The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with over thirty years securities law experience, including experience at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC.

The firm has offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida because of the obvious benefits of being located so close to the FINRA Dispute Resolutions offices in those cities (FINRA’s Southeast headquarters is located at Boca Center Tower 1, 5200 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton, FL 33486- less than one mile from our office, and FINRA’s Midwest headquarters is located at 55 West Monroe Street, Suite 2600, Chicago, IL 60603-1002- close to the firm’s Chicago office).

Having our offices located so close to FINRA’s regional headquarters has its advantages, particularly since all cases filed in the southeast portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Boca Raton, Florida Dispute Resolution office, and all cases in the Midwest portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Chicago, Illinois Dispute Resolution office.

Although located in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida, The White Law Group handles securities fraud cases throughout the country and Nebraska, including reviewing securities fraud cases in Lincoln, Omaha, Bellevue, Grand Island, Council Bluffs, Norfolk, Hastings, and North Platte. With over 30 years of securities law experience, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions. To contact The White Law Group, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information about The White Law Group or securities fraud, you can also visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm is dedicated to assisting investors who have suffered investment losses as a result of their financial advisor or broker-dealers’ fraud or negligence.

We are currently investigating possible securities fraud claims involving the following investments or type of investments:

(1) Investments in DBSI, Inc. or DBSI TICs (tenants in common), particularly those solicited by Royal Alliance, Independent Financial Group, and Questar
(2) ING variable annuities and ING’s variable annuity sales practices
(3) Ameritas and Pacific Life variable annuity and life insurance sales practices
(4) UBS proprietary products and mutual funds sales practices
(5) Investments in Citigroup structured products such as ELKS
(6) Investments in Medical Capital, particularly those solicited by Securities America
(7) Morgan Stanley active trading practices (and possible churning), as well as margin investing
(8) RBC Capital (f/k/a RBC Dain Rauscher) suitability standards for elderly investors
(9) Investments in emerging markets (in particular Chinese companies) solicited by Brookstone Securities
(10) Raymond James’ variable annuity sales practices
(11) Morgan Keegan funds
(12) Lehman Brothers’ 100% principal protected promissory notes

If you have any information that may assist us in our current investigations, on if you believe that you have been the victim of a securities fraud, please contact our offices at either 561-238-9650 or 561-961-5411. With over 30 years of securities law experience, including experience working at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions. For more information on The White Law Group, please visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with over thirty years securities law experience, including experience at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC.

The firm has offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The White Law Group has its offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida because of the obvious benefits of being located so close to the FINRA Dispute Resolutions offices in those cities (FINRA’s Southeast headquarters is located at Boca Center Tower 1, 5200 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton, FL 33486- less than one mile from our office, and FINRA’s Midwest headquarters is located at 55 West Monroe Street, Suite 2600, Chicago, IL 60603-1002- close to the firm’s Chicago office).

Having our offices located so close to FINRA’s regional headquarters has its advantages, particularly since all cases filed in the southeast portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Boca Raton, Florida Dispute Resolution office, and all cases in the Midwest portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Chicago, Illinois Dispute Resolution office.

Although located in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida, The White Law Group handles securities fraud cases throughout the country and Michigan, including reviewing securities fraud cases in Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Holland, Lansing, Kentwood, Detroit, Ann Harbor, Flint, and Traverse City. With over 30 years of securities law experience, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions. To contact The White Law Group, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information about The White Law Group or securities fraud, you can also visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with over thirty years securities law experience, including experience at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC.

The firm has offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The White Law Group has its offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida because of the obvious benefits of being located so close to the FINRA Dispute Resolutions offices in those cities (FINRA’s Southeast headquarters is located at Boca Center Tower 1, 5200 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton, FL 33486- less than one mile from our office, and FINRA’s Midwest headquarters is located at 55 West Monroe Street, Suite 2600, Chicago, IL 60603-1002- close to the firm’s Chicago office).

Having our offices located so close to FINRA’s regional headquarters has its advantages, particularly since all cases filed in the southeast portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Boca Raton, Florida Dispute Resolution office, and all cases in the Midwest portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Chicago, Illinois Dispute Resolution office.

