Wedbush ordered to pay $3.5M for 'morally reprehensible failure'

Wedbush Securities Inc. was ordered to pay former municipal bond trader Stephen Kelleher $3.5 million for failing to give him years' worth of incentive-based compensation he was owed
JUL 17, 2011
Wedbush Securities Inc. was ordered to pay former municipal bond trader Stephen Kelleher $3.5 million for failing to give him years' worth of incentive-based compensation he was owed. A three-person Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. panel found that the firm's “morally reprehensible failure and refusal to compensate” him in a timely fashion broke California's labor laws. A “poorly written and ambiguous employment contract” was partly to blame, the Finra panel said. “Bringing the suit was a last resort for Mr. Kelleher,” said his attorney, Kit Knudsen, a partner at Commins & Knudsen PC. “No one wants to be on record being in an adversarial relationship with an employer.” Mr. Kelleher, who joined Wedbush in 2007, had requested $4.2 million in bonus compensation that he was due, but he is satisfied with the arbitration award, Mr. Knudsen said. Mr. Kelleher resigned days after the arbitration case finished up and he isn't employed now, the lawyer said. Wedbush plans to appeal the ruling, its attorney, John Stetson, said. He declined to comment on the case. Wedbush had been paying Mr. Kelleher's salary but not the incentive compensation that he was due, Mr. Knudsen said. The arbitration panel also blamed “a corporate management structure” that required Edward W. Wedbush, the majority shareholder in the firm, to approve bonus pay to senior employees. That approval “was routinely withheld,” the Finra panel wrote. Another Wedbush employee testified that he also went for two years without receiving the incentive-based compensation due him, Mr. Knudsen said. Mr. Wedbush was originally named in the suit. Mr. Kelleher dropped the case against him during the hearing, however, after Mr. Wedbush requested to testify in person, which would have delayed the hearing. E-mail Liz Skinner at [email protected].

Latest News

Why fixed income still belongs in your clients' portfolios
Why fixed income still belongs in your clients' portfolios

In an era of AI euphoria and market FOMO, getting back to basics with fixed income may be the most contrarian and most important move advisors can make.

Voya expands advisor managed accounts to add private market assets
Voya expands advisor managed accounts to add private market assets

Voya Financial adds private equity, credit and real estate options to its AMA program, building on support for looser federal investment rules in retirement accounts.

With executives leaving, Osaic’s Reid now in the spotlight
With executives leaving, Osaic’s Reid now in the spotlight

Shannon Reid, president of Osaic and the network’s number two executive, has plenty of challenges, industry executives said.

Investors sue crypto fund and platform, alleging $1.5 million never returned
Investors sue crypto fund and platform, alleging $1.5 million never returned

Auditors flagged the commingling. The COO allegedly knew. Investors kept getting the pitch

Wells Fargo nabs $1.7B RBC advisor team, loses two teams to LPL
Wells Fargo nabs $1.7B RBC advisor team, loses two teams to LPL

The advisors on the move include two brothers leading a family practice in Connecticut, and a husband-and-wife tandem working with business owners in the West Coast.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.