The
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) issues a report on
disciplinary and other actions involving registered brokers, investment
advisers and brokerage firms every month.
Here
are significant Florida related actions for January 2013. Follow
this link to the FINRA
website for all of the January 2013 disciplinary actions as well as prior periods.
B & T Securities, Inc. - Boca Raton, FL and Brent Daryl Obergfell Registered
Principal, Boca Raton, FL submitted
a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent in which the
firm was censured, fined $20,000, of which $10,000 was jointly and severally with Obergfell, and
required to discontinue any use of “B&T Asset Management,” and submit for review to
FINRA’s Department of Advertising Regulation any websites made available to the public or any
customer. Obergfell was suspended from association with any FINRA® member in any principal
capacity for five business
days.
The firm and Obergfell consented to the described
sanctions and to the entry of findings that the firm posted a website that made numerous misleading
and unsubstantiated claims
or characterizations, and did not comply with Securities Investor
Protection Corporation (SIPC) rules. The findings stated that when trading losses started to mount
and the trading strategy the firm employed started changing in
response to changed markets,
other statements posted to the website became misleading. The firm’s website failed to provide
a basis for the trading model and “Investment Style and Practice” descriptions. The logo
on the website’s
first page and elsewhere on the website characterized the firm as an
asset management firm and claimed it had a unique market focus without providing a basis for those
characterizations. The findings also stated that the firm’s
written supervisory
procedures (WSPs) addressing communications with the public did not address continued (or periodic)
review of advertising (whether through websites or otherwise) to ensure the material remained
accurate. The
WSPs did not assign anyone responsible for writing, approving or updating the
WSPs applicable to advertising (including websites), and failed to designate
anyone with
responsibility for supervising the chief compliance officer (CCO).
The suspension was in effect
from January 7, 2013, through January 11, 2013.
EFG Capital International - Miami,
Florida was censured and fined $40,000. The firm consented to the described sanctions and to the
entry of findings that it failed to report to TRACE S1 transactions in TRACE-eligible securities
within 15 minutes of the execution time. The findings stated that the firm failed to report to TRACE
P1 transactions in TRACE-eligible securities within T+1 of the execution time.
The findings
also stated that the firm failed to report the correct market identifier to TRACE for some S1 and P1
transactions, and over-reported some S1 transactions in TRACEeligible securities. The findings also
included that the firm failed to report to TRACE the correct contra-party’s identifier for
transactions in TRACE-eligible securities.
Tradewire Securities LLC -Miami,
Florida- the firm was censured, fined $27,500 and required to revise its WSPs regarding TRACE
reporting. The firm consented to the described sanctions and to the entry of findings that it
failed, within 90 seconds after execution, to transmit to the FNTRF last sale reports of
transactions in designated securities and incorrectly designated as “.SLD” to the FNTRF
last sale reports of transactions in designated securities within 90 seconds of execution. The
findings stated that the firm double-reported to TRACE transactions in TRACE-eligible securities and
reported transactions in TRACE-eligible securities it was not required to report. The findings also
stated that the firm failed to report to TRACE S1 transactions in TRACE-eligible securities within
15 minutes of the execution time, and failed to report to TRACE the correct
capacity
in TRACE-eligible corporate securities transactions. The findings also
included that the firm’s supervisory system did not provide for
supervision reasonably designed to
achieve compliance with applicable securities laws,
regulations and FINRA rules concerning TRACE reporting.
(
John Boyd Dexter -North
Miami, Florida) was barred from association with any FINRA member in any capacity. Dexter
consented to the described sanction and to the entry of findings that he failed to appear for
testimony as FINRA requested in connection with an investigation that FINRA had initiated concerning
alleged suspicious activity at a member firm’s branch, where Dexter was employed as branch
office manager. The findings stated that in a telephone conversation with FINRA, Dexter stated that
he would not provide testimony or cooperate with the investigation because he was no longer employed
in the securities industry.
According to FINRA records, Boyd last worked for Murphy &
Durieu brokerage firm.
Alison Marie Janke - Port Richey, Florida was fined
$11,600, which includes the disgorgement of financial benefit received of $6,600, and suspended from
association with any FINRA member in any capacity for three months. Janke consented to the described
sanctions and to the entry of findings that she participated in a private securities transaction
without providing prior written notice to her member firm. Janke referred a customer who was seeking
alternative investments to a registered representative at a different firm, where the customer
invested $200,000 in a real estate investment trust (REIT) through the other
registered
representative. Janke not only referred the customer to another representative, but also attended
the meeting with the customer and the other representative, and
assisted with the completion of
the purchase transaction. The findings stated that a limited liability company Janke owned received
a $6,600 payment in connection with the sale of
the REIT.
According to FINRA records
Janke works for Summit Brokerage Services. Prior to that she was employed by Wells Fargo
Advisors.
The suspension is in effect from December 3, 2012, through March 2, 2013.
William Earl Manley -Sarasota, Florida was barred from
association
with any FINRA member in any capacity. Manley consented to the
described sanction and to the entry of findings that he failed to respond to a FINRA request for
information regarding his arrest, felony charge and termination from his member firm. The findings
stated that Manley advised FINRA he would not respond to a request for information.
According to FINRA records, Manley is not currently registered and he last worked for PRUCO
Securities in Sarasota, FL.
James DeFranco Marshall - Longwood, Florida was
fined $5,000 and suspended
from association with any FINRA member in any capacity for 30 days.