Although located in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida, The White Law Group handles securities fraud cases throughout the country and Tennessee, including reviewing securities fraud cases in Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Murfreesboro, Hendersonville, Franklin, and Chattanooga. With over 30 years of securities law experience, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions. To contact The White Law Group, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information about The White Law Group or securities fraud, you can also visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

It is not uncommon for foreign investors to seek to establish an investing relationship with a United States based broker-dealer (either because the client is seeking the security of investing in U.S. investments, or because these firms provide the client with the ability to discreetly invest their assets outside of their home country). Whether the client realized it or not when establishing their account with these U.S. broker-dealers, the client likely signed an arbitration agreement requiring them to submit to FINRA arbitration in the event of a dispute. In so doing, the client agreed to resolve any dispute (including a claim related to investment losses) through FINRA’s Dispute Resolution process.

The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm represents foreign investors in claims against their U.S. brokerage firm in such FINRA arbitrations.

The Firm has its offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida because of the obvious benefits of being located so close to the FINRA Dispute Resolutions offices in those cities (FINRA’s Southeast headquarters is located at Boca Center Tower 1, 5200 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton, FL 33486- less than one mile from our office, and FINRA’s Midwest headquarters is located at 55 West Monroe Street, Suite 2600, Chicago, IL 60603-1002- close to the firm’s Chicago office).

Having our offices located so close to FINRA’s regional headquarters has its advantages, particularly since FINRA assigns cases to the FINRA office closest to where the client resides. For example, an investor residing in Central or South America will typically have their case assigned to FINRA’s Boca Raton, Florida Dispute Resolution office with the hearing conducted in Miami. As such, having our office located in Boca Raton has huge benefits in administering these cases. Additionally, Rose M. Schindler, who is Of Counsel to The White Law Group, is the former Regional Director of FINRA Dispute Resolution’s Boca Raton office.

We have reviewed cases on behalf of many foreign investors with claims against United States brokerage firms, including reviewing claims on behalf of investors residing in Colombia, Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Bolivia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Chile. These claims often involve large American brokerage firms servicing Latin American investors from their offices in Miami, firms such as Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, Wachovia, Wells Fargo, Ameriprise, and UBS.

With over 30 years of securities law experience, including experience working at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions.

To contact The White Law Group, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information about The White Law Group or securities fraud, you can also visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group is pleased to announce that Rose M. Schindler, former FINRA Vice-President and Regional Director, is now acting in an Of Counsel capacity to the firm.

Rose Schindler has over 25 years of experience as a securities attorney and she will be working in the firm’s Boca Raton, Florida office. Ms. Schindler is a member of the Florida and California Bar Associations. Prior to entering private practice, Ms. Schindler was the Vice President and Regional Director of FINRA’s Southeast Regional Office of Dispute Resolution in Boca Raton, Florida. She is also a former Associate Regional Director of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s Miami, Florida regional office, and a former in-house securities litigation attorney with A.G. Edwards. Ms. Schindler is a huge asset to the firm’s securities practice group.

In addition to representing investors in claims against their broker-dealer, Ms. Schindler also handles many securities regulation and compliance matters, as well as acting as an expert witness in various securities related litigation matters.

The White Law Group is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration and investor protection law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm has over 30 years of experience reviewing securities fraud claims and handles matters throughout the country. To contact the firm, please call 312-238-9650 or 561-961-5411. Or, for more information on The White Law Group, please visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

In proceedings filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, known as FINRA (f/k/a the NASD), Morgan Keegan was accused of misleading brokers and customers through marketing materials that did not disclose the risks being taken by a group of funds sold only to Morgan Keegan clients.

In addition, the S.E.C. said in its filing, James C. Kelsoe Jr., the manager of the funds, repeatedly directed the funds to use valuations for which there was no justification during the first half of 2007, and Joseph Thompson Weller, an accountant in charge of valuing the company’s funds, did nothing to correct the misstatements.

“This scheme had two architects, a portfolio manager responsible for lies to investors about the true value of the assets in his funds, and a head of fund accounting who turned a blind eye to the fund’s bogus valuation process,” said Robert Khuzami, the commission’s enforcement director.

