior to his purchase of the stock in order to make it appear that the purchase for his firm’s facilitation account had been intended for a customer.
Mark David Webb (Principal): Fined $12,500; Suspended 18 months
The Firm failed to establish and maintain adequate written supervisory procedures relating to the conduct of private placements, and did not maintain required books and records in connection with the private placement offerings in that it failed to maintain all of the subscription agreements that customers who invested in the offerings completed and submitted, and any type of confirmation reflecting these investments.
Domson created financial planning agreements for customers, forged the customers’ signatures on the agreements and submitted them to his member firm, without the customers’ knowledge and consent. Domson paid the initial fees for the plans from his own funds and created the plans to generate sufficient sales of financial plans to enable him to reach a higher level employment status with his firm.
While his state registration status was inactive in Florida, Smalbach caused securities transactions that he had solicited to be placed through a junior registered representative whom he had hired. Smalbach caused false information regarding the identity of the registered representative of record to be provided to his member firm because he was in fact the representative of record for the securities transactions submitted by the junior representative to the firm for execution.
Acting under Davis’ direction and control, the Firm participated in private placements of securities. The private placement memoranda for the offerings provided that the offerings were contingent upon receiving subscription agreements for established minimums, and the financing agreements provided that the escrow agent shall promptly return all escrowed funds to the investors should the contingencies not be met. The business bank accounts were established in the issuers’ names, into which the offering proceeds were deposited, and these business accounts failed to conform to the requirements of SEC Rule 15c2-4 for accounts holding investor funds pending satisfaction of an offering contingency.
Paulson Investment Company, Inc. and Trent Donald Davis: Censured, Fined $10,000 jt/several; Required to provide certification that the firm has complied with SEC Rule 15c2-4 to FINRA within 10 business days of the closing of all contingent offerings conducted by the firm during the 12 months following acceptance of this AWC.
Weaver and Will participated in private securities transactions, for compensation, in the sale of securities issued by another firm and did not provide prior written notice to, or receive prior approval from, their member firm. They incorrectly answered “no”when asked on required annual compliance questionnaires whether they had ever been paid or received a referral or finder’s fee from anyone for referring securities clients and/or business.
Randy Brian Weaver: No fine in light of financial status; Suspended 9 months
Richard Lance Will: No fine in light of financial status; Suspended 8 months
Londo made loans, in the form of casino chips or markers, totaling $270,000 to a firm customer who was also a close personal friend, contrary to his member firm’s written supervisory procedures that prohibited its representatives from lending to, or borrowing from, securities customers unless the customer was a family member, which she was not. Londo’s firm was not aware of his loans to the customer.
Ray Matthew Londo (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 20 business days
Dion failed to comply with the terms of a written settlement agreement he executed in connection with an arbitration case.
Richard George Dion: Fined $5,000; Suspended until he fully satisfies the terms of a settlement agreement by paying a former member firm $75,000 and providing satisfactory proof thereof to FINRA, or entering into a superseding settlement agreement with the firm and providing satisfactory proof of the agreement to FINRA; Suspended from association with any FINRA member in any capacity an additional 30 business days upon FINRA’s receipt of satisfactory proof of his full satisfaction of the original or superseding settlement agreement
Berteletti created a false and misleading account summary and provided it to a customer, and failed to respond to FINRA requests for information. Berteletti engaged in securities transactions in a customer’s account without the customer’s authorization and consent, and without discretionary authority. Berteletti settled a customer complaint away from his member firm.
Securities and Exchange Commission sustained findings of violation and sanctions on appeal of a National Adjudicatory Council decision on appeal from Office of Hearing Officers decision.
Chief Compliance Officer Strong failed to supervise a research analyst who sold securities in his personal trading account contrary to the recommendations contained in various firm research reports, and allowed the trader to execute purchase transactions during the blackout periods. Strong failed to include, or included insufficient or inaccurate required disclosures in research reports, and failed to timely file an annual attestation of supervisory procedures for research analysts.
Austin purchased shares of stock for his own account and did not have the funds to pay for the stock, in violation of Federal Reserve Board Regulation T. Austin obtained a Regulation T extension to have time to pay for the stock but failed to pay for the stock when the extension expired, causing his member firm to extend him credit in a manner not permissible under Regulation T by making the stock purchase without sufficient funds. Austin willfully caused his firm to extend him credit in violation of Federal Reserve Board Regulations T and X. Austin sold the stock to a public customer, which he was not permitted to do because he did not have his Series 7 General Securities Representative registration. FINRA found that Austin failed to timely transfer the stock out of his account to the customer after he had sold him the stock.
Sean Aaron Austin: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 months in all capacities
While Effron was registered with a member firm, he engaged in outside business activities and failed to provide prompt written notice by completing and submitting an Outside Business Activity Notification Form.
Effron placed variable annuity transactions through his member firm for customers of a representative from another member firm without discussing the transactions with the customers, and after receiving the completed and signed applications, he submitted them to his firm for processing. Effron received commissions from the transactions and forwarded most of the commissions to the representative without advising his firm of the arrangement.
Steven Effron: Fined $10,000; Suspended 4 months in all capacities
Laundrie failed to supervise his firm’s business consulting business by failing to take any action to determine whether his firm was providing services to stock issuers pursuant to its consulting agreements or was being paid solely for its market making activities. Laundrie failed to take any action to review or monitor his firm’s market making in the issuers’ securities.
Thomas William Laundrie: Fined $15,000; Suspended 45 days in Principal capacity only
The Firm failed to establish, maintain and enforce an adequate supervisory system and written procedures to detect statutorily disqualified individuals and to ensure the reporting of disclosable events as required by NASD Rule 3070. The Firm did not report to FINRA that it was associated with a person subject to statutory disqualification.
Trade Station Securities, Inc.: Censured; Fined $15,000
refused to allow FINRA staff to enter the firm’s branch office to examine the firm’s books and records, and to otherwise conduct an on-site examination;
failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information, and
have not established the existence of the vast majority of the books and records that the firm is required to make and preserve.
Acting through Constantin, Windham failed to maintain and preserve numerous books and records required pursuant to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4, and NASD Rule 3110.
Lesko misappropriated $24,520 from customers’ accounts at the bank affiliated with her member firm. Lesko prepared fraudulent cash advance checks to cause unauthorized withdrawals from customers’ bank accounts and then deposited the funds into her personal bank account.
Lacour borrowed $5,000 from a customer contrary to his firm’s written supervisory procedures prohibiting registered representatives from borrowing from a customer without prior review and approval by the firm, unless the customer was a familymember or financial institution, which the customer was not. Lacour failed to pay the loan in full and failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Bennett Joseph Lacour III: Barred; Ordered to pay $4,400 plus interest in restitution to customer.
After learning that a customer’s enrollment form in a mutual fund had been rejected because it was submitted more than 30 days after it had been signed, Geske signed the customer’s name on a new enrollment form without the customer’s authorization or consent rather than asking the customer to sign a new application.
Carol Ann Geske (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 month
Moni recommended concentrated positions in the security of a clinical-stage drug development company to customers of his member firm. The concentrated positions were unsuitable for Moni’s customers in light of their financial profile, personal circumstances and limited ability to withstand loss.
Charles James Moni: Fined $10,000; Suspended 3 months
Brunert fraudulently obtained a customer’s signature on a wire transfer form in order to misappropriate $100,000 from the customer. Brunert transferred the funds into a bank account that he and a relative controlled for his own use and benefit, and used the funds to pay credit card debts and other expenses. He failed to respond to FINRA requests for information and to appear for an on-the-record interview.
