Monday, June 20, 2011

Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against FINRA for Violating Brokers' Constitutional Due Process Rights


Block & Landsman joined other firms in filing a class action lawsuit against the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) seeking injunctive relief to stop the regulatory authority from violating the constitutional due process rights of registered representatives. Specifically, FINRA Rule 3010(b)(2), known as the Taping Rule, requires brokerage firms to establish special supervisory procedures, including the tape recording of broker conversations, when they employ more than a specified percentage of representatives who were previously employed by firms that have been expelled or had their registrations revoked for sales practice rule violations (referred to as "disciplined firms").

FINRA's Rule imposes a "guilt-by-association" standard by tainting brokers who worked for a disciplined firm even though the representatives had no involvement in any activity that led to the firm's expulsion or revocation. Even if the registered representatives worked left the firm before the misconduct occurred, they are nonetheless deemed to be "tainted." The special supervisory procedures required of firms that hire enough of these brokers are burdensome and expensive, and can be avoided only by reducing the number of so-called "tainted" brokers. Subsequent employers can avoid having to implement the procedures by reducing the number of affected brokers below a qualifying number.

As a result, brokers who are "tainted" face termination, or the inability to be hired, on the basis of nothing more than their past association with a prior disciplined firm. And FINRA provides no mechanism for a former broker of a disciplined firm to remove the "taint" arbitrarily imposed by FINRA's rule, thereby violating their due process rights and subjecting them to arbitrary termination.