Morgan Keegan, which is a subsidiary of Regions Financial, a large regional bank based in Birmingham, Ala., issued a statement that did not address specific claims in the suits, but defended its actions.

“We have always held our obligations to our clients and to regulatory law with the utmost seriousness,” the firm said. “In that context, we have cooperated fully with the investigations of the S.E.C., Finra and the states for nearly three years. We are disappointed at the decision by these agencies and the states to bring charges which we believe are meritless and based upon erroneous hindsight analysis. We will vigorously refute these charges.”

The cases filed by the S.E.C. and FINRA are to be handled administratively, rather than in federal court, although Morgan Keegan could appeal any decisions to the courts. The regulators are seeking orders that the firm give up profits and reimburse investors. FINRA, which is the industry-financed regulator of brokerage firms, said that investors lost $1 billion in the funds but did not say how much restitution it would seek.

The FINRA case concerned marketing of the funds, saying that Morgan Keegan’s research division repeatedly failed to provide accurate information on the funds. One particular fund, FINRA said, “was substantially invested in structured and other products with material, specific risks that made them unsuitable for many retail investors,” but Morgan Keegan brokers were not told that and therefore did not tell their customers.

As the credit market crisis grew worse in 2007, the FINRA case makes it appear, Morgan Keegan descended into fiefs. Beginning in early June of that year, FINRA said, the bond fund department simply “stonewalled” the firm’s research department, which was trying to prepare reports and answer questions from worried brokers.

Eventually, the research division stopped following the fund, and Morgan Keegan eliminated it from accounts the firm managed. But stockbrokers were assured those changes did not reflect any concerns with the fund’s management.

Assuming the facts set forth in the regulatory complaints are accurate — and Morgan Keegan declined to comment on whether they were — it appears that Morgan Keegan sold funds as conservative investments and did not tell either brokers or customers how misleading those descriptions were.

Once the collapse began, Morgan Keegan was in a difficult position. For the firm to recommend that its customers sell would have forced liquidation of funds that owned mostly illiquid assets, making things that much worse. So on Aug. 17, 2007, three days after the firm eliminated one fund from all accounts it managed, Morgan Keegan’s head of sales assured a worried customer that “all is well” and that the funds’ holdings would soon recover.

There have already been numerous investor arbitration claims filed against Morgan Keegan and there are certainly more similarly situated investors who may have similar claims against the firm. If you have questions regarding investments you made with Morgan Keegan, or if you believe that you have been the victim of a securities fraud, The White Law Group may be able to help. The White Law Group is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration and investor protection law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm has over 30 years of experience reviewing securities fraud claims and handles matters throughout the country. To contact the firm, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information on The White Law Group, please visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm.

The White Law Group has its offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida because of the obvious benefits of being located so close to the FINRA Dispute Resolutions offices in those cities (FINRA’s Southeast headquarters is located at Boca Center Tower 1, 5200 Town Center Circle, Boca Raton, FL 33486- less than one mile from our office, and FINRA’s Midwest headquarters is located at 55 West Monroe Street, Suite 2600, Chicago, IL 60603-1002- close to the firm’s Chicago office).

Having our offices located so close to FINRA’s regional headquarters has its advantages, particularly since all cases filed in the southeast portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Boca Raton, Florida Dispute Resolution office, and all cases in the Midwest portion of the United States are administered out of FINRA’s Chicago, Illinois Dispute Resolution office.

Although located in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida, The White Law Group handles securities fraud cases throughout the country and Mississippi, including reviewing securities fraud cases in Jackson, Oxford, Hattiesburg, Meridian, Brookhaven, and Biloxi. With over 30 years of securities law experience, including experience working at FINRA (f/k/a the NASD) and the SEC, The White Law Group has the expertise to help investors defrauded in securities, investment and financial business transactions.