Hayworth prepared and submitted 403(b) Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) Distribution Request forms on public investors’ behalf authorizing the distribution of 403(b) assets to rollover Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) at his member firm. Although the investors had consented to the transfers, they were ineligible for rollovers because they were currently still employed by the 403(b) plan sponsor, and Hayworth was aware of their ineligibility but provided false employment-status information and forged the plan administrator’s signature on each distribution request form to facilitate the rollovers.
Securities and Exchange Commission sustained findings of violation and sanctions on appeal of a National Adjudicatory Council decision on appeal from Office of Hearing Officers decision.
The firm and Baldwin failed to respond completely and fully to FINRA requests for information. For a commentary on this interesting case, see The Cost of Telling a Regulator to Go To Hell (figuratively, that is) at http://www.brokeandbroker.com/index.php?a=blog&id=118 What makes this case particularly interesting -- if not edgy? For starters, consider this language from the SEC's decision:
Moreover, we find troubling the contradictory statements given by Enforcement's witnesses with respect to respondents' failure to respond to the final disposition letter. The differing responses from Enforcement's witnesses, coupled with the confused nature of the FINRA examiner's testimony, raise considerable questions concerning the accuracy of Enforcement's general assessment that respondents did not respond completely to the requests...
CMG Institutional Trading, LLC and Shawn Derrick Baldwin (Principal): Fined $25,000 jt/severally and suspended 2 years in all capacities.
Garcia directed an individual to telephone the insurance affiliate of his member firm for a client history interview and to impersonate an insurance customer to obtain approval of life insurance policies for the customer prior to the deadline date.
David Garcia: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 business days
Mathis used his manager’s user identification and password to make unauthorized credits to his brokerage account at his member firm and to his bank account at his firm’s bank affiliate. Mathis credited a total of $1,205 from the firm account used to provide credits to customers to which he was not entitled. Also, he failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information.
permitted an individual to perform functions requiring principal registration without being registered with FINRA in that capacity;
failed to enforce his member firm’s written supervisory procedures requiring that a Watch/Restricted list be maintained while the firm participated in underwriting activities; and
failed to file a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) in connection with suspicious stock transactions and wire activity involving the sale of over one billion shares of a sub-penny stock from the account of one customer resulting in total proceeds of over $786,000.
James Russell McCarthy Jr. (Principal): Fined $20,000; Suspended 2 months in Principal capacity only
Securities and Exchange Commission sustained findings of violation and sanctions on appeal of a National Adjudicatory Council decision on appeal from Office of Hearing Officers decision.
NASD found that Associated Person Craig willfully failed to disclose four felony charges and one misdemeanor conviction on his Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration ("Form U4") in violation of NASD Membership Rule IM-1000-1 and Conduct Rule 2110.The SEC imposed the sanction following appeal of a NAC decision. The sanction was based on findings that Craig willfully failed to disclose material information on his Form U4.
In order to obtain authorization for withdrawals totaling $37,299.55 for a public customer directly from her IRA securities account, Kleinerman completed a distribution request form, dated the form in her own handwriting, affixed a photocopy of the customer’s signature onto the form and submitted it to her member firm. Kleinerman used a photocopy of the customer’s signature several times on distribution request forms with the customer’s full knowledge or consent.
Jill A. Kleinerman: Fined $2,500 in light of her financial status; Suspended 30 days
Bancroft misappropriated $10,500 worth of cash premium payments that he received from insurance customers for his personal use. He attempted to cover up his misuse of customer funds by depositing some of the more recent cash payments he received from customers into the accounts of other customers whose money he had previously misappropriated.
Walsh misappropriated stock and mutual fund shares valued at $2,057,248.52 from his member firm, sold the stock and made personal use of the proceeds. Walsh misappropriated $198,574.50 from a credit union affiliated with his firmby procuring a line of credit and creating false holdings in stock at his firmt o secure the loan.
Pramer altered customer telephone records at his member firm by deleting or inaccurately updating the numbers to slow down other registered representatives at his firm that he believed would be assigned to call his customers after he resigned. By changing customer telephone numbers, Pramer caused his member firm to create and maintain inaccurate books and records.
Joseph Aloyisius Pramer III: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 business days
Bickford converted $21,667.05 of nonsecurities to her personal use by effecting unauthorized journal transactions from her member firm’s suspense account to her personal brokerage account at the firm. Bickford failed to fully respond to FINRA requests for information.
McKinney was assigned a corporate credit card by an affiliate of hismember firm and, without the knowledge, authorization or consent of the affiliate or the firm,
used the credit card to purchase merchandise for his personal benefit and purchased additional merchandise for his personal benefit which was billed directly by the vendors to the affiliate; and
sold some of the merchandise that he obtained and retained the proceeds of the sales.
McKinney failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Berkoff failed to enter a stop-loss order a customer requested, and borrowed $8,000 from the customer in violation of his member firm’s procedures and NASD Rules 2110 and 2370.
Michael Ross Berkoff: Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 business days
Patton prepared and submitted a 403(b) ERISA Distribution Request form on a public investor’s behalf authorizing the distribution of 403(b) assets to a rollover IRA at his member firm. Although the investor had consented to the transfer of her 403(b) assets, she was ineligible because she was currently employed by the 403(b) plan sponsor. Patton was aware of her ineligibility, but provided false employment status information and forged the plan administrator’s signature on a distribution form to facilitate the rollover.
Monty Chad Patton: Fined $5,000; Suspended 18 months
Lorne made unauthorized withdrawals totaling approximately $12,101 from an organization for which he was treasurer, and hid the withdrawals from the organization’s officers and submitted false financial reports to the organization. Lorne converted the funds for his own personal use, except for a small amount that was for legitimate expense reimbursement, but repaid the organization after he was confronted about the unauthorized withdrawals. He engaged in outside business activities and failed to provide prompt written notice to his member firm, and made misrepresentations to his firm regarding any outside business activity.
Jensen paid $18,000 to another firm’s trader and the trader’s relative so that the trader would continue to conduct his firm’s securities transactions through its account with Jensen. Also, while serving as the registered representative of record on a customer’s corporate account, Jensen shared in losses and gains in the account without written authorization from his member firm or the customer, and he did not share in the profits and losses in direct proportion to his financial contributions to the account.
Patrick James Jensen: No fine in light of financial status; Suspended 1 year
Associated Person Fry, while associated with a member firm, she transferred, or caused the transfer of, $25,000 from a customer’s brokerage account to her personal bank account, without the customer’s knowledge or consent, by creating a false Automatic Clearing House Transaction Request Form to which she forged the customer’s signature and used the funds to pay personal expenses. The firm repaid the customer’s funds, plus interest, and then Fry repaid the firm.
Noragon failed to cause his firm to conduct an annual compliance meeting, and failed to ensure that Offices of Supervisory Jurisdiction (OSJ) and non-OSJ branch offices were examined and the examinations documented. Noragan approved his member firm’s participation as an underwriter in securities offerings without ensuring that the prospectuses used in connection with the offerings contained adequate disclosures and were not materially misleading.
Raymond Lee Noragon (Principal): Fined $25,000; Suspended 6 months in Principal Capacity only.
Meadows borrowed $30,000 from a customer who was also a personal friend, but he did not obtain consent from the firm to borrow from the customer when the firm’s written procedures prohibited registered persons from borrowing from customers except under certain circumstances and also required the firm’s prior review and approval. Meadows failed to disclose the loan when completing the firm’s annual compliance questionnaires.
Robert Brian Meadows: Fined $7,500; Suspended 90 days
Chun created false documents by misrepresenting that a customer had not been previously declined life insurance on variable life insurance applications when, in fact, the customer had been previously declined life insurance. Moreover, Chun’s actions caused the firm’s books and records to contain false and misleading information related to the customer’s life insurance application history.
