Penny Stock 101
In November and December 1997, when Patterson Travis, Inc.
("the Firm") was making a market in the penny-stock Turner
Group, Inc. ("TG"), Michael
A. Rooms, who was a general securities principal and representative
with the Firm, sold 2,425 shares of the stock to customers. Although
Securities Exchange Act Rule 15g-1(e) exempts "transactions
that are not recommended" from penny stock disclosure
requirements, Rooms
recommended (and sold) TG stock to at least three customers (Heasley,
Contursi, and Debski). In violation
of the Penny Stock Rules and NASD Conduct Rule 2110, these
customers were not furnished with a risk disclosure document, nor
were they told the amount of Rooms’ compensation (this allegation
is unchallenged by Rooms).
NASD 8210 Requests
Following an NASD examination of the Firm in April 1998, NASD
sent David Travis, the
Firm's owner and president, several requests for information
pursuant to Procedural Rule 8210.
1. The initial May
26, 1998 request, asked, among other things, whether the
Firm's TG transactions during the period November 1997 to February
1998 had been recommended to customers and, if not, that
documentation be provided substantiating that claim.
Travis replied on June
30, stating that all of the Firm's TG transactions were
exempt from the penny stock rules because, among other things, the
transactions had not been
solicited. He supplied some customer letters to that effect, and
stated that a few such letters were missing, and that he was
trying to locate them.
2. On August 11, 1998, in response to a second NASD
request, Travis supplied additional non-solicitation letters.
3. On May 28, 1999,
NASD sent Travis a third request for information. NASD's
letter noted that Travis had provided non-solicitation letters for
only some of the accounts in question, and requested documentation
in support of the exemption claimed for each of the accounts on
NASD's attached schedule. The letter warned that a failure to
respond completely could result in the imposition of
sanctions.
In June 1999, after
receiving this letter, Travis asked Rooms to get signed
non-solicitation forms from every customer who did not have
one in his file. Rooms then contacted the three customers noted
above.
Rooms' Contacts Clients
Rooms called Heasley
and told him that TG (whose stock had done poorly) had misled the
Firm, and that, if Heasley would sign a document that Rooms was
sending him and send it back within two days, Heasley
would be compensated with stock worth the same amount as the amount
he had invested in TG. The document that Rooms sent to
Heasley, entitled "Affirmation
of Non-Solicitation," noted Heasley's purchase of TG and
the date of that purchase, November 21, 1997. Below that notation
was a printed statement reciting that Heasley's purchase of TG had
not been "solicited in any way, nor made on the basis of any
recommendation or information from [the Firm], its research
department, or any of its employees." Next to the signature
line on this form, Rooms had entered the same date that appeared
above, the date of Heasley's purchase of TG. Heasley wanted the
stock that Rooms offered but was very uncomfortable signing a backdated
form. Before sending the signed form back to Rooms, he added
the date he actually signed it (June 25, 1999) both underneath his
signature and next to the date that Rooms had entered on the
signature line. However, when
Rooms received the signed form from Heasley, he admittedly removed
the 1999 dates before turning the form over to Travis.
Rooms told Contursi
that he knew that the price of TG had dropped, that TG had given the
Firm inaccurate information, and that customers who had purchased TG
were being compensated with
additional stock. However, in order to get the additional
stock, Contursi would have to sign the non-solicitation form that
Rooms was sending him. After Contursi received the form, he noticed
that it was backdated to
the date of his TG purchase. He decided not to sign the document
because his purchase of TG had been solicited, and he would not sign
anything that was untrue.
Rooms told Debski
that, prior to Rooms' sale of TG, somebody connected with that
company had given a presentation to the Firm that painted a rosier
picture of TG's prospects than turned out to be the case. Rooms
stated that Debski would be
given enough additional shares of stock roughly to equal the
price he had paid for TG, but that, in return for that stock, he
would have to sign a
document stating that his purchase of TG had not been
solicited. Debski told Rooms not to send him the document because it
was untrue, and Rooms did not send it. |
PENNY
STOCK RULES
The
Securities Exchange Act Rules 15g-1 thorugh 15g-9 essentially
describe a "penny stock" as a speculative security that
trades below $5 on the OTC Bulletin Board or the Pink Sheets (not
the New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ). Before a broker-dealer
can sell a penny stock, SEC rules require the firm to
- approve
the customer for the transaction;
- receive
from the customer a written agreement to the transaction;.
