FINRA Bars Broker for Operating Ponzi Scheme
As part of an ongoing investigation, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) has permanently barred a former registered representative with AXA Advisors, LLC, for conducting a Ponzi scheme.
A FINRA news release said Kenneth George Neely of St. Louis conducted a Ponzi scheme involving at least 25 brokerage customers of AXA and his previous employer Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. Inc., as well as his own family, friends, and fellow church members. Neely induced customers to participate in a fictitious “St. Louis Investment Club” and to invest in the non-existent real estate investment trust, the “St. Charles REIT.”
Neely only stopped collecting funds when FINRA confronted him earlier this month. AXA terminated Neely’s employment upon his admission to FINRA staff that he converted customer funds for his personal use, according to FINRA.
In total, Neely improperly used more than $600,000 in investors’ assets. He returned about $300,000 of the funds back to some of the investors and converted more than half of the amount to his own personal use, FINRA said.
Background
To conceal the scheme from authorities, Neely
typically had investors make payments to his wife in increments of
$2,000 to $3,000, according to FINRA. He also prepared false invoices
on his personal computer. The fraudulent invoices used the names of a
fictitious "President" and "Secretary" and listed Neely's mother's home
address as the address of the St. Louis Investment Club. Neely assured
some investors by telling them he was on the investment club's board of
directors.
In one instance, FINRA reported he stole $154,000
from a long-time friend and recent retiree, as well as an additional
$10,000 from that friend's daughter. Neely had begun managing the
friend's retirement assets in 2002, but by 2007 Neely was facing
demands from clients who were seeking the return of their previously
invested money, so he approached the friend with the promise of a high
rate of return on the fraudulent REIT investment. Neely eventually
returned $10,000 to the friend, bit used the balance of the investment
to pay down personal debts, including country club and golf expenses.
In
another instance, Neely induced a fellow church member to invest
$35,000 of a retirement account, promising a 5% rate of return, FINRA
found. He again used the balance to fund personal expenses. Neely's
monthly country club dues and entertainment expenses sometimes exceeded
$4,000.
"This individual was robbing Peter to pay Paul," said
Susan L. Merrill, FINRA executive vice president and chief of
enforcement, in the news release. "What is especially disturbing about
this case is the exploitation of family and church relationships to
defraud unsuspecting investors of their hard-earned savings to finance
both the scheme and personal expenses."