Chen engaged in misuse of customer funds when, without a customer’s knowledge, authorization or consent, he caused the transfer of $10,000 from the customer’s bank account to the bank account of a business acquaintance to whom Chen owned money. The Firm’s operations personnel detected the transaction and then Chen reversed it.
The Firm failed to accurately complete Forms U5 following the termination of registered representatives alleged to have committed theft, fraud or violations of investment-related rules. The failure to complete Forms U5 hindered the investing public’s ability to access information regarding the termination of registered representatives. Also, the Firm failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system and written procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with its obligation to complete and submit accurate Form U5 filings to FINRA.
approved a research report for a company that was issued to the firm’s customers, but did not contain a disclosure that the firm had received compensation for investment banking services from the company, and
failed to ensure that the research reports contained such disclosure.
Choice issued subsequent research reports that did not contain such disclosure.
Choice Investments, Inc.: Censured; Fined $20,000 ($10,000 Jt/severl with Itzen)
Donald Arthur Itzen (Principal): Fined $10,000 jt/sev with Choice; Suspended 20 business days in Principal capacity only.
Call supplied price quotes to a propriety trader at another broker dealer without any independent verification of the accuracy of the prices, but made it appear as if he were providing good faith price quotes. Had he attempted to verify the actual market prices of the corporate bonds at issue, he would have known that the pricing information he re-sent to the trader was inaccurate. The other trader relied on the inaccurate prices quotes to mark positions in his trading book, thereby enhancing his profit and loss statement at his firm, causing the firm to record inaccurate prices for corporate bonds on its books and records.
Christian Powers Call: Censured; Fined $5,000; Suspended 45 days in all capacities
De Zoysa published research reports in which she made false, exaggerated, unwarranted or misleading statements, and published the reports, which she knew were false or misleading. De Zoysa was involved in a romantic relationship with an executive of a company within her coverage area and failed to disclose the relationship, which created an actual, material conflict of interest. In contravention of her firm’s directive, De Zoysa created and deleted documents on her laptop computer after commencement of the firm’s internal investigation.
Dhulsini Hemani De Zoysa: Fined $10,000; Barred in any capacity requiring the Research Analyst Series 86 (Analysis) and/or Series 87 (Regulatory Administration and Best Practices); Suspended 12 months in all capacities.
timely adopt a written Anti-Money Laundering (AML) program, provide AML training and respond to information requests from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the U.S. Department of the Treasury;
file an application to obtain FINRA’s approval for a material change in its business operations when its minimum net capital increased due to the receipt of customer checks; and
establish and maintain a supervisory system and written procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with rules concerning best execution of customer foreign securities transactions.
Also, the Firm's Website did not present balanced discussions of risks and contained misleading, exaggerated and unwarranted statements, and contained comparisons of services that failed to disclose all material differences.
On three separate occasions, Rodriguez deposited $6.00 to an account she maintained at her bank through a bank automatic teller machine (ATM) but intentionally entered $600 into the ATM as the deposit amount. Immediately after each deposit, Rodriguez caused roughly $500 to be transferred directly from the account to which she made the deposits to a separate account she maintained at her bank to pay personal expenses. The funds transferred to the second account temporarily enabled Rodriguez to have sufficient funds in that account to satisfy all payments and withdrawals made against it.
Gail Marie Rodriguez: Fined $5,000;Suspended 4 months in all capacities
Hagan evaded an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) garnishment of wages order by routing commissions he earned to an unregistered person at his member firm. Also, he willfully failed to disclose material information on his Forms U4.
Joseph William Hagan: Fined $10,000; Barred in Principal Capacity; Suspended 3 months all capacities
report, or timely report, disclosable settlements and disclosable regulatory orders;
timely file summary and statistical information for customer complaints that the firm received.
file a Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4) amendment and failed to timely file amendments to Uniform Applications for Broker-Dealer Registration (Forms BD), Forms U4 or Uniform Termination Notices for Securities Industry Registration (Forms U5).
LF Financial, LLC: Censured; Fined $15,000 jt/several with Kaplan
Jed Philip Kaplan (Principal) Censured; Fined $15,000 jt/several with LF Financial
O'Callaghan improperly priced various corporate bond positions in his proprietary trading book to improve the profit and loss totals reported in his book. His member firm became aware of the mismarkings during a routine reconciliation of his positions for daily mark-to-market purposes. The mismarkings resulted in his firm recording inaccurate prices for corporate bonds on its books and records.
Matthew Edward O’Callaghan: Censured; Fined $10,000; Suspended 18 months in all capacities
While associated with a member firm, Resnik contacted former member firm clients to determine if they were interested in moving their accounts to his current member firm so that he could provide assistance with the accounts. Resnick telephoned clients who had not responded to his earlier calls or correspondence, and left messages advising that he was going to submit a request to his former firm to have them reassigned to him as their registered representative unless they instructed him otherwise. When the clients did not respond to his call, Resnick cut and pasted their signatures to broker of record change forms without their authorization or consent. As a result of his actions, Resnick was able to continue to serve as the broker of record for the customers’ mutual fund accounts, but his current firm terminated him for his misconduct and ultimately returned the accounts to his former firm.
National failed to establish, maintain and enforce an adequate supervisory system and written supervisory procedures to supervise its securities lending business and registered securities lending representatives to prevent and detect fraudulent activity.
The Firm failed to
include a description of
what managers were to look for in reviewing Loanet reports,
the steps to be taken if questionable activity was discovered, and
how to document and maintain documentation of supervisors’ oversight activities;
failed to take steps to detect and prevent a registered representative from participating in fraudulent stock loan transactions for his personal benefit;
establish and maintain a separate system of follow-up and review to ensure that delegated supervisory authority and responsibility were being properly exercised.
National permitted a stock loan supervisor to review his own transactions.
National Investor Services Corp.: Censured; Fined $75,000
Murray charged a customer at her member firm a fictitious account “maintenance fee”when her firm imposed no such fee on customers. Murray directed the customer to pay the fee by way of a personal check written out to “cash” for $4,025.61, which Murray subsequently cashed.
submitted variable life insurance applications for customers to his member firm, signing customers’ names on various documents without the customers’ knowledge, authorization or consent; and
created checks purporting to be from the customers (or purchased money orders with his own funds, signing the customers’ names to the money orders) and submitted them with the insurance applications to his member firm without the customers’ knowledge, authorization or consent.
By engaging in this conduct, Clarkson received $41,667.98 in commissions from his firm, which subsequently reversed the commissions.
Stewart accepted $445,914.13 from an elderly public customer for investment in a corporation he organized and owned, and failed to issue the customer any ownership interest. Rather than using the funds as intended, Stewart converted the funds to his own use and benefit by depositing the funds into the corporation’s bank account and paid personal expenses directly from the account or transferred funds to his personal bank account, thereby converting the funds without the customer’s knowledge or consent.
Securities and Exchange Commission sustained findings of violation and sanctions on appeal of a National Adjudicatory Council decision on appeal from Office of Hearing Officers decision.
Acting on a member firm’s behalf, Pellegrino failed to develop an adequate supervisory system reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws, regulations and NASD Rules, and ignored “red flags” that should have resulted in additional supervisory scrutiny. Pellegrino’s supervisory failures resulted in firm registered representatives making unsuitable recommendations and misleading customers as to the risks of proprietary products over an extended time. Pellegrino facilitated the representatives’ misconduct by promoting sales to firm customers rather than improving compliance. He failed to enforce the firm’s written supervisory procedures regarding suitability determinations, and failed to take reasonable steps to monitor and have the firm perform appropriate individual suitability determinations based on each investor’s personal financial needs as prescribed in the firm’s supervisory and compliance manuals rather than solely on suitability guidelines.