- furnish
the customer a document describing the risks of investing in
penny stocks;
- tell
the customer the current market quotation, if any, for the penny
stock and the compensation the firm and its broker will receive
for the trade.
Additionally,
the BD must send monthly account statements showing the market value
of each penny stock held in the customer’s account.
NASD
Business Conduct Rule 2110
Standards of Commercial Honor and Principles of Trade
A
member, in the conduct of his business, shall observe high
standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of
trade.
NASD
Procedural Rule 8210.
Provision of Information and Testimony and Inspection and Copying of
Books
(a)
Authority of Adjudicator and Association Staff : For the
purpose of an investigation, complaint, examination, or proceeding
authorized by the NASD By-Laws or the Rules of the Association, an
Adjudicator or Association staff shall have the right to:
(1) require a member, person associated with a member, or person
subject to the Association's jurisdiction to provide information
orally, in writing, or electronically. . . and to testify at a
location specified by Association staff, under oath or affirmation
administered by a court reporter or a notary public if requested,
with respect to any matter involved in the investigation,
complaint, examination, or proceeding; and
(2) inspect and copy the books, records, and accounts of such
member or person with respect to any matter involved in the
investigation, complaint, examination, or proceeding. . .
.
. .
(c)
Requirement to Comply: No member or person shall fail to
provide information or testimony or to permit an inspection and
copying of books, records, or accounts pursuant to this Rule. . .
.
(d)
Notice: A notice under this Rule shall be deemed received
by the member or person to whom it is directed by mailing or
otherwise transmitting the notice to the last known business
address of the member or the last known residential address of the
person as reflected in the Central Registration Depository. . . .
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NASD Imposes a Bar
Following a hearing, the NASD found that Rooms violated
- the Penny Stock Rules and
NASD Conduct Rule 2110 by failing to provide customers with required
information and disclosures in connection with his sales of a
penny stock, Turner Group, Inc. ("TG"); and
- NASD Procedural Rule 8210
and Conduct Rule 2110 by attempting to obstruct an NASD
examination with respect to the Firm's sales of TG.
NASD imposed a Bar on
Rooms for the obstruction violation and stated that, in light of the bar,
it need not determine the suspension it would otherwise have imposed for
the penny stock violations. The Firm was expelled from membership, but did
not appeal to the SEC. Travis was barred and fined $50,000, but did
not appeal to the SEC.
Rooms appeals those findings and sanctions to the SEC.
Rooms' Appeal
Rooms Contends NASD Admitted Improper Hearsay
Evidence:
Public Customers Contursi
and Debski did not testify at the hearing. Instead, their written
declarations were introduced into evidence. Rooms objects to
this as hearsay evidence. |
HOWEVER:
Contursi's and Debski's declarations were sworn
and no evidence suggested that the customers in question were biased
against Rooms; and their statements are mutually
corroborative and consistent with the testimony of public customer
Heasley, who testified at the hearing. |
The SEC Has No Problem:
The SEC found the two declarations reliable and probative. |
Rooms Contends He Did Not Know About the NASD
Examination:
He was unaware of any NASD examination. He thought he was
simply assisting Travis in correcting the Firm's records. At
the time he contacted customers seeking their signatures on
non-solicitation forms, he did not know that the forms would be
turned over to NASD. |
HOWEVER:
Rooms admitted in his Answer to the NASD's Complaint
that when
Travis instructed him to obtain non-solicitation letters from his
customers, Travis told Rooms that NASD staff had requested this
information. His answer also admitted that he gave the signed
customer forms to Travis for submission to NASD staff.
