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It’s sometimes hard being
a lawyer and being skeptical about the justice system. But beliefs
and opinions are formed by experience. It is with great difficulty
that I relay the following true story supplemented by actual witness
testimony from the court reporter:
I represented some individuals
and companies who filed an arbitration claim against a brokerage
firm and several principals of the firm. The brokerage firm MFI
Investments is a small one based in Ohio. It was an unusual claim
in that my clients had hired a registered investment advisor to
handle their funds, and the advisor ran the transactions through
this brokerage firm. The advisor grossly mishandled my clients’
funds. Unfortunately, the advisor had shut down his business, lost
most of his assets, and was diagnosed with aids. My clients likely
would not be collecting any money judgments against the investment
advisor.
Our argument against the
brokerage firm and its principals was that they had a duty to supervise
my clients’ accounts. This was a hotly disputed issue in the case;
the brokerage firm and principals argued that they merely executed
the orders of the advisor and since they never had any contact with
my clients, they had no such duty to supervise.
To my surprise, and I suppose
to the surprise of his attorneys, the manager who we had sued, Mr.
Russell Clark, testified that he believed he did have a duty to
supervise my clients’ accounts. He testified that on a monthly basis
he or another principal in his office reviewed my clients’ monthly
statements for excessive trading and to ensure the investment were
suitable based upon my clients’ investment objectives. The follow-up
question to this testimony was:
Q. And my question to you is when you did that, did you make a written record evidencing such review?
A. None other than perhaps a signature notation on them, on the statement.
This was odd, because I had
requested that the brokerage firm produce any and all documents
evidencing that the firm performed any supervisory review of my
clients’ accounts. Nothing responsive had been produced. So I inquired
as to the whereabouts of the monthly statements:
Q. Where are they?
A. The -- I thought I explained that. We sent them back to Ohio…The statements were sent back all together, all the various months. So whoever reviewed them that particular month would have that person's initial on them…
Q. Do you know, Mr. Clark, why we don't have those documents today?
A. I don't know.
Q. You are aware that those documents are required to be maintained, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And have you had any conversations with anyone at [the brokerage firm] regarding the whereabouts of those documents?
A. No.
Two days later, Mr. Clark
walked into the arbitration hearing with an armful of my clients’
monthly statements. He testified that he had received the statements
at lunch time from Debbi Smythe, another supervisory manager at
the brokerage firm. Scattered throughout the monthly statements
were the original initials and a few notations of Russell Clark.
I was suspicious. I requested
permission to take the monthly statements for the purpose of having
a handwriting analysis performed to determine when the initials
were placed on the documents - several years earlier, when they
should have been or in the last week after I had begun asking Mr.
Clark questions about them. The Panel granted my request. I noticed
Mr. Clark squirming. I called him back to the stand to question
him some more about when the initials were put on the paper. I asked
him outright:
Q. Do you know if it was done in the last week?
A. No.
Either Mr. Clark didn’t know
if the initials were placed on the documents in the last week or
he knew they were not. Either interpretation pinned Mr. Clark down
regarding the initials.
The next morning, Mr. Clark’s
attorney entered the hearing room with a grave and concerned face.
He advised the Panel and the parties that he had called Ms. Debbie
Smythe and she had admitted that Russell Clark telephoned her in
the last week and asked her to take my clients’ monthly statements
and randomly place Russell Clark’s initials throughout. Ms. Smythe
went further than that, however. She used different colored pens
- sometime blue and sometimes black . And occasionally she circled
things and drew arrows to make it look like some sort of analysis
had been done.
Two wrongs had been committed.
Not only did Mr. Clark and Ms. Smythe, together, manufacture critical
evidence for the arbitration - evidence that went to the very heart
of the case - but Mr. Clark lied about it under oath. He perjured
himself. The defense counsel hung their heads and offered no defense
for the misconduct. I requested that the Panel make a disciplinary
referral to the NASD to sanction these two licensed, supervisory
individuals. This was the only avenue for punishment available.
The NASD, in turn, could investigate the matter and either fine
Mr. Clark and Ms. Smythe, suspend them for a period of time, or,
better yet, yank their licenses, thereby prohibiting them from working
in the securities industry. The Panel responded that any such referral
would be made in the written decision of the Panel.
When I reviewed the arbitrators’
decision, some months later, I almost became physically ill. The
Panel not only failed to make a disciplinary referral, it did not
even comment upon the charade described above - not one word. What
is it that propelled these arbitrators - Stephen Nagy, Simeon Trotter,
and Edmund R. Yates - to silence? What is it that caused them to
close their eyes in the face of such egregious conduct?
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