Not Dead Yet: Just Flesh Wounds, Suspensions, and Fines (SEC, CFTC, and FINRA Enforcement Actions in September 2020)

The Holy Grail. Knights who say “Ni.” The list goes on and on. (Wink wink, nudge nudge, say no more.) Monty Python, the comedy group, is known for a lot of things. However, what most people don’t know is that if you watch their movies, TV shows and Broadway musical very carefully, you’ll actually learn a lot about compliance and securities enforcement.

To understand what Monty Python can teach us about the SEC, CFTC and FINRA enforcement actions brought in September 2020,  read more here.

FINRA Panel Stretched Rule 8210 Too Far

A recent 2-1 decision by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Office of Hearing Officers stretched Rule 8210 beyond its wording and intent, barring a registered representative in the process.

The case, Department of Enforcement v. Wilfredo Felix, et al., involved several issues, including Felix’s failure to produce his Wage and Income Transcript (IRS transcript), which he could have obtained by submitting an IRS Form.

An IRS transcript is an IRS-created document that shows “most line items” from tax returns, including adjusted gross income. During the investigation, FINRA staff asked Felix to produce his IRS transcripts (a very rare request), which he did not have in his possession, or to sign an IRS Form instructing the IRS to send them to him.

He refused, stating that FINRA’s request went beyond the scope of Rule 8210.

Read More Here.