#newbridge securities complaints
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rexsecuritieslaw · 2 years ago
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Dean Nowak- Former Newbridge Securities Broker -Has Multiple Pending Customer Disputes- Winter Park, FL
Dean Nowak Investigation March 2023- Winter Park, FL According to publicly available records Dean Nowak, a broker previously employed by  Newbridge Securities Corporation,  discloses 5 pending customer disputes. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that licenses and regulates stockbrokers and brokerage firms. FINRA requires brokers and brokerage firms to report…
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buzzblend · 2 years ago
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Widow loses life savings after ‘firetrap’ developer fails to repay €150k loan
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A controversial developer who asked to borrow the life savings of an 81-year-old widow has failed to repay the money after half a decade of broken promises.
In 2017, the widow gave €160,000 in cash to developer Paddy Byrne, who built the Millfield Manor estate in Co. Kildare where six houses burnt to the ground in under 30 minutes in 2015.
The cash was for a penthouse apartment in Dublin she planned to move into.
The development was built by Victoria Homes, a company that was established by Mr Byrne’s sister Joan just before Mr Byrne was precluded from acting as a company director in Ireland for five years.
After viewing plans for the €630,000 property, in a development called Greygates in Mount Merrion, the pensioner withdrew the cash from her bank and gave it to Mr Byrne.
Some €10,000 of this was a deposit, with the remaining €150,000 provided on the advice of a third party who was known to Mr Byrne and the widow, who said the cash would secure a good price.
According to a handwritten receipt, signed by Mr Byrne, the money was provided on May 29, 2017.
But in November 2017 the widow, a retired primary school teacher, found a more suitable home and asked for her money back.
Mr Byrne agreed to this, saying he would have no problem selling the penthouse and promptly refunded the €10,000 deposit.
However, he asked that the remaining €150,000 be treated as a 14-month loan and promised to pay a 10% annual interest rate.
This effectively turned the widow into an unwitting creditor of Victoria Homes.
According to a handwritten agreement, signed by Mr Byrne, the loan was to be ‘paid back from the sales proceeds’ of the penthouse at his Greygates development.
More than half a decade later, the loan remains unpaid – even after the widow made a criminal complaint to gardaí and took legal action to secure a judgement.
As it is a civil matter, the Garda investigation faltered. And because various other unpaid creditors had previously secured judgements against Victoria Homes, the widow is now unlikely to get her savings back. During the Celtic Tiger years, Paddy Byrne was renowned for his €2.4m Sikorsky helicopter and sponsorship of the Irish National Hunt festival.
But in 2011 his then-firm, Barrack Homes, went bust and Mr Byrne declared bankruptcy in Britain with debts of €100m.
He was banned from acting as a UK director for 10 years in 2012.
This ban was scheduled to end in 2022 – and ran the full course – but it only applied in the UK and Wales.
According to the UK insolvency register today, Mr Byrne’s discharge from UK bankruptcy is ‘suspended indefinitely’ until the fulfilment of conditions made in a 2012 court order.
Separately, in Ireland, he was also restricted from acting as a director for a period of five years – which ended in January 2018.
Mr Byrne is also known for building the Millfield Manor estate in Newbridge, Co. Kildare, where half a dozen houses were razed to the ground within 30 minutes in 2015.
A report into the blaze found ‘major and life-threatening serious shortfalls and discrepancies and deviations from the minimum requirements of the national mandatory building regulations’ at Mr Byrne’s development.
Today, having exited bankruptcy, Mr Byrne is best known as the figurehead behind Victoria Homes and associated businesses, which was set up by his sister and her husband in December 2012, while he was bankrupt.
Mr Byrne was not a director or owner of Victoria Homes during the period of his bankruptcy. But, in 2017, Mr Byrne’s sister and her husband stepped back from Victoria Homes, transferring their shares to an offshore entity in Belize city called Victoria Holdings.
In November 2022, the main lenders to Victoria Homes – the Lotus Development Group – forced the firm into receivership for the second time.
In 2020, Lotus had forced a previous short-lived receivership before agreeing a deal that saw Victoria Homes begin trading normally once more.
Today, Mr Byrne appears to have left Victoria Homes behind and seems to be focusing on a new firm instead.
Set up in the summer of 2020, Branach Developments is entirely owned by Mr Byrne and is not encumbered by any bank debt or mortgages as Victoria Homes was.
According to the latest filed accounts, for the year ended 2021, Branach Developments held ‘tangible assets’ of €210,000 and ‘stocks’ of €600,000.
