Subscribe

Finra bars broker accused of stealing $1 million from clients

The broker, James Thomas Booth, joined LPL as a result of the firm's NPH acquisition.

Finra has barred a former LPL Financial broker for taking at least $1 million from clients for his personal use.

The broker, James Thomas Booth, took the funds from several customers over a five-year period through May 2019, according to a Finra letter of acceptance, waiver and consent filed July 1.

Instead of investing the money on clients’ behalf, Mr. Booth deposited the funds into an account he controlled, and used them for personal means, the regulator said.

(More: Here’s what top Finra executives get paid)

Mr. Booth’s attorney, Frank P. Bevilacqua of DePanfilis & Vallerie, declined to comment.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. launched an investigation of Mr. Booth’s conduct after receiving information from LPL, which had conducted its own internal investigation into his conduct. LPL fired Mr. Booth in May as a result of that investigation.

(More: Finra arbitration panel awards client $967,000 in churning, fraud, negligence case)

Mr. Booth joined LPL in February 2018 after his previous firm, Invest Financial Corp., was purchased by LPL as part of its acquisition of the National Planning Holdings brokerage network.

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

SEC issues FAQs on investment advice rule

The agency published answers to four questions about Form CRS.

SEC proposes tougher sales rule for exchange-traded products

The agency, concerned about consumer protection, says clients need a baseline understanding of product risk

Pete Buttigieg proposes a ‘public’ 401(k) program

The proposal is similar to others seeking to improve access to workplace retirement plans but would require an employer match.

DOL digital 401(k) rule not digital enough, industry says

Some stakeholders say the disclosure proposal is still paper-centric and should take into account newer technologies.

Five brokers lose Ohio National lawsuit over annuity commissions

Judge rules the brokers weren't beneficiaries of the selling agreement between the insurer and broker-dealers.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print