Mueller executed discretion in customers’ accounts without prior written authorization that hismember firm accepted. In certain instances, Mueller exercised time and price discretion after the business day on which the customer granted authorization to purchase or sell a definite amount of a specified security, without the customers’written authorization.
Rudy Rinehart Mueller: Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Schonfeld accepted customer short sale orders in certain securities and, for each order, failed to make/annotate an affirmative determination that the firm would receive delivery of the security on the customer’s behalf or that the firm could borrow the security on the customer’s behalf for delivery by settlement date. In connection with orders, the firm effected short sales in certain securities for its proprietary account(s) and failed to make/annotate an affirmative determination that the firm could borrow the securities or otherwise provide for securities’ delivery by settlement date. The Firm accepted short sale orders in an equity security from another person, or effected short sales in an equity security for its own account, without borrowing the security, or entering into a bona fide arrangement to borrow the security; or having reasonable grounds to believe the security could be borrowed so that it could be delivered on the date delivery is due; and documenting compliance with SEC Rule 203(b)(1) of Regulation SHO. The Firm failed to provide documentary evidence that it performed the supervisory reviews set forth in its written supervisory procedures concerning NASD Rule 3370 and SEC Rule 203(b)(1). Also, the Firm failed to timely report Reportable Order Events (ROEs) to OATS.
StockCross failed to preserve all employee electronic communications, including personal email and instant messaging services. The Firms written procedures failed to provide for any reasonable follow-up and review to ensure that electronic communications were, in fact, being printed out and reviewed, and because it failed to adequately preserve employee electronic communications, it could not show that it was reviewing and approving them. The Firm failed to demonstrate that it was preserving or reviewing facsimile communications that branch office employees sent or received. The Firm failed to make and preserve books and records related to customer accounts, and failed to maintain a record of the individual at a branch office who could explain the types of records maintained at that branch and the information contained in the records.
Kelly borrowed $5,000 from a customer contrary to his member firm’s written supervisory procedures prohibiting registered representatives from borrowing from a customer unless the customer was a family member; and the customer was not related to Kelly.
Jaramillo acted unethically and failed to deal fairly with a customer by inducing him to provide funds for an investment by falsely describing the investment as "risk free" and guaranteed a 35% return within 10 weeks; after 10 weeks, falsely told the customer he had sent payment; sent several checks backed by insufficient funds; and failed to repay the customer's funds until two years later. Jaramillo failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Devastey completed documents for a customer to purchase a life insurance policy without the customer’s knowledge or consent, back-dated the documents and forged the customer’s signature on the documents. Devastey wrote a check from a closed checking account to pay the initial premium on the insurance policy, wrote the customer’s name on the check and forged the customer’s signature on it. Devastey submitted, or allowed the submission of, the documents for processing, and Devastey admitted to the forgeries only after the check bounced and the customer was asked to make the initial payment.
Clifford Dominick Devastey: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 years in all capacities
Brochu and Schlesinger sold Class B units pursuant to a private placement memorandum containing inaccurate financial projections. Brochu and Schlesinger worked on the private placement memorandum, and Brochu supervised registered representatives who worked on the memorandum’s financial projections. Brochu discovered inaccuracies in the financial projections contained in the memorandum and reported them to firm managers, but incorrectly determined that the inaccuracies were not material and did not disclose them to customers who had purchased the securities. Schlesinger accepted the determination that the inaccuracies were not material and should not be disclosed. Brochu and Schlesinger continued to use the inaccurate private placement memorandum to sell additional units. Acting through Brochu, a member firm failed to establish, maintain and enforce a reasonably designed supervisory system and written procedures regarding its registered representatives’ private securities transactions.
David Francis Brochu (Principal): Fined $20,000; Suspended 15 business days in all capacities
Kiley received $20,382.07 in compensation for participating in the sale of life settlements totaling $160,601.24, and failed to give prior written notice to, or receive prior written approval from, his member firm. The compliance manual for Kiley’s member firm explicitly prohibited the sale of viatical and life settlements.
Donald Walter Kiley: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
Goldberg falsified information on wire authorization forms for customers who had ordered wire transfers, and submitted the falsified forms to his member firm. He fabricated a notary’s signature and commission stamp impression on a customer’s wire authorization form. Goldberg failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview. (FINRA Case #)
Thomason entered false information in the firm’s records by providing incorrect answers on firm forms, thereby concealing his violations of its policies. Thomason violated the firm’s policies when customers, who were not related to him, purchased fixed annuity policies through him and made him their beneficiary without the firm’s prior written permission. Thomason received a customer’s mail at his home or at an address he controlled contrary to his firm’s written policies and without written authorization.
Acting through Jahre, the Firm filed a misleading and inaccurate Uniform Termination Notice for Securities Industry Registration (Form U5) in connection with a registered representative’s termination.
Hedge Fund Capital Partners, LLC: Censured; Fined $10,000
Howard Gordon Jahre: Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business day in Principal Capacity
The Firm's AML procedures were not tailored to reflect its business model, but instead used procedures designed for retail firms although it was not a retail brokerage firm. The section identifying “red flags” of suspicious activity copied examples in NASD Notice to Members 02-21 and were not modified to reflect issues that might arise in its wholesale trading business. The findings also stated that the firm’s supervisory procedures and compliance manual were not cross-referenced to the AML procedures, and failed to give employees guidance on what action to take in an AML context if suspicious activity was detected. The Firm’s failure to customize its AML procedures to its business left employees to devise their own red flags to address the firm’s market-making activities and to determine how to apply AML procedures.
Epstein received $280,500 from customers in their nineties to hold for distribution to a relative upon their deaths. Epstein deposited the funds in an account for a business he operated and distributed the funds to individuals other than the customers. Epstein knew that his member firm prohibited his acceptance, commingling and misuse of the customers’ funds, and after the firm discovered his activities, he repaid the customers. Also, Epstein failed to fully and timely respond to FINRA requests for information and documentation.
Keith Lowell Epstein: Fined $10,000; Suspended 2 years in all capacities
In response to customers’ requests to withdraw funds from bank-issued instruments each owned, Stain accessed the computer system of a bank affiliated with her member firm, and, in violation of the bank‘s internal policies and without its authorization, caused the customers’ instruments to be liquidated in a manner that enabled them to avoid fees and/or charges that they otherwise would have incurred. This unauthorized conduct caused the bank to lose revenue to which it was entitled.
Kimberly Ann Stain: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 years
Markovich borrowed $14,480 from a firm customer, contrary to his member firm’s compliance manual prohibiting borrowing money or securities from a customer.
L. Vincent Markovich: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Legent failed to develop and implement a written AML program reasonably designed to achieve and monitor its compliance with Bank Secrecy Act requirements. The written AML program did not adequately consider the money laundering risks its introducing firms posed; some of which were conducting high risk AML activities. The AML training program was deficient, and that the firm failed to provide an adequate AML training program for new and existing employees. The Firm failed to file, and to timely file, Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs), and failed to document any internal discussions it might have had, or the reason for any decision that it might have made, not to file an SAR. The Firm effected improper trades by permitting customers to sell securities in cash accounts before making full cash payment, which was in violation of Regulation T, and failed to properly restrict accounts from trading subsequent to this activity. The Firm failed to ensure that, for each transaction in a cash account, full cash payment was made within two days of the settlement of each purchase, regardless of whether or when the security was sold, and the firm’s written supervisory systems and procedures did not adequately address the Regulation T provisions. The Firm failed to make accurate reserve computations.
Legent Clearing LLC: Censured; Fined $350,000; Required to adopt and implement policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with Parts 220.8(a) and 220.8(b) of Regulation T, and to have an officer of the firm certify to FINRA, in writing within 60 days, that the firm has adopted and implemented such policies and procedures.