The accounts also show that, in 2021, Mr Byrne provided the company with an interest-free loan of €1,024,438.
Just last week Mr Byrne’s new firm was one of the winners at the National Property Awards sponsored by the Business Post and Deloitte, among others.
At the award ceremony, Branach Developments took home the prize for best sustainability initiative of the year.
However, Mr Byrne, who shuns publicity and is rarely photographed, does not appear to have attended the ceremony and the award was accepted by a colleague.
This week the Irish Mail on Sunday sent queries to Mr Byrne via his mobile phone, his email at Victoria Homes and his email at Branach Developments, without response.
Queries to his solicitor and the separate accountancy firms representing Victoria Homes and Branach Developments also went unanswered as did calls to the numbers on the websites of these firms.
Mr Byrne also previously declined to respond to questions from the MoS relating to the establishment of Victoria Homes during the period of his bankruptcy.
At the time, Mr Byrne appeared to be living at Ballinrahin House, close to Rathangan on the border of Offaly and Kildare.
The home is a luxury build on 26 acres of stud-railed paddocks with six stables and a 1.3km tree-lined avenue behind electric gates.
The property was on sale for €2.8m in 2009, but land registry records confirm that, in November 2014, it was sold to Victoria Homes for a knockdown price of €484,000.
Ownership of Ballinrahin House was transferred offshore to Victoria Holdings in Belize on April 10, 2018, just weeks before Mr Byrne was due to repay the €150,000 back to the widow.
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mhdqj · 2 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Corp. Complaints Rise Due to GWG L Bonds
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demithor · 2 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Corp. Complaints Rise Due to GWG L Bonds
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fakeherosmentality · 2 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Corp. Complaints Rise Due to GWG L Bonds
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mariposa121 · 2 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Corp. Complaints Rise Due to GWG L Bonds
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businessnewsreports · 2 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Corp. Complaints Rise Due to GWG L Bonds
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securitieslitgtr · 5 years ago
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Philly real estate investor Nicholas Schorsch, his former CFO and company settle with SEC for more than $60M
Published by The Philadelphia Inquirer
by Erin Arvedlund
Updated: July 16, 2019- 4:36 PM — The Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday settled with AR Capital, its founder Nicholas S. Schorsch, and former CFO Brian Block for more than $60 million to resolve charges ranging from defrauding investors to falsifying records.
The SEC charged Jenkintown scrap metal heir Schorsch with stealing millions of dollars in two separate mergers between real estate investment trusts (REITs) managed by his company, AR Capital. They agreed to a penalty of more than $60 million in disgorgement, interest and civil penalties.
According to the SEC’s complaint, between late 2012 and early 2014, AR Capital arranged for American Realty Capital Properties, a publicly traded REIT, to merge with two publicly held, non-traded REITs. The SEC alleges that AR Capital, Schorsch, and Block inflated an incentive fee in both mergers, which allowed them to obtain about 2.92 million additional partnership units as part of their compensation.
“REIT managers and their professionals have an obligation to tell the truth when making disclosures to shareholders about their compensation,” said Marc P. Berger, director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office in a news release. “As we allege in our complaint, AR Capital and its partners Schorsch and Block failed to do so and benefited themselves greatly at the expense of shareholders.”
The SEC’s complaint, filed in federal district court in Manhattan, charges AR Capital and Block with violating anti-fraud provisions and falsifying books and records.
Without admitting or denying the allegations, AR Capital, Schorsch, and Block consented to a final judgment of more than $39 million, which includes cash and the return of the wrongfully obtained ARCP operating partnership units; and civil penalties of $14 million against AR Capital, $7 million against Schorsch, and $750,000 against Block.
The settlements are subject to court approval.
In 2016, Schorsch was also sued by Malvern investment giant Vanguard Group.
That lawsuit alleged “a multiyear fraud and attempted cover-up” after Schorsch sent out seven quarters of false earnings reports to shareholders and the SEC.
Two Schorsch lieutenants were later convicted of fraud; Schorsch was not charged.
Vereit Inc., successor to the former real estate investment company American Realty Capital Partners Inc. set up by Schorsch, agreed to pay Vanguard $90 million to settle. Vanguard’s 150-page complaint alleged that fraud “was orchestrated by the top executives” at Schorsch’s company, which was at one time among the nation’s largest REITs, with more than $30 billion of real estate at its height in the early 2010s.
Other Schorsch-backed companies employed brokers such as Austin Dutton, who pushed Schorsch-backed real estate stocks and closed-end funds.
