Column:”Petty Crimes on Broker Records – Can they be Expunged?” – As seen in WealthManagement.com
On November 22, 2013, WealthManagement.com ran Patrick Mahoney’s editorial Petty Crimes on Broker Records – Can they be Expunged?. A link to the article is available HERE.
The article’s content is available below:
FINRA rules require brokers to make extensive and often intrusive disclosures (vis-à-vis a broker’s Central Registration Depository (“CRD”) record) concerning their work and disciplinary histories. These disclosures are publicly available through BrokerCheck, an online database that the public may use to vet a potential broker. For the most part, these required disclosures work to protect investors from controversial brokers.
Under FINRA rule 8312(2)(A), FINRA may release to BrokerCheck any information reported on Forms U4, U5, U6, and Form BDW. In other words, anything a broker puts on any of these forms, with very limited exceptions, will appear on the broker’s publicly available BrokerCheck record.
There are two categories of crimes that FINRA requires brokers to disclose: felonies and misdemeanors. With respect to the former, FINRA requires brokers to disclose any felony conviction or charge on their Form U4 (see Form U4 question 14A). Felony convictions and charges generally involve serious crimes, so arguably, potential main street investors should be privy to a broker’s felony criminal involvement.
Under the rules, that broker must report the Skittles theft conviction on his or her Form U4, which would then cause the offense to be reported on his or her BrokerCheck record.
According to FINRA’s “Interpretive Questions and Answers” relating to criminal disclosures (available here), FINRA has the authority to remove a conviction from the broker’s record if the broker obtains a criminal court order expunging the criminal conviction. Expungement of a criminal conviction renders the offense as though it never happened. The criminal court destroys the record so that no one (not even by court order) can obtain it.
For more information about this topic or related topics, please Email Attorney Patrick Mahoney.