Burgos falsified customers’ signatures on documents to effect transactions the customers requested, lthough they did not expressly give her permission to sign their names. Burgos’ member firm detected an instance where she falsified customer signatures and confronted her about it. Burgos admitted to the falsification of these signatures only, but later admitted to the additional falsifications when the firm discovered them.
Maria Antonia Burgos: Fined $5,000; Suspended 1 year in all capacities.
enforce his member firm’s supervisory procedures concerning the review of outgoing written correspondence of registered representatives to ensure that communications with the public were not false or misleading; and
ensure that his firm’s compliance department pre-approved correspondence sent to more than 10 individuals.
Michael Francis Smith (Principal): Censured; Fined $10,000
prepared and maintained inaccurate customer reserve formula computations and failed to make required deposits to its Special Reserve Account as required by the Securities Exchange Act, and failed to notify FINRA of its failure to make the deposits;
prepared and maintained an inaccurate net capital computation, trial balance and general ledger, and filed a materially inaccurate Financial and Operations Combined Uniform Single (FOCUS) report in which it overstated its net capital;
failed to conduct an accurate box count (in that there were certificates in the box for positions that were not on the firm’s stock record, and the amount of shares in the box did not match the firm’s stock record);
failed to maintain an accurate securities position record, and did not take steps to obtain physical possession or control of securities failed-to-receive by initiating a buy-in procedure or otherwise in automated customer account transfers (ACATs) failures and customer-related fails;
failed to liquidate, or timely liquidate, unpaid-for customer securities positions in cash accounts as required by Regulation T, and permitted customers to purchase securities in accounts that were frozen pursuant to Regulation T without having cash on deposit for the purchases, and failed to liquidate customer positions in a timely manner in customer margin accounts that fell below FINRA’s maintenance margin requirements;
permitted an individual to act as its operations manager and to perform functions requiring registration as a Financial and Operations Principal (FINOP) when she was not so registered, and also employed a chief compliance officer who was not registered with the firm as a general securities principal or registered in any capacity with the firm;
had not recently conducted an independent test of its anti-money laundering (AML) compliance program, failed to provide prompt notification to FINRA of the change of its AML compliance officer, failed to conduct ongoing AML training for appropriate personnel, and its AML compliance program was inadequate in that it failed to establish policies and procedures that could reasonably be expected to detect and cause the reporting of suspicious transactions;
failed to maintain all internal electronic correspondence on non-erasable, non-rewriteable media, and its supervisory system was deficient in that registered persons could delete emails at will, and its written procedures were deficient because they lacked details or explanation;
failed to maintain a continuing and current firm element continuing education program;
failed to establish and maintain a reasonable supervisory system for financial and credit risk management relating to its correspondent business;
failed to reasonably supervise its operations system conversion and its operations activities to detect and/or prevent violations including, but not limited to, inaccurate box counts, position records, buy-in procedures, Regulation T and NASD Rule 2520,maintenance of electronic correspondence and customer account transfers;
engaged in the practice of improperly liquidating customer money market fund positions and failing to sweep customer free credit balances into customer-designated money market funds or a bank deposit account to create cash flows to meet its daily settlement obligations;
failed to maintain and provide account documentation to FINRA for accounts liquidated to meet its daily settlement requirements, and failed to comply with FINRA’s Uniform Practice Code in that it validated account transactions and transfers late; and
failed to report to FINRA, for itself or for any of its correspondent firms, daily INSITE information regarding the number and type of transactions conducted each day, the dollar value of the transactions, the net liquidating equity in proprietary trading accounts, the dollar amount of unsecured customer debits, information about margin debits, and calls in customer accounts and short interest information.
Benz manipulated the thinly traded common stock of an oil and gas exploration company by making trades in a customer’s account and making a market in the company’s common stock. Benz opened an account at his member firm for a corporate customer, and that Benz’ close relative, who was the controlling manager of a hedge fund with a significant position in the company, controlled the account. Benz effected trades in the company’s stock in the account to create activity and raise the price of the stock for the purpose of inducing others to purchase it. Benz traded at the end of the month, which inflated the month-end value of the hedge fund, and in turn increased its monthly management fees, which benefited Benz’ relative. Benz earned about $87,750 in trading commissions. Benz failed to respond to FINRA requests for documents and information, and to appear for an on-the-record interview.
McGarrah instructed his assistant to withdraw $60,000 from the joint account of his customers, who were relatives, and make the check payable to them, forged their signatures on the issued check and deposited it into his personal account, without their knowledge or consent. McGarrah subsequently wrote a letter on firm letterhead, informing the customers that the withdrawal was an error and was being rectified, and forged the signature of a supervisor who was no longer employed at the firm to conceal his conversion of customer funds. McGarrah failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Richard Allen McGarrah (Registered Supervisor): Barred
Bell failed to follow-up on “red flags” indicating possible misconduct by a registered representative. He failed to investigate why many of the representative’s accounts had “sellouts,” and why certain of the representative’s new customer accounts failed to pay for securities purchases that had appreciated in value. Bellia failed to adequately enforce his member firm’s heightened supervisory measures against the representative.
Robert Anthony Bellia Jr. (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities; Suspended 90 days in Principal/Supervisory capacities only.
Garretson falsely represented to New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Regulation examiners that his member firm did not employ any interns at the firm’s branch office. Garretson denied to the regulators that the branch office he supervised employed non-registered cold callers who used telemarketing scripts. Garretson instructed staff at the branch office that, if asked, the branch office employees were to tell the regulators that there were no interns employed at the branch office. Garretson purposefully failed to correct his misleading statements to the regulators.
Rodney Scott Garretson (Registered Supervisor): Fined $5,000; Suspended 6 months in all capacities
Sirota attempted to settle a customer complaint by sending the customer a check and a letter for her to sign retracting the complaint, without providing prior notice to his member firm or obtaining the firm’s consent.
Ronald Harris Sirota (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days
Ayre failed to take appropriate action to supervise a firm registered representative reasonably designed to prevent him from permitting an unregistered individual from conducting a securities business with firm customers. Ayre ignored “red flags” indicating possible misconduct, failed to conduct any meaningful review of the registered representative’s activities, and never conducted an internal inspection of his office. Acting through his member firm, Ayre failed to establish, maintain and enforce a supervisory system and written procedures to supervise the activities of each registered person that were reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the applicable rules and regulations in the following areas: discretionary accounts, branch operation supervision, heightened supervision, form filings, business continuity planning, net capital requirements, Regulation S-P, transaction reporting and variable product suitability.
Timothy Tilton Ayre (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 1 month in Principal Capacity only.
Helton owed a bank $533 in overdraft charges and other charges to her checking account; wrote a check from another checking account for $533, knowing she had inadequate funds in the account and submitted the check to the first bank, but the check was returned for non-sufficient funds. Helton failed to respond to FINRA requests for additional information.
did not adequately retain and archive back-up tapes,
permitted representatives to change their desktop computer settings to stop outgoing emails from being retained automatically, and
did not prevent representatives from deleting emails or moving incoming emails to their desktops prior to daily backups so that emails would not be retained automatically.
utilized an email system that overwrote email back-up tapes that contained emails employees sent or received every three or four weeks.
permitted representatives to use, or failed to prevent them from being able to use, public instant messaging and other means of electronic communications without retaining the communications.
implemented a new email retention system, but the system malfunctioned and the firm did not have adequate systems and procedures in place to detect and prevent the malfunctions.
"FINRA found that the deficiencies did not result in the firm’s failure to produce emails that were material to any regulatory investigation or legal proceeding."