To contact The White Law Group, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information about The White Law Group or securities fraud, you can also visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

FINRA recently announced that James Cordell Wisdom III, formerly a financial advisor with Natcity Investments, Inc. in Norwood, Ohio, has been barred association with any FINRA member in any capacity. Without admitting or denying the findings, Wisdom consented to the described sanction and to the entry of findings that he executed an unauthorized sale of shares of a mutual fund in a customer’s account without the customer’s knowledge or authorization. The findings also stated that Wisdom wired the sale proceeds from the customer’s account into a bank account he established in the customer’s name without the customer’s knowledge or authorization. Finally, the findings stated that when Wisdom established the account, he listed himself as the signatory on the account and subsequently withdrew $2,800 from the bank account and used it for personal use.

According to his FINRA Broker Report (CRD), it appears that prior to working as a financial advisor with Natcity Investments, Wisdom was a registered-representative with Merrill Lynch in Cincinnati, Ohio.

If you have questions regarding investments you made with James Cordell Wisdon, or if you believe that you have been the victim of a securities fraud, The White Law Group may be able to help. The White Law Group is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration and investor protection law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm has over 30 years of experience reviewing securities fraud claims and handles matters throughout the country and Ohio, including reviewing securities fraud cases in Norwood, Cincinnati, Covington, Hamilton, Middletown, and White Oak. To contact the firm, please call 312-238-9650. Or, for more information on The White Law Group, please visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

The White Law Group is now representing financial advisors in Promissory Note disputes and claims related to the financial advisors prior employment.

The White Law Group is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection and securities regulation/ compliance law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Boca Raton, Florida. The firm’s lawyers have extensive experience in Promissory Note disputes, including previous experience representing Banc of America, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, Wachovia, Wells Fargo and Ameriprise in such claims. This background allows the firm to understand exactly how these firms litigate Promissory Note cases and the firms’ typical settlement parameters.

If you have questions regarding your outstanding Promissory Note, please contact our Chicago office at 312-238-9650. For more information on The White Law Group, please visit our website at http://www.whitesecuritieslaw.com.

Here is some additional information regarding the Promissory Note litigation process for your reference:

Promissory Notes (often called up-front forgivable loans) are commonly used as a recruiting tool by many of the major brokerage firms in the securities industry, including Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, Banc of America Investment Services, Wachovia Securities, Wells Fargo, Merrill Lynch, Ameriprise (formerly H&R Block), and UBS Financial Services. Essentially, brokerage firms use the up-front forgivable loans to recruit financial advisors from other firms to bring their clients (or “book of business”) to the new firm. Typically these loans are then forgiven by the hiring firm on a monthly or annual basis and if the financial advisor remains with the new firm through the duration of the forgiveness period of the loan, the broker does not have to repay the loan. If, however, the financial advisor resigns from the brokerage firm, or is terminated, before the loan is forgiven, the broker is contractually obligated to repay the outstanding amounts owed on the loan and the brokerage firm will often move to collect the outstanding amount still owed on the loan.

Typically, the brokerage firm does this by sending a “demand letter” requesting that the financial advisor repay the money owed on the promissory notes. If this demand letter is sent by an outside collection agency, including an outside law firm, the demand letter is required to be in compliance with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. As such, the demand letter should include (1) the outstanding balance on the promissory notes (the amount owed, including interest), (2) the demand letter should provide the debtor with thirty days to dispute the debt, and (3) the demand letter should provide validity of the debt (usually by attaching a copy of the promissory notes).

If the broker fails to respond to the demand letter or if the financial advisor and brokerage firm are unable to reach a mutually satisfactory settlement agreement, the brokerage firm will often then elect to sue the broker for failure to repay the promissory note(s). If the brokerage firm does sue the former financial advisor, such suit will likely be filed with FINRA (formerly the NASD) since virtually all brokers at the onset of their employment with their now former employer agreed to arbitrate any dispute between themselves and their employers through FINRA arbitration as part of their employment agreements. A similar arbitration clause is also usually included in the promissory notes. Moreover, the financial advisor’s U-4 sets forth that a financial advisor (or associated person in the industry) agrees to FINRA’s jurisdiction for disputes.