Notwithstanding, Rooms argued that the admissions in his Answer
should be given "minimal weight" by the SEC since he could
not afford counsel at the time and the Answer was drafted by Travis'
attorney. |
The SEC Begs To Differ:
The SEC gave weight to Rooms' admissions in his Answer, but said
that for argument's sake, even if they didn't give those statements
due consideration, the admissions were repeated and amplified in
Rooms' testimony at the NASD hearing. Pointedly, Rooms testified
that Travis told him that NASD was seeking the non-solicitation
letters, and that was why Rooms was attempting to obtain them from
his customers. Rooms also stated, "I'm sure I was aware there
was an NASD examination going on in the Firm, and that's what (the
non-solicitation letters) were being requested for." Rooms'
claim that his testimony was based on what he learned subsequent to
the period in question was contradicted by his own words at the
hearing. |
Rooms Contends He Did Not Violate NASD Rule 8210:
Rooms argued that the NASD never invoked NASD Rule 8210 with respect to
him personally. |
HOWEVER:
Rule 8210 gives NASD staff the right to require persons associated
with member firms to supply information in connection with an NASD
examination. Nonetheless, such a request was only first sent to Rooms personally in December 1999, several months after the
period in question. It
is undisputed that, during the relevant period, Rooms never received any
such notice. No request for information pursuant to Rule 8210 was ever
directed to Rooms during that time. NASD's requests were directed to
Travis, not Rooms. |
The SEC Isn't So Sure:
On its face, the language of Rule 8210 appears to limit
its scope to obtaining information from, and ensuring compliance by, those
persons and firms to whom such requests are directed. Liability under
the rule may possibly extend to associated persons of a firm who are aware
of an 8210 request directed to the firm and seek to falsify or impede the
firm's response. Here, however, the record does not establish
that, during
the relevant period, Rooms was aware of the 8210 requests directed to
Travis. Under the circumstances, the SEC was unable to conclude that Rooms
violated Rule 8210 and would not sustain that portion of the NASD's
decision. |
Rooms Contends He Did Not Violate NASD Rule 2110:
Rooms describes his conduct as nothing more than the procurement of documents
for his employer, and states that he was merely an unwitting pawn in
Travis' scheme to deceive NASD. He argues that a finding that he violated Rule 2110
would constitute a denial of due process since that rule did not give him
fair notice that the conduct in which he engaged was prohibited. |
HOWEVER:
The SEC viewed the evidence as showing that, with knowledge of NASD's pending
examination, and aware that the form letters he was seeking to obtain from
customers would be turned over to NASD, Rooms deliberately sought to
deceive NASD with respect to his prior sales of TG. He offered bribes to
his customers in an effort to get them to sign false non-solicitation
forms, and backdated the forms to make it appear that they had been signed
at the time of his sales. When one customer entered the actual date of
signing on his form, Rooms deleted it. Finally, Rooms' brief on appeal,
states, "If . . . [I had been] . . . made aware of [NASD's]
investigation . . . and thereafter acted intentionally to falsify
documents to obstruct that investigation, [I] would undoubtedly have [had]
reasonable notice that [my] conduct was prohibited." In fact, Rooms
was aware of NASD's examination and sought to obstruct it. |
The SEC Gets Blunt:
Due process requires that
"laws give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable
opportunity to know what is prohibited." Rooms could hardly have
been unaware that the deliberate deception he sought to practice on NASD
did not comport with high standards of commercial honor and just and
equitable principles of trade. The rule "has long obligated NASD members
to cooperate with [NASD] in its effort to perform its regulatory
functions." The SEC sustained NASD's finding that he violated Conduct Rule 2110. |
Rooms Contends the NASD's Bar is Excessive:
In arguing for a more lenient sanction, Rooms notes that
- during his 13 years in the securities business, he has no prior
disciplinary record and has had no customer complaints;
- he acted without scienter;
- when he did receive an NASD request for information after the period
at issue, he responded fully and
truthfully; and
- his sanction is inconsistent with others imposed in more egregious
circumstances, and that he is being held accountable for Travis'
misconduct.
|
HOWEVER:
The SEC concluded that Rooms was not being disciplined for anyone's
conduct but his own. His claim that he was an "unwitting pawn"
who did not understand the wrongfulness of his conduct was rejected
outright. Pointedly, the SEC ruled that Rooms sought to conceal his penny
stock violations by supplying NASD with false information. |
The SEC Says He Got What Was Coming to Him:
Restating its long-held views that self-regulation requires
cooperation of members and associated persons, the SEC admonished Rooms
that his actions subverted the NASD's regulatory processes. Pointedly, the
SEC warned that his conduct was worse than merely refusing to respond
because he mislead the NASD. Moreover, the SEC agreed with the NASD that
Rooms' subsequent truthful testimony provided him with little credit
because it was essentially "capitulation after NASD staff learned of
the misconduct from customer statements."
Notwithstanding that the SEC did not sustain the NASD's finding that
Rooms violated Procedural Rule 8210, the remaining misconduct (described
as "deliberate deception") was deemed sufficiently serious to
warrant a Bar, and such was sustained. |
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