Pennsylvania state securities officials levied their highest-ever fines against brokerage Newbridge Securities of Boca Raton, Fla., and Dutton of Doylestown, for selling risky real estate funds set up by Schorsch that were “unsuitable” for Philadelphia police officers and other city workers for their retirement funds.
Schorsch bought thousands of commercial properties, from blocks of stores whose mortgages had been controlled by GE Capital to Red Lobster restaurants and other chain eateries. Schorsch and his supporters said Schorsch had developed a new way to invest in real estate, sharing future profits rather than up-front fees.
But “the true primary purpose in Schorsch’s buying spree” was “to rob from shareholders and give to himself and his friends,” according to Vanguard’s suit.
According to the suit, Schorsch “transferred hundreds of millions of dollars to entities controlled by him and by other senior insiders” in 2013 and 2014.
According to Vanguard, Schorsch and his helpers reported sharply rising earnings through those years, persuading Vanguard and other professional investors to buy the stock, after certifying that the company had solid financial controls and honest financial reporting.
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from Investment Fraud Lawyers | Investor Loss Recovery https://securitieslitigators.com/philly-real-estate-investor-nicholas-schorsch-his-former-cfo-and-company-settle-with-sec-for-more-than-60m/
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mikednolan · 6 years ago
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Newbridge Securities Advisor Dana Davis Subject to Multiple Allegations of Excessive Trading
According to BrokerCheck records kept by The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) broker Dana Davis (Davis) has been subject to seven customer complaints and one termination for cause.  Davis is currently employed by Newbridge Securities Corporation (Newbridge Securities).  Many of the customer complaints against Davis concern allegations of high frequency trading activity also referred to as churning, unauthorized trading, and unsuitable investments.
In January 2018 a customer filed a complaint alleging misrepresentation, unsuitable and excessive trading, negligent supervision, and breach of fiduciary duty.  The claim alleges $250,000 in damages and is currently pending.
In October 2011 a customer filed a complaint alleging excessive transactions claiming $9,078 in damages.  The complaint was closed.
In September 2006 Davis was terminated from First Montauk Securities Corp. after allegations were made that Davis failed to follow procedures concerning unauthorized trading.
When brokers engage in excessive trading, sometimes referred to as churning, the broker will typical trade in and out of securities, sometimes even the same stock, many times over a short period of time.  Often times the account will completely “turnover” every month with different securities.  This type of investment trading activity in the client’s account serves no reasonable purpose for the investor and is engaged in only to profit the broker through the generation of commissions created by the trades.  Churning is considered a species of securities fraud.  The elements of the claim are excessive transactions of securities, broker control over the account, and intent to defraud the investor by obtaining unlawful commissions.  A similar claim, excessive trading, under FINRA’s suitability rule involves just the first two elements.  Certain commonly used measures and ratios used to determine churning help evaluate a churning claim.  These ratios look at how frequently the account is turned over plus whether or not the expenses incurred in the account made it unreasonable that the investor could reasonably profit from the activity.
According to newsources, a study revealed that 7.3% of financial advisors had a customer complaint on their record when records from 2005 to 2015 were examined.  Brokers must publicly disclose reportable events on their BrokerCheck reports that include customer complaints, IRS tax liens, judgments, investigations, terminations, and criminal cases.  In addition, research has show a disturbing pattern with troublesome brokers where brokers with high numbers of customer complaints are not kicked out of the industry but instead these brokers are sifted to lower quality brokerage firms with loose hiring practices and higher rates of customer complaints.  These lower quality firms may average brokers with five times as many complaints as the industry average.
Davis entered the securities industry in 1989.  Since September 2006 Davis has been associated with Newbridge Securities out of the firm’s New York, New York office location.
At Gana Weinstein LLP, our attorneys are experienced representing investors who have suffered securities losses due to excessive trading and churning violations.  Investors who have suffered losses are encouraged to contact us at (800) 810-4262 for consultation.  Claims may be brought in securities arbitration before FINRA.  Our consultations are free of charge and the firm is only compensated if you recover.