Once the brokerage firm’s claim against the former broker is filed, pursuant to FINRA Rule 13303, the financial advisor has 45 days to file an Answer. The common defenses/counterclaims asserted by financial advisors in defending against claims brought by brokerage firms to collect on these promissory notes are misrepresentation/fraudulent inducement (related to promises regarding the terms of employment), discrimination, wrongful termination/constructive discharge, unjust enrichment (related to clients the financial advisor may have left behind), and breach of contract. Another equity argument that is often asserted is that the forgiveness of the notes should be pro rated (although the notes are often forgiven on an annual basis, the broker can still argue that equity should provide that the forgiveness date should be the date that the broker left the firm and not the date of the last annual forgiveness).

Once the defenses or counterclaims are filed, the parties then proceed to the discovery process and set the matter for hearing. The case is then decided by either an industry or public panel (depending on the counterclaims raised).

If the brokerage firm takes their claim all the way to hearing and gets an award against the financial advisor, the financial advisor is required by FINRA Rules to pay the award. Specifically, Rule 9554(a) provides that an associated person’s failure to comply with a settlement agreement or award related to an arbitration or mediation within 21 days of notice by FINRA will result in a suspension of the associated person from the industry. As such, if a financial advisor gets an arbitration award against him/her related to his/her obligations on their promissory notes, and fails to pay that award, the broker may be suspended from the industry. There are a few ways to avoid being suspending without paying the award (including agreeing with the brokerage firm to settle the award with payments over time, declaring bankruptcy, or demonstrating to FINRA a legitimate inability to pay the award) but generally speaking a financial advisor is obligated to pay the award if the brokerage firm prevails.

Before entering into any up-front forgivable loan agreement with a brokerage firm, there are a few significant provisions in virtually every Promissory Note of which financial advisors should be aware.

(1) Promissory Notes will almost always include a provision setting forth the financial advisors employment as an “at-will” employee. A typical example of such a provision is as follows:

“This Agreement is not a contract of employment for any period of time. The Borrower’s employment with the Lender is on an “at-will” basis which means that the employment relationship can be terminated at any time for any reason or no reason by either party. Nothing herein shall be construed as a contract of employment for a definite term.”

The reasons this provision is included are obvious. While most employees are at-will employees, brokerage firms still want this arrangement to be spelled out so that the employee can not later argue that the brokerage firm made promises of employment for a specified period of time. Although there is caselaw that claims that an NASD (now FINRA) arbitration agreement changes a broker’s at-will relationship with a brokerage firm to “something else,” requiring justification for a discharge (see, e.g. Paine Webber v. Agron, 49 F. 3d. 347, 352 (8th Cir. 1994)), “at-will” provisions are generally enforced.

(2) Promissory Notes also almost always provide for the broker being obligated to reimburse the brokerage firm for any costs of collection in the event of default (including attorney’s fees and costs). Although many states require that an attorney fees provision be reciprocal (meaning that the broker would be entitled to his/her attorneys’ fees if he/she disputes the debt and ultimately prevails), the provision in the promissory notes will not be drafted that way, and a broker should be aware that they may be on the hook for the brokerage firm’s attorneys fees if they fail to repay their prior employer.

(3) Similarly, the Notes also generally provide for interest to accrue both while the broker remains with the brokerage firm and after default. As such, if the broker is in default and is considering settling, it is better to do so sooner rather than later.

(4) Another provision that is significant is that the Notes usually provide for the brokerage’s firm authority to restrict the broker’s brokerage account if any amounts owed on the loans become outstanding. A typical example of such a provision is as follows:

“The Lender shall have the right, upon default, without notice, to withhold any monies payable by it to the Borrower, as commissions or otherwise or from any amounts payable under any non-qualified deferred compensation or similar arrangement sponsored by the Lender, and to withhold other monies, securities, commodities or other properties of the Borrower which may at any time be in the possession of the Lender for any purpose; and to apply such monies, etc., to satisfy the indebtedness due under this Note. The Borrower hereby authorizes and consents to the aforementioned deductions.”

Depending on the broker’s separate customer agreements, these restrictions may apply to joint accounts in addition to individual accounts, and if the financial advisor leaves his/her employer owing money on a promissory note and with money in a brokerage account held by their employer, the brokerage firm is likely to restrict that account.