Securities law experts on Thursday expressed doubt that the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority will lose its ability to bar bad brokers as a result of an ongoing case pitting the Securities and Exchange Commission against a broker that FINRA barred back in 2008.
However, if the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit rules against the SEC and in favor of ex-broker John M.E. Saad in Saad v. SEC, it would be an "earthquake-sized ruling for FINRA," according to John Curley, partner at New York law firm Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney.
In an upcoming hearing in the case, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals will consider, among other things, whether an industry bar for broker misconduct can ever be a permissible sanction in a FINRA enforcement proceeding.
Saad, who was barred from the industry following a FINRA disciplinary proceeding that the regulator said proved he submitted false expense reports to his employer and misled investigators about his actions, argued that after the U.S. Supreme Court's 2017 opinion in Kokesh v. SEC, a FINRA lifetime ban is "punitive" and therefore not a proper FINRA sanction.
The matter has been slowly making its way through the courts. Most recently, the SEC ruled against Saad. However, that decision is now on appeal in the D.C. Circuit.
"One of the issues the Circuit may have to resolve is whether an industry ban is 'remedial' or 'punitive,'" according to Curley, who represents clients in securities-related regulatory investigations and proceedings.
"There is precedent that FINRA may only impose 'remedial' and not 'punitive' sanctions, and this is where Kokesh's analysis of what makes a court-ordered relief 'remedial' or 'punitive' could be relevant," Curley said. "Of particular note is that in the D.C. Circuit's remand ruling, then-Circuit Judge [Brett] Kavanaugh concurred in the decision with a forceful argument that an industry bar is not remedial," Curley pointed out.