Nord loaned to or borrowed from firm customers amounts ranging from $4,000 to $500,000, sometimes on more than one occasion, without his member firm’s written approval in accordance with the firm’s written procedures. Nord engaged in an outside business activity, for compensation, without prompt notice, written or otherwise, to his member firm, and failed to respond to a FINRA request to appear for an on-the-record interview.
Aul created and submitted falsified Letters of Authorization (LOAs) to his member firm that bore forged customer signatures requesting that the firm transfer funds from the customers’ accounts to the accounts of people unknown to the customers but known to Aul. Aul’s acquaintances transferred the funds to Aul, who used the funds for personal expenses including paying off large gambling debts. Aul converted more than $1.5 million of customer funds. Aul failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
Jensen exercised control over a customer’s account, and made excessive and unsuitable securities transactions in the account in a manner inconsistent with the customer’s objectives, financial situation and needs. Jensen’s trading in the account resulted in losses of $32,000 to the customer and generated gross commissions of $49,000. Jensen’s trading in the account was excessive and unsuitable based on the volume of transactions and the substantial fees associated with such trading.
Clifford Michael Jensen: Fined $10,000; Suspended 3 months in all capacities.
Roberts borrowed $10,000 from a public customer without written approval in accordance with his firm’s written procedures, and engaged in an outside business activity with the expectation of compensation without prompt notice, written or otherwise, to his member firm.
Daniel Joseph Roberts: Fined $10,000; Suspended 100 days in all capacities
Kimbrough borrowed $10,000 from a public customer and the loan document was re-executed in the loan amounts of $10,600 and $7,200. Kimbrough borrowed the funds without his member firms’ written pre-approval. Kimbrough signed a firm annual certification form in which he represented that he understood that borrowing from a customer was prohibited.
Danny Lynn Kimbrough: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months in all capacities
The Firm failed to enforce written supervisory procedures, in that it failed
to maintain separation between its sales and investment banking departments to prevent communication of material, non-public information concerning investment activity to anyone outside the investment banking department without the prior approval of designated managers;
to establish “Grey List” procedures to be implemented when the firm is about to obtain, or has obtained, material, non-public information concerning a security; and
to establish a “Restricted List” procedure designed to prohibit insider trading violations and appearances of impropriety.
The Firm failed to enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent the misuse of material, non-public information by the firm or any person associated with it.
David A. Noyes & Company: Censured; Fined $22,500; Required to revise its supervisory system regarding
the misuse of material, nonpublic information by the firm or any person associated with it;
maintaining separation between its sales and investment banking departments to prevent communication of material, non-public information; and
establishing “Grey List” and “Restricted List” procedures.
Dorn signed customers’ names to insurance-related documents in violation of his firm’s policy prohibiting registered representatives from signing or initialing documents on customers’ behalf, without exception. Some customers had authorized Dorn to sign their names, but others had not. Dorn signed a customer’s name to a letter representing that the customer had removed a wire-transfer machine from his business premises so that an insurance company would renew the customer’s policy, even though Dorn knew that the machine had not been removed and the customer had not authorized Dorn to sign his name on the letter.
Dennis Dean Dorn: Fined $5,000; Suspended 15 months in all capacities
Savage altered a subscription agreement by signing a customer’s initials on the agreement after the customer had failed to initial one section of the agreement. Savage’s firm had both a specific policy prohibiting the alteration of subscription agreements and a more general policy requiring that firm records be truthful and accurate. Savage acknowledged that she was aware of the firm’s policy against alteration of documents and knew it was a violation when she initialed the paperwork on the customer’s behalf.
Diane Jo Savage: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 days in all capacities
Acting through Davenport and other individuals, the Firm
failed to obtain written consent to conduct Web CRD searches pertaining to individuals not seeking registration or assignment with the firm, and
falsely certified that written consent had been obtained fromthe individuals whose CRD records were searched.
The Firm failed to establish and maintain adequate written procedures to supervise the use of Web CRD, and failed to adequately train and supervise all of the employees who were permitted access to Web CRD to ensure that the requisite written consents were obtained prior to conducting all Web CRD searches.
Fifth Third Securities, Inc.: Censured; Fined $20,000 ($5,000 jt/sev with Davenport)
Cynthia Lynn Davenport (Principal): Fined $5,000 jt/sev with Firm; Suspended 2 months in all capacities
Acting through Chachkes, Edelman and others, the Firm sold securities short during the five business days before the pricing of public offerings and then engaged in covering transactions with shares from public offerings in violation of SEC Rule 105: Short selling in connection with a public offering.
The Firm’s supervisory system
failed to provide for adequate and reasonable supervision of the individual representatives’ activities, and its supervisory system and written procedures did not provide for supervision reasonably designed to achieve compliance with and prevent violations of SEC Rule 105.
did not include written supervisory procedures providing for a statement of the steps to be taken by the responsible person in connection with SEC Rule 105 supervision.
The Firm
provided inaccurate information in response to a FINRA inquiry, which was caused by its failure to have in place adequate supervisory procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the firm provided responsive information to regulatory inquiries;
failed to make and preserve books and records, in conformity with SEC and FINRA rules;
order tickets did not reflect the correct price, lacked time stamps or contained inaccurate time stamps; and
failed to preserve brokerage order memoranda for a period of not less than three years, the first two in an accessible place.
First NewYork Securities, L.L.C.: Censured; Fined $170,000; Ordered to disgorge $171,504.44 in unlawful profits; Required to revise its written supervisory procedures to achieve compliance with, and prevent violations of, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Rule 105, and to include the supervisory steps to be taken by the responsible person in connection with SEC Rule 105 supervision.
May misappropriated $437,000 from a trust account for which an individual at his member firm acted as trustee. May transferred the funds to his own bank account by forging transfer requests with the trustee’s signature, without having provided May with authority to sign his name or to effect the transfers.
Acting through Orr, the Firm participated in private placements that were contingent upon receiving a minimum and/or a maximum of investor funds and during the offering periods, the firm failed to transmit investor funds to a bank that had agreed, in writing, to hold such funds in escrow for the investors until the offering contingency was met but, instead, investor funds were held in an account over which Orr had control as escrow agent. As a result of the firm’s control over the funds held in connection with the private placements, it was deemed to be in control of customer funds, which resulted in an increase in its net capital requirement, but the firm was found to be deficient in its net capital while conducting a securities business.
On the firm’s behalf, Orr failed to maintain a Cash/Checks Received and Forwarded Blotter, or an equivalent record to reflect the receipt and/or forwarding of funds as required by SEC Rule 17a-3. The Firm did not have an adequate email retention system and therefore failed to adequately preserve emails as required. The Firm failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to ensure compliance with applicable laws, rules and regulations in connection with the private placements conducted by the firm, and the firm failed to retain a written record of the dates upon which reviews and branch office inspections were conducted.
Blue completed firm financial documents for customers containing their confidential financial information, which he provided to a third party, without the customers’ knowledge, approval or consent, causing his member firm to violate Rule 10 of Regulation S-P. Blue’s member firmwas unaware of his misconduct and failed to update its initial and annual privacy disclosures in violation of Rules 4 and 5 of Regulation S-P.
Gossett made unsuitable investment recommendations to public customers, in that they were inconsistent with each customer’s financial situation, investment objective, circumstances and needs. In verbal and written communications with customers, Gossett made misleading or unwarranted claims about his investment strategy, particularly regarding investment risks, and made predictions or projections of the future performance of the strategy without providing a sound basis for evaluating his assertions. Gossett prepared and distributed to prospective customers sales literature about his investment strategy that failed to include risk disclosures and provided misleading information about past performance; provided incomplete and/or misleading information to customers about the performance of their investments and/or the account balance; and prepared an account statement for a customer in which he did not report all of the customer’s account holdings and thus reported an account balance that was greater than actual.
