The Securities and Exchange Commission has obtained a final judgment against California-registered investment adviser representative Paul Horton Smith Sr., his companies Northstar Communications and Planning Services, and his California-registered investment adviser eGate, for perpetrating a $5.6 million investment fraud that targeted retirees and pre-retirees in Southern California.
Smith was previously charged in a parallel criminal action and is currently awaiting trial.
In May, the SEC alleged that Smith and his entities defrauded at least 35 investors by falsely claiming that Smith and Northstar would pay investors guaranteed interest based on investments in specified products. The complaint alleged that they failed to invest the funds raised as promised and instead used new investor funds to pay investor returns in a Ponzi-like fashion.
The final judgment orders the defendants, jointly and severally, to disgorge $4.24 million in ill-gotten gains plus prejudgment interest of $383,059, and orders Smith to pay a civil penalty of $4.24 million.
The fintech giant is doubling down on its strategy to reach independent advisors through a newly created leadership role.
The two firms are strengthening their presence in California with advisor teams from RBC and Silicon Valley Bank.
The high court's decision rebuffing Alpine Securities marks a setback for a broader challenge to Wall Street's reliance on self-regulatory organizations.
Arax acquires a boutique firm's $4 billion RIA business in Michigan as Steward Partners continues its Southwestern expansion.
Wealth management is a key focus for a new service tier.
How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave
From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.