ARTICLE
19 August 2020

Broker-Dealer Settles Charges For Failing To Detect Insider Trading

CW
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP

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Cadwalader, established in 1792, serves a diverse client base, including many of the world's leading financial institutions, funds and corporations. With offices in the United States and Europe, Cadwalader offers legal representation in antitrust, banking, corporate finance, corporate governance, executive compensation, financial restructuring, intellectual property, litigation, mergers and acquisitions, private equity, private wealth, real estate, regulation, securitization, structured finance, tax and white collar defense.
A broker-dealer settled FINRA charges for failing to detect potentially suspicious insider trading and for failing to produce discovery in a FINRA arbitration proceeding.
United States Government, Public Sector
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A broker-dealer settled FINRA charges for failing to detect potentially suspicious insider trading and for failing to produce discovery in a FINRA arbitration proceeding.

In a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent, FINRA stated that the broker-dealer's AML procedures were deficient because they failed to detect that one of the broker-dealer's customers, who was known to the broker-dealer to be a corporate insider of a microcap issuer, was trading the stock of his own company. Further, FINRA claimed that the broker-dealer failed to implement its own AML procedures, including those requiring the timely review of microcap-related red flags. Had the broker-dealer followed its AML policies and procedures, FINRA said, the broker-dealer would have identified the insider trading transactions as suspicious.

FINRA also charged the broker-dealer with falsely claiming it did not have the documents it was required to produce in an arbitration proceeding that a former customer brought to FINRA's Dispute Resolution Forum. FINRA alleged that the broker-dealer had previously produced, in an unrelated matter, the documents it claimed not to possess.

FINRA determined that the broker-dealer violated FINRA Rules 2010 ("Standards of Commercial Honor and Principles of Trade"), 3310 ("Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Program"), and IM-12000 ("Failure to Act under Provisions of Code of Arbitration Procedure for Customer Disputes").

To settle the charges, the broker-dealer agreed to (i) a censure, (ii) a $60,000 fine, and (iii) review and revise its written AML program.

Primary Sources

  1. FINRA AWC: Network 1 Financial Securities Inc.

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