Gossett exercised discretion in firm customer accounts without the customers’ prior written authorization and his member firm’s prior written acceptance. Gossett enlisted the service of a non-registered individual to solicit investors to open accounts with Gossett, promote Gossett’s investment strategy, assist customers with completing application forms and serve as Gossett’s primary point of contact. As compensation for the services, Gossett agreed to pay the individual half of the commissions he generated from trades in the customers’ accounts.
In addition, Gossett opened a securities brokerage account with another FINRA member without providing written notice to his member firm and without advising the other firm of his association with a member firm; failed to disclose the account to his member firm after he opened the account; and failed to provide written notice to his member firm that he was engaged in an outside business activity. In response to a request for information, Gossett knowingly provided false and misleading information.
Pan completed and submitted to his member firm variable universal life insurance applications for public customers on which he falsified the customers’ states of residence in order to circumvent state registration requirements because Pan was not registered in the states in which the customers resided. Also, Pan provided false financial information on an insurance application in connection with the purchase of a life insurance policy by a corporation he owned in order to obtain approval of the policy.
Jeff Yuejian Pan (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 18 months in all capacities
Guckert promised in an oral agreement to provide a financial service plan to a customer for two years and, instead of complying with the terms of the agreement and forwarding the customer’s funds to his member firm’s corporate office, Guckert endorsed the check and deposited it in an unknown account. Guckert provided some financial planning advice to his customer over a short time period, but resigned from his firm without notifying the customer that he would not be providing further services, and failed to return any of the funds paid by the customer for the agreed-upon services.
The Firm failed to develop and implement a customer identification program. The Firm’s Checks Received and Forwarded Blotter or an equivalent record was inadequate in that the firm failed to record checks received. The Firm failed to develop and maintain a continuing and current education program for its covered registered persons for one year, in that it failed to develop a written training plan outlining the Firm Element program and failed to maintain records documenting the content and completion of the Firm Element by its covered registered persons.
The Firm failed to establish and maintain a system to retain for more than 30 days its electronic communications related to the firm’s business, including emails firm employees sent or received, and failed to retain a record of supervisory review of those electronic communications for production to FINRA upon request.
Callaway allowed a subordinate client associate to complete firm training programs, including FirmElement training, for him by completing the modules and taking the applicable proficiency tests using his User ID and password. Callaway condoned allowing client associates to complete firm training, including Firm Element training, for members of his business unit.
Michael Alvin Callaway: Fined $5,000; Suspended 3 months
Without a bank customer’s authorization or consent, Slusher transferred $4,000 from the customer’s account to an account he had opened in a fictitious customer’s name, then withdrew $300 from that account for his own use and benefit. Slusher also failed to respond to FINRA requests for information.
failed to preserve business-related instant messages its associated persons sent or received; and
failed to establish and maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to achieve compliance with securities laws, regulations and FINRA rules applicable to the preservation of business-related instant messages.
The Firm’s membership agreement with FINRA precluded it from holding customer securities and, without filing an application for approval of a material change in business operations, the firm held customer securities on numerous dates within an eight-month period. The Firm conducted a securities business without maintaining its required net capital and maintained materially inaccurate computations of its excess net capital in its books and records for several months.
Farrar forged his supervisor’s signature on checks made payable to Farrar or to his creditors, and misappropriated $14,739.03 from his supervisor’s business checking account. Farrar refused to provide a signed written statement and supporting documents FINRA requested regarding the circumstances surrounding the termination of his employment by his member firm.
The Firm distributed a mailing referencing private placements offered by the firm that were represented to be exempt from registration pursuant to SEC Rule 506 of Regulation D, which requires compliance with SEC Rule 502 that prohibits general solicitations. Because individuals who received the mailing lacked a pre-existing business relationship with the firm, the mailing was considered a general solicitation in contravention of SEC Rule 502 and therefore, the firm’s transactions did not qualify for an exemption under SEC Rule 506--no other exemption was available and the securities were not registered. Individuals made investments in the offerings and the transactions constituted the sale of unregistered securities. The firm’s supervisory system and its written supervisory procedures addressed private placements but were not reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the registration requirement of Section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933 or the eligibility requirements for Regulation D exemptions. The system and procedures did not provide adequately for the detection and prevention of general solicitations by firm personnel.
Respondents allowed a subordinate client associate to complete the Firm Element training programs for them by completing the modules and taking the applicable proficiency tests using their user IDs and passwords.
Troy Eric Brown: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Larry Michael Cole: Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Jeffrey David Swanson: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 business days in all capacities
Anderson misappropriated money from public customers’ pension plans. This is an interesting scheme, so let me set it out in order and some detail:
For starters:
Anderson’s company was a third-party administrator for a number of pension plans.
And now the fun begins:
Nastiness #1
Anderson received monthly checks from one customer and deposited the funds into his company’s account;
However, Anderson failed to forward the funds to the company in which the customer’s pension plan was invested;
INSTEAD, Anderson used the funds, which totaled to $222,700, for his own benefit.
Nastiness #2
Anderson removed $250,000 from another customer’s pension plan by using signed blank withdrawal/transfer forms to cover up the $222,700 he had misappropriated from his other customer and used the remaining funds for his own benefit;
Following the withdrawal, Anderson created and provided to the second customer falsified statements containing information that would have applied if the $250,000 had not been withdrawn;
Then, Anderson used the remaining blank forms to further withdraw funds totaling $62,288 from the customer’s account for his own benefit;
Because of the falsified statements, Anderson was able to prevent the customer from discovering the misappropriation in excess of $312,000 for about 14 years.
Big Surprise!
In addition, Anderson failed to respond to a FINRA request for information and documents and to appear for an on-the-record interview.
Russell loaned $150,830 to a firm customer, but her member firm had policies prohibiting this activity, and she neither had permission to loan the funds, nor did she make her firm aware of the loans to the customer. Also, Russell engaged in an outside business activity, for compensation, without providing verbal or prompt written notice to her firm.
Yvonne Yuliene Russell: Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 business days in all capacities
Jacobs failed to properly supervise the private securities transactions of registered representatives at his member firm and failed to ensure that the transactions were recorded on the firm’s books and records.
Alan Lawrence Jacobs (Principal): Fined $10,000; Suspended 30 business days in Principal capacities only.
Wacik borrowed $45,000 from a public customer, contrary to his member firm’s policy prohibiting registered representatives from borrowing froma customer, and concealed the loan from his member firm by falsifying a response on an annual compliance questionnaire, and failed to repay $40,000 of the loan. Wacik willfully failed to disclose material information on his FormU4. (FINRA Case #)
Brian Mark Wacik: Ordered to pay $40,842.78, plus interest, in restitution to a public customer; Barred
The Firm failed to comply with the Taping Rule, in that it
provided certain representatives with access to unrecorded telephone lines;
allowed representatives to accept customer orders on unrecorded telephone lines when the representatives were out of the office; and
failed to catalog tape recordings that registered persons had made.
During a later period, the Firm installed a new system that recorded telephone calls to the hard drives of the computers on representatives’ desks, which was not password protected and was backed up by the firm only once a year, and which allowed representatives access to erase recorded telephone calls.
Carlton Capital, Inc.: Censured; Fined $40,000; Required to Comply with the NASD Rule 3010(b)(2) (the Taping Rule) for an additional three years until February 17, 2012 and to Retain an independent consultant to conduct a comprehensive review of the adequacy of its policies, systems and procedures (written and otherwise) and training related to compliance with the Taping Rule, and adopt and implement the consultant’s recommendations
establish, maintain and enforce an adequate supervisory system and written supervisory procedures with respect to the business conducted in a branch office;
establish, maintain and enforce written supervisory procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with the recordkeeping requirements of SEC Rule 17a-4 as it pertains to preserving electronic communications;
develop and implement adequate AML procedures to achieve and monitor its obligations under the Bank Secrecy Act and related U.S. Treasury regulations; and
report customer complaints to FINRA.