from Securities Fraud https://www.securitieslawyersblog.com/newbridge-securities-advisor-dana-davis-subject-to-multiple-allegations-of-excessive-trading/
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rexsecuritieslaw · 2 years ago
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John Moy- Newbridge Securities Broker- Discloses Customer Disputes and Two Terminations From Employment- Boca Raton, FL
John Moy Investigation March 2023-Boca Raton, FL  The FINRA records of John Kirkland Moy, an Newbridge Securities Corporation broker, discloses 3 final customer disputes,  a pending customer dispute and two terminations from employment. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that licenses and regulates stockbrokers and brokerage firms. FINRA requires brokers and…
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derrickgilesten · 7 years ago
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Pennsylvania Levies Record-Breaking Fine Against Florida Broker
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has fined a Florida broker-dealer a state-record $499,000 for violations within its derivative securities business. The Pennsylvania Department of Banking and Securities fined Boca Raton, Fla.-based Newbridge Securities for failing to maintain controls around the sale of derivative securities by a Pennsylvania agent between 2012 and 2016. While the state’s complaint did not name the agent involved, FINRA lists Newbridge’s Pennsylvania agent as Austin Dutton. While the state did not provide details on the specific investments or selling practices in question, Dutton, who runs a Philadelphia-area office of Bridge Valley Financial Services, sold securities issued by American Realty Capital Partners and other firms backed or led by Nicholas Schorsch. Schorsch’s investment empire began to crumble in 2015, when officers in American Capital Realty Partners admitted to misreporting company profits to investors and the SEC. According to a report in the Philadelphia Inquirer, many of Dutton’s customers were Philadelphia police, firefighters and their families.  . undefined. from FA News http://www.fa-mag.com/news/pennsylvania-levies-record-breaking-fine-against-florida-broker-33870.html
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rexsecuritieslaw · 3 years ago
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Gilford Ward Negard- Former Newbridge Financial Broker- Discloses Regulatory Event, Customer Disputes and a Termination From Employment - Phoenix, AZ
Gilford Ward Negard- Former Newbridge Financial Broker- Discloses Regulatory Event, Customer Disputes and a Termination From Employment – Phoenix, AZ
September 2021- Phoenix, AZ According to publicly available records,  Guilford Negard,  a currently unregistered  financial advisor who previously was employed by Newbridge Financial Services discloses a regulatory event , 4 prior customer disputes, a currently pending customer disputes and a termination from employment. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that…
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rexsecuritieslaw · 2 years ago
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Betsy Whipple-Newbridge Securities Broker-Customer Seeks $500,000 For Alternative Investment Loss- Hike, NV
Betsy Whipple-Newbridge Securities Broker-Customer Seeks $500,000 For Alternative Investment Loss- Hike, NV
Betsy Whipple Newbridge Securities Investigation Hiko, Nevada According to publicly available records Betsy Lou Whipple, a broker who works for Newbridge Securities Corp. ,  discloses that a customer is seeking damages as a result of losses suffered after investing in alternative investments. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that licenses and regulates…
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rexsecuritieslaw · 2 years ago
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Robert Bragg-Newbridge Securities Broker-Discloses Customer Disputes Over Alternative Investments- Monument, CO
Robert Bragg-Newbridge Securities Broker-Discloses Customer Disputes Over Alternative Investments- Monument, CO
Robert C. Bragg Investigation Monument,  Colorado According to publicly available records Robert Charles Bragg, a broker who works for Newbridge Securities,  discloses a pending customer dispute and a prior regulatory matter. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that licenses and regulates stockbrokers and brokerage firms. FINRA requires brokers and brokerage firms to…
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rexsecuritieslaw · 3 years ago
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Megurditch "Mike" Patatian -Former Western International Securities Broker- Allegedly Sold Unsuitable REITs- Westlake Village, CA
Megurditch “Mike” Patatian -Former Western International Securities Broker- Allegedly Sold Unsuitable REITs- Westlake Village, CA
Megurditch “Mike” Patatian Investigation November 2021- Westlake Village, CA According to publicly available records,  Mike Patatian a former broker who was last employed by Western International Securities, Inc. discloses a pending regulatory event , 9 prior customer disputes and 3 terminations from employment. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the agency that licenses and…
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rexsecuritieslaw · 3 years ago
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Gilford Ward Nergard- Former Raymond James Broker- Discloses Regulatory Event, Customer Disputes and a Termination From Employment - Phoenix, AZ
Gilford Ward Nergard- Former Raymond James Broker- Discloses Regulatory Event, Customer Disputes and a Termination From Employment – Phoenix, AZ
Guilford Nergard Investigaton November 2021- Phoenix, AZ According to publicly available records,  Guilford Negard,  a currently unregistered  financial advisor who previously was employed by Raymond James discloses a regulatory event , 4 prior customer disputes, a currently pending customer disputes and a termination from employment. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is the…
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