Schwab Seeks to Block Former Advisor From Soliciting Clients

News December 19, 2024 at 06:00 PM
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Charles Schwab has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas seeking a preliminary injunction to prevent its former advisor, Robert Van Ortega, from soliciting clients for his new registered investment advisor firm, Nhabla Wealth Management.

The firm claims that Ortega took confidential and trade secret information about Schwab’s clients and then used that information to solicit the clients’ business. The complaint further alleges Ortega has breached his contractual obligations to Schwab and broken “numerous laws, including those protecting Schwab’s trade secrets.”

Schwab’s lawsuit seeks injunctive relief to halt Ortega’s alleged ongoing misconduct, noting that, in his former capacity as a Schwab registered representative, Ortega served high-net-worth clients with some $1.5 billion in assets.

Ortega could not immediately be reached for comment.

According to the complaint, Ortega resigned from Schwab, without providing advance notice, on July 1.

“In the weeks and months following his departure, Schwab discovered the scope and extent of the misconduct Ortega committed, both during and after his employment,” the complaint states. “A review of Ortega’s computer activities in the weeks leading up to his departure from Schwab, along with eyewitness testimony, strongly suggest that Ortega intentionally and maliciously misappropriated confidential and trade secret client information.”

Specifically, the lawsuit suggests Ortega reviewed nearly 1,700 client-overview screens in a proprietary Schwab database in early May — including after normal business hours. Ortega allegedly repeated this pattern of activity over the next few weeks.

“Moreover, multiple reports from Schwab’s clients indicate that Ortega has used, and is presently using, Schwab’s misappropriated trade secrets in furtherance of wrongful solicitation of its clients,” the complain states.

The lawsuit argues Schwab and Ortega are obligated to arbitrate the merits of this dispute consistent with the arbitration rules and regulations of FINRA. Accordingly, concurrently with the filing of its court action, Schwab has also filed a statement of claim with FINRA Dispute Resolution seeking binding arbitration of the dispute pursuant to FINRA Rule 13804.

Credit: Bloomberg

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