Dennis Jordan: Fined $60,000; Barred in Principal capacities only.
and another individual to execute trades in covered securities during a period beginning 30 calendar days prior to and ending five calendar days after publishing research reports concerning the subject companies;
to trade in a manner that was inconsistent with his recommendation, as reflected in the most recent research report the firm published.
The Firm and Marshall provided a subject company with a draft copy of a research report that contained prohibited information before the report was published.
Acting through Marshall, the Firm issued research reports that failed to disclose that Marshall and/or a member of his household had a financial interest in the securities of the subject company and the nature of the financial interest.
The Firm failed to
affirmatively disclose in one research report that an affiliate owned more than one percent of a subject company’s common equity securities, and failed to disclose in research reports the risks that may have impeded achievement of the price target stated in each report;
develop and implement adequate written supervisory procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the firm and its employees complied with the provisions of NASD Rule 2711;
provide an attestation to FINRA for a year that it had adopted and implemented procedures regarding compliance with NASD Rule 2711, and failed to develop and implement any written supervisory procedures concerning watch or restriction lists; and
develop and implement a Firm Element Continuing Education program, specifically, to develop a written training plan for its covered registered persons.
The Firm's research reports did not include clear, comprehensive and prominent disclosures regarding whether it or any of its affiliates, officers or employees held interests in the subject companies’ securities.
First Dallas Securities: Censured and fined $50,000 ($10,000 of which was jointly and severally with Marshall)
Eric Jay Marshall: Fined $10,000 jt/sev with Firm and an additional $5,428.07 (includes $428.07 in disgorged trading profits; Suspended 15 days as a research analyst
While associated with a member firm, Chiappetta loaned $14,222.45 to unrelated public customers in violation of the firm’s written procedures that prohibited its registered representatives from borrowing or lending to customers unless the customer is an immediate family member of the representative.
Gino Nick Chiappetta (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 5 business days in all capacities
permitted Cotto to manage and control its securities business and otherwise engage in activities and functions that required registration with FINRA as a general securities principal, even though he was not registered with FINRA, and while he was suspended by FINRA for six months in any capacity;
failed to respond fully and completely to additional FINRA requests for information; and
willfully filed false or inaccurate amendments to its Uniform Application for Broker-Dealer Registration (Form BD)
Cotto failed to produce certain documents at a FINRA on-the-record interview, and willfully failed to amend his Uniform Application for Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4) to disclose material information.
Tipton engaged in an outside business activity, for compensation, without prompt written notice to his member firm. Also, he loaned $600 to a public customer in breach of his firm’s procedures that prohibited borrowing and lending transactions with customers. Tipton failed to appear for a FINRA on-the-record interview.
Stebbins engaged in his member firm’s investment banking and securities business in capacities requiring registration as a representative and principal, but he was not registered in those capacities. Stebbins engaged in an outside business activity, for compensation, without prior written notice to his member firm. Stebbins had a beneficial interest in securities accounts maintained at other member firms and failed to disclose to the carrying broker-dealers that he was associated with FINRAmembers, and also failed to give his member firms written notification that he had a financial interest in securities accounts with the carrying broker-dealers.
Stebbins knowingly provided false and/or misleading information in response to FINRA requests for information; and failed to respond to FINRA requests to appear for an on-the-record interview and to provide information and documents.
Marshall engaged in a private securities transaction despite his member firm’s denial of authorization because the size of the investment would concentrate too much of a trust’s assets in a single investment. Marshall requested his firm to wire the transaction amount to an outside bank account where it was invested in the hedge fund through Marshall’s partner, knowing it was an unapproved private securities transaction. Marshall failed to provide an accurate and complete response to his firm when asked why the trust was moving funds out of the firm.
John Gilbert Marshall Jr.: Fined $7,500; Suspended 6 months in all capacities
Cagan failed to inform his member firm of securities accounts he maintained at other member firms; and failed to provide written notice of his association with a member firm to the member firms where he maintained accounts.
Laird Quincy Cagan (Principal): Fined $5,000; Suspended 10 business days in all capacities
Without permission or authorization from his member firm, he paid $29,000 to public customers in an attempt to prevent them from filing a complaint against him with his firm.
Lance Jeffrey Ziesemer (Registered Supervisor): Fined $5,000; Suspended 20 business days in all capacities
Contrary to the instructions given her, Langlois left the testing center during the course of the Series 66 examination, reviewed written notes that contained material relevant to the examination, returned to the testing center and completed the examination.
Madeline Marie Langlois: Fined $5,000; Suspended 2 years in all capacities; Required to retake and pass the Series 66 prior to resuming registered activity
This matter was remanded from the SEC to redetermine the sanctions that should be imposed on Richard F. Kresge ("Kresge"), formerly the president of Yankee Financial Group, Inc. ("Yankee Financial" or "the Firm"), for supervision, reporting, and registration violations. Kresge's violations occurred during a period when new representatives of the Firm engaged in fraudulent sales practices and unsuitable recommendations that caused substantial harm to customers.
NASD barred Kresge in all capacities, ordered restitution to the customers at issue in the amount of $3,866,426, plus interest, and assessed costs of $9,519.61. NASD stated, “[W]e aggregate respondents’ misconduct for purposes of imposing sanctions because such misconduct emanated from a single, underlying problem: respondents’ addition of, and failure to monitor, the Brooklyn office.”
The SEC sustained NASD’s findings that Kresge violated Conduct Rules 2110, 3010, and 3070(c) and Membership and Registration Rules 1021(a), 1031(a), IM-1000-1, and IM-1000-3. However, the SEC set aside NASD’s findings that Kresge was liable for violations by certain registered representatives of Yankee Financial of Exchange Act Section 10(b), Exchange Act Rule 10b-5, and Conduct Rules 2120, 2310, and IM-2310-2. The SEC set aside FINRA's earlier findings that Kresge had secondary liability for such fraudulent and unsuitable recommendations. Accordingly, the SEC remanded this proceeding to NASD for a redetermination of the sanctions to be imposed upon Kresge.
Kresge failed to
establish or maintain a system of supervision reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws;
register an individual, either as a principal or a representative, who was actively engaged in the management of the firm’s securities business as either a principal or representative of his member firm; and
report customer complaints to FINRA.
The NAC considered Kresge’s violations as a whole and imposed the sanction of a bar in response to the totality of the misconduct. The NAC weighed each violation, in addition to Kresge’s “highly troubling” disciplinary history, and found a bar necessary “to protect investors.”
Without his member firm’s knowledge or consent, Mispel borrowed $20,000 from a public customer in contravention of his firm’s procedures prohibiting the borrowing and lending money between a registered person and the firm’s customers.
Shane David Mispel: Fined $5,000; Suspended 30 days in all capacities
Harris falsified an annuity distribution request form by cutting signatures from another document and taping them to the form, then transmitting or causing it ot be transmitted to the insurance company for payment. Harris forged a customer’s initials without his knowledge, authorization or consent on a Subscription Agreement that the customer had previously signed, and then submitted it to the issuer. Harris failed to respond to FINRA requests for information and to appear for an on-the-record interview.
Before my second career as a lawyer, I was the third generation of my family in the wine and liquor industry. In 1981, I started law school; and in 1982, I was hired as a law student in Smith Barney, Harris & Upham's Legal Department. After I graduated law school, I was a regulatory lawyer with the American Stock Exchange and then with the NASD (now... Read On