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Industry experts said the proposal shows that New York, which oversees a number of major Wall Street players, is positioning itself to take a more aggressive approach than its federal counterparts.
January 10 -
The advisor paid $50,000 to a widow's lawyer to refer her $100 million account to him – a fact he failed to disclose to the client, the agency claims.
January 10 -
The regulator plans to ramp up scrutiny of bad brokers and electronic communications, among other new measures.
January 9 -
The adviser misappropriated $268,680 from the brokerage accounts of five elderly clients, one terminally ill.
January 5 -
The former broker, who pleaded guilty to securities fraud last month, allegedly promised clients returns of up to 15% and used proceeds for personal expenses.
January 4 -
High-value targets include client names and account numbers. Protecting the information can also protect an advisory practice from regulatory penalties.
January 4 -
The regulator accused the rep of writing 38 checks totaling $46,280 from two personal J.P. Morgan bank accounts that it claims did not have sufficient funds to cover the checks.
January 4 -
Jay Clayton represented the bank in connection with the $10 billion bailout it received in 2008 as part of the government’s $700 billion rescue of banks during the financial crisis.
January 4 -
The rep declined to provide the regulator with the documents and information it needed to assess allegations that he misappropriated bank customer funds.
January 3 -
The brokerage firm processed a number of securities transactions that facilitated conversions of foreign currency from or into U.S. dollars, FINRA claimed.
December 27