Marshall consented to the described sanctions and to the entry of
findings that he became involved with an entity engaged in non-securities, non-investment related
business. Marshall was identified in public documents as one of the entity’s three
managers/members. Marshall also created and maintained the company’s website.
Marshall received $4,835.47 in compensation for his outside business activity. The findings stated
that Marshall failed to provide his member firm with prior written notice of this
outside
business activity.
The suspension was in effect from December 3, 2012, through January 1,
2013.
Charles Tuttle Mason aka Chip Mason St. Pete
Beach, Florida and
Darren Duane Gibson Oceanside, California were each fined $5,000 and suspended from
association with any FINRA member in any capacity for
three months. Mason and Gibson consented
to the described sanctions and to the entry of findings that while employed as wholesalers at their
member firm, they were responsible for promoting a non-registered entity’s offerings to retail
broker-dealers, through sales presentations and providing marketing materials to registered
representatives. The findings stated that Gibson, through his wholesaling efforts related to the
entity’s offerings, secured selling agreements from retail broker-dealers, who in turn raised
more than $300 million from investors and earned $2,930,000. The findings also
stated that Mason, through his wholesaling efforts related to the
entity’s offerings, secured selling agreements from broker-dealers, who
in turn raised more than $132 million
from investors and earned approximately $1,500,000. The
findings also included that Mason and Gibson assisted the retail broker-dealers with product
training by providing
sales and marketing materials designed to encourage individual investors
to purchase the offerings. Mason and Gibson read most of the third-party due diligence reports
regarding the offerings. Several of the reports raised concerns about the accounting of
inter-offering transactions and the ability of the offerings to generate sufficient revenue from oil
and gas investments. Mason and Gibson, though aware of the concerns raised in the due diligence
reports, continued to market the offerings without having adequately investigated the subject
concerns and determining for themselves whether the offerings were appropriate to be recommended to
investors.
Mason’s suspension is in effect from November 19, 2012, through February
18, 2013. Gibson’s suspension is in effect from November 19, 2012, through February 18,
2013.
According to FINRA records Mason is not currently registered and last worked
Newport Coast Securities.
Steven Jay Oshinsky - Boca Raton, Florida was suspended
from association with any FINRA member in any capacity for one year. Without admitting or denying
the allegations,
Oshinsky consented to the described sanction and to the entry of findings that
he failed to timely respond to FINRA requests for documents and information to investigate his
potential failure to disclose tax liens and outside business activities on his Form U4. The
findings stated that Oshinsky’s failure to timely respond impeded FINRA’s
investigation.
The suspension is in effect from December 17, 2012, through December 16, 2013.
According to FINRA records he is not registered and last worked for Catalyst Financial.
Clayton George Roach -Jacksonville, Florida was fined $5,000 and suspended from association
with any FINRA member in any capacity for six months.
Roach consented to the described
sanctions and to the entry of findings that he participated in the sale of private placements by
promoting an offshore investment club,
referring investors, acting as an officer and registered
agent for the offshore investment clubs’ Florida-based affiliate, facilitating other
people’s investment in the offshore
investment club and receiving no less than $64,000 in
compensation from the offshore investment club. Roach did not receive any direct compensation based
on the referrals, but he received a monthly stipend for other activities on the offshore investment
club’s behalf.
The findings stated that Roach participated in private placement
securities transactions without providing the requisite notice to his firm. The suspension is in
effect from December 3, 2012, through June 2, 2013.
According to FINRA records he last
worked for Equity Sevices Inc. and is not currently registered.
Michael Lee Trier
(CRD #1628954, Registered Representative, Oviedo, Florida was fined $2,500 and suspended from
association with any FINRA member in any capacity for 30 business days. Trier engaged in
private securities transactions without providing his member firm with the required written notice
describing the proposed sales.
The suspension was in effect from November 19, 2012, through
January 3, 2013.
Ronald E. Walblay Delray Beach, Florida was barred
from
association with any FINRA member in any capacity. The sanction was based on findings that Walblay
failed to appear in response to FINRA requests for on-the-record
testimony.
The decision
has been appealed to the NAC and the sanction is not in effect pending review.
According to
FINRA records Walblay last worked for Energy Securities and is not currently registered.
Kenneth Andrew Mauchin -Sanford, Florida was
named a respondent in a FINRA
complaint alleging that he misappropriated $23,750 from elderly customers’ accounts by
converting their funds to cashier’s checks and depositing
those checks into a bank
account of an entity he controlled. The complaint alleges that Mauchin did so without the
customers’ knowledge or authorization. The complaint also
alleges that Mauchin prepared a
customer’s application for a variable annuity and falsely listed his bank branch office
address as the customer’s mailing address, which he knew to
be false. In addition, a
customer applied for a premiere select IRA brokerage account with Mauchin’s firm and, without
the customer’s knowledge or authorization, he falsely listed
his bank branch office
address as the customer’s mailing address, which he knew to be false. These applications
became part of the firm’s books and records, causing his firm’s books and records to be
false. The complaint further alleges that Mauchin failed to appear for FINRA on-the-record
testimony.
According to FINRA records he last worked for SunTrust Investment Services.
If you have suffered losses in your brokerage account due to negligent advice or fraud, you
may be able to recover all or a part of those losses through FINRA arbitration. Most of our cases
are done on a contingent fee basis, meaning you only pay fees if you recover.
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