Enforcement Actions
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)
CASES OF NOTE
2011
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.
December 2011 - View all for this month
Internet Securities and Michael Wayne Beardsley (Principal)
AWC/2009020930302
AWC/2009020930302
Beardsley was a registered
representative’s direct supervisor who was responsible for reviewing
and approving the
representative’s securities transactions, but failed to exercise
reasonable supervision over
the representative’s recommendations of exchange-traded funds
(ETFs) in customers’
accounts, thereby allowing the representative to conduct numerous
unsuitable
transactions.
As the firm’s chief
compliance officer (CCO), Beardsley
was responsible for ensuring that the firm filed all necessary
Uniform Applications for
Securities Industry Registration or Transfer (Forms U4), Uniform
Termination Notices for
Securities Industry Registration (Forms U5) and Rule 3070 reports.
The Firm and Beardsley failed to timely amend Beardsley’s
Form U4 to disclose the
settlement of an arbitration against him, the firm and the
registered representative; the
firm failed to timely amend a registered representative’s Form U5
to disclose settlement of
the arbitration; and the firm and Beardsley failed to timely
report the settlement to FINRA’s
3070 system.
The Firm and
Beardsley failed to establish and
maintain a supervisory system reasonably designed to achieve
compliance with applicable
securities laws, regulations and FINRA rules as they pertain to
private placements. The
firm and Beardsley failed to conduct investigations of offerings
for suitability but relied
on information the registered representative who proposed selling
the offering provided;
never reviewed issuers’ financials, nor attempted to obtain
information about the issuers
from any third parties; failed to maintain documentation of their
investigations; allowed
a registered representative to draft selling agreements with
offerings which allowed the
issuer to make direct payment to an entity the representative, not
the firm, owned,; failed
to implement supervisory procedures to ensure compliance with SEC
Exchange Act Rule
15c2-4(b); and failed to implement supervisory procedures to
prevent general solicitation of
investments in connection with offerings made pursuant to
Regulation D.
The Firm’s written procedures required Beardsley
to obtain and review, on
at least an annual basis, a written statement from each registered
representative about his
or her outside business activities; despite the fact that several
registered representatives
were actively engaged in outside business activities, Beardsley
failed to obtain any such
written statements.
For almost a three-year
period, Beardsley did not
request any duplicate statements of outside securities accounts
firm employees held; he
neither requested nor obtained any written notifications from firm
employees concerning
their actual or anticipated outside securities activities. In
addition, the Firm and Beardsley failed to implement an adequate system of
supervisory control
policies and procedures regarding testing supervisory procedures
for compliance, erroneous
criteria for identifying and supervising producing managers, including
Beardsley, review
and monitoring transmittal of funds or securities, customer
changes of address, customer
changes of investment objectives, and concomitant documentation
for its limited size and
resources exception in FINRA Rule 3012. Moreover,he firm and Beardsley completed an annual certification in which Beardsley certified
that he had reviewed a
report evidencing the firm’s processes for establishing,
maintaining and reviewing policies
and procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with
applicable FINRA rules,
Municipal Securities and Rulemaking Board (MSRB) rules and federal
securities laws
and regulations; modifying such policies and procedures as
business, regulatory and
legislative changes and events dictate; and testing the
effectiveness of such policies and
procedures on a periodic basis, the timing and extent of which is
reasonably designed to
ensure continuing compliance with FINRA rules, MSRB rules and
federal securities laws and
regulations. In fact, the report did not evidence any processes
for testing the effectiveness
of such policies, and no such testing was done.
Furthermore, on the firm’s behalf, Beardsley executed an engagement
letter committing the firm to serve as a placement agent for an
issuer of limited
partnership units. The letter, which a registered representative
of the firm drafted, falsely
represented that the firm was not a registered broker-dealer.
The Firm and Beardsley failed to enforce the firm’s Customer
Identification Program (CIP) in
that they completely failed to verify four customers’ identities.
The Firm and Beardsley failed to conduct a test of the firm’s
anti-money laundering
(AML) compliance program for a calendar year. FINRA found that the
firm conducted a
securities business while failing to maintain its required minimum
net capital.
Internet Securities: Censured; Fined $12,500; Required to retain an outside consultant to review and prepare a report concerning the adequacy of the firm’s supervisory, and compliance policies and procedures, and supervisory controls; the report shall make specific recommendations addressing any inadequacies the consultant identifies, and the firm shall act on those recommendations. FINRA imposed a lower fine after it considered the firm’s size, including, among other things, the firm’s revenues and financial resources.
Michael Beardsley: No fine in light of financial status: Suspended 1 year in Principal capacity only
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