FINRA disciplinary action

Naming Names: FINRA's December 2013 Disciplinary Action Report

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Every month and again on a quarterly basis, the agency that regulates the financial industry, FINRA, produces a report that runs down all disciplinary actions taken against brokerage firms and brokers. This long list of alleged wrongdoing and misconduct reads a lot like a police blotter. We strongly encourage any investor who suspects their broker and/or broker-dealer of having lost them money on dubious terms to at least skim this report to see if you recognize any names. For our part, we like to pick out some of the highlights from each report. Specifically, we’re looking for schemes or abuses that might be more far-reaching than the individual cases brought through the FINRA arbitration process. In other words, we name names here because we hope to raise awareness out there about certain brokers and products that might otherwise go unnoticed except for the case appearing in the report. So, without further ado, here goes:

 

Virginia-based broker Ramnik Singh Aulakh of Success Trade Securities, Inc. was censured and barred by FINRA for failure to respond to requests for information regarding his allegedly participating in a huge $18 million fraud involving the offering of promissory notes.

Read more here.

 

Georgia-based broker James Arnold Busch of Wells Fargo Financial Advisors, LLC was barred from FINRA for allegedly using elderly customers’ bank accounts to misappropriate around $1.3 million. According to FINRA, in some cases Mr. Busch also allegedly liquidated securities from his clients brokerage accounts in order to use the funds himself.

Read more here.

 

Mary Alice Faher, of WR Rice Financial Services, was fined and suspended from FINRA for allegedly recommending and effecting purchases of unsuitable investments for customers who were retired or of limited financial means, including membership interests, diversified land contracts, and limited partnerships. These investments allegedly exposed her clients to high levels of risk and illiquidity.

Read more here.

 

Broker Francis Melvin Johnson of Newport Coast Securities was barred from FINRA for allegedly borrowing more than $1 million from the family trust of one of his clients.

Read more here.

 

Martin John Maloney, a broker at Metflife Securities, was barred from FINRA for allegedly diverting a customer’s funds into his own pocket when he represented that the money was going into an indoor golf and driving range.

Read more here.

 

Christopher Ryan Reber Orlando (that’s a mouthful) of PlanMember Securities Corporation was fined and suspended from FINRA for two years for allegedly handling private securities transactions to the tune of $7 million that were executed outside his firm. Big no-no.

Read more here.

 

Dallas-based broker Bryan Mark Rigg of WFG Investments, Inc. was censured and suspended by FINRA for allegedly participating in private securities transactions without approval from his brokerage, including $500,000 worth of the company’s preferred stock.

Read more here.

 

Broker Lawrence Spaulding Rule of Wells Fargo Advisors (Wachovia) was suspended from FINRA for allegedly getting up to some excessive unsuitable trading of customer, including trades totaling over $2.3 million.

Read more here.

 

Los-Angeles-based broker Scott Donovan Schroeder of Milkie Ferguson Investments, Inc. was barred from FINRA for allegedly making unsuitable investment recommendations to elderly customers, including high-risk life settlement contracts and private placements.

Read more here.

 

Daniel Edmund Walsh of Securities America, Inc. was suspended from FINRA for allegedly selling almost $5 million worth of equity indexed annuities (EIAs) to customers outside the scope of his employment and without notifying his brokerage.

Read more here.

 

Naming Names: FINRA's October 2013 Disciplinary Action Report

Every month and again on a quarterly basis, the agency that regulates the financial industry, FINRA, produces a report that runs down all disciplinary actions taken against brokerage firms and brokers. This long list of alleged wrongdoing and misconduct reads a lot like a police blotter. We strongly encourage any investor who suspects their broker or broker-dealer of having lost them money on dubious terms to at least skim this report to see if you recognize any names.

For our part, we like to pick out some highlights from each report. Specifically, we’re looking for schemes or abuses that might be more far-reaching than the individual cases brought through FINRA. In other words, we name names here because we hope to raise awareness out there among investors about certain brokers and products that might otherwise go unnoticed. Without further ado, here you go:

Creative Commons, Wikipedia

Creative Commons, Wikipedia

James Robinson, President and CCO of Vermont-based broker-dealer Middlebury Securities, LLC, got himself fined handsomely and suspended from FINRA for allegedly misusing, through a registered representative, $200,000 in escrowed customers’ funds during a private offering that raised more than $5 million. Middlebury Securities was also censured and fined $325,000 for allegedly failing to supervise transactions and accounting related to this private offering deal.

Read more here.

MML Investor Services, LLC, based in Springfield, Massachusetts, was censured, fined, and ordered to pay almost $800,000 for allegedly failing to supervise its registered representatives (brokers) “in connection with their unapproved sale of certain private securities.” As a result of this failure to supervise its brokers, many of MML’s investors were allegedly sold unauthorized promissory notes from an issuer, ICI, who turned out to be running a multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme.

Read more here.

Gregory Jerome Ptasienski Osborn, a broker with Middlebury Securities and based in Ridgewood, NJ, is the subject of a complaint alleging that he “willfully made fraudulent misrepresentations and omissions of material facts in connection with the sale of securities in private offerings, conducted on behalf of issuers, and raised approximately $5.09 million from investors through the sale of the issuers’ offerings.” Osborn also allegedly received around $100,000 in commissions related to the offerings.

Read more here.

Michael Eugene French, a broker formerly with Wells Fargo Advisors, was fined $25,000 and suspended from FINRA for allegedly recommending and trading non-traditional ETFs in an elderly couple’s accounts who were relying on their portfolio to provide for their retirement.

Read more here.

Karen Yvonne Geiger of broker-dealer Wall Street Strategies, Incorporated was fined and suspended from FINRA for 30 days for recommending and selling more than $200,000 in illiquid and high-risk investments to an elderly couple who had no business holding these products.

Read more here.

Jeffrey Griffin, Jr. of Jersey-based National Securities Corporation was barred from FINRA for allegedly having created his own limited liability company, Tricep Trading, then used it to solicit investors’ money so he could day-trade ETFs.

Read more here.

Anthony Manaia of brokerage firm, Intervest International Equities Corporation, was fined more than $50,000 and suspended from FINRA for allegedly making “negligent misrepresentations and omissions of material fact in a cover letter and in email communications to customers in connection with investments in private placements.” His customers’ investments in the private placement, known as MedCap VI (issued by Medical Capital Holdings, Inc.), totalled around $1.35 million.

Read more here.

There’s plenty more where that came from. If you’d like to read the entire FINRA Disciplinary Action Report, click here.

 

If you or anyone you know has been the victim of broker misconduct or investment fraud, please contact us immediately at 1-855-462-3330 for a free consultation or use our contact form to the right.