Ex-broker: I forced out regional Finra director

An ex-broker claims his letter to Richard Ketchum led to the resignation weeks later of Finra's Florida regional director. Dan Jamieson reports.
OCT 16, 2013
By  DJAMIESON
Finra said this week that its Southern regional director Mitchell C. Atkins had resigned to pursue other interests — but a self-proclaimed whistleblower is taking credit for his departure. Former broker David Evansen in May wrote to Richard Ketchum, Finra's chief executive, and Susan Axelrod, executive vice president of regulatory operations, claiming that in 1993 Mr. Atkins was indicted in Louisiana on a criminal charge. The charge alleged that he used money raised in bingo games for non-charitable purposes, which is against state law. Along with the letter, Mr. Evansen, of New Lisbon, Wis., provided legal documents he had uncovered. His motivation for sending the missive? Mr. Evansen claims Mr. Atkins was engaged in a “spurious enforcement action” against him. Mr. Evansen believes his letter led to Mr. Atkins' resignation, although he has no proof. “There may be a lot of extenuating circumstances behind [Mr. Atkins' resignation],” he said. “But yes, I think it's because of my letter.” The documents he sent to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. show that Mr. Atkins was indicted on a felony and a misdemeanor charge in March 1993. The felony charge was dismissed in late 1993 when Mr. Atkins pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor charge. He was sentenced in early 1994 to conditional probation, 100 hours of community service, a $500 charitable contribution, and a $500 fine. The misdemeanor charge against him was set aside and the court record supposedly expunged in March 1994 after Mr. Atkins had complied with the terms of his sentence. This information comes from handwritten docket entries and other court records from the Nineteenth Judicial District Criminal Court in Baton Rouge. Mr. Atkins' name was not completely redacted from the documents. Via email, Finra spokeswoman Nancy Condon maintains that Mr. Atkins resigned to pursue other interests. “People resign and leave organizations all the time,” she wrote, declining further comment. Several sources said Mr. Atkins is expected to leave at the end of the month. A call to Finra's Boca Raton, Fla., office in an attempt to speak with Mr. Atkins was referred to Ms. Condon. The Boca Raton office covers the state of Florida, and as regional director, Mr. Atkins has additional responsibility for offices in Atlanta, Dallas and New Orleans. Mr. Evansen's letter has been passed around from broker to broker and to others in the industry over the past several weeks, giving rise to speculation that it triggered Mr. Atkins' departure. “The timing [of Mr. Atkins' resignation] is interesting, at a minimum,” coming just weeks after the letter was sent, said Alan Wolper, a partner at Ulmer & Berne LLP, and a former director of Finra's Atlanta office. Having a top enforcer who had been subject to a criminal charge would obviously be a problem for Finra, observers said. “There's no way a [broker-dealer] firm could have hired Mitch (20 years ago),” said Joel Blumenschein, president of Freedom Investors Corp. “If we had [hired him], God knows we would've gotten whacked for not doing our due diligence,” said Mr. Blumenschein, who resigned from the Finra board a year ago after settling a failure-to-supervise case with the regulator. Ms. Condon would not comment on whether Finra knew about Mr. Atkins' criminal charge before Finra received Mr. Evansen's letter. Mr. Atkins joined Finra's New Orleans office in 1993 before the court records of his case were expunged. He was seen as an up-and-comer within Finra, where he had enjoyed a series of promotions. Mr. Atkins was named the first director for the Boca Raton office, Finra's first Florida office, when it opened in 2005. “He was told to go clean up South Florida [and] the 'maggot mile' in Boca [Raton]” where a lot of bucket shops operated, Mr. Wolper said. Known as a tough enforcer, Mr. Atkins has ruffled feathers among many smaller firms in his district. Mr. Evansen worked at several firms that had run-ins with Finra, including Newbridge Securities Corp. and Jesup & Lamont Securities Corp. He says he clashed with Finra examiners in Florida when he worked at Newbridge from 2003 to 2009. A Finra hearing panel last August barred him from the industry for failing to answer questions about several customer complaints he received at Newbridge. Mr. Evansen, who is appealing the ban, said he had not been properly notified of the inquiry and responded to Finra's questions in 2011. He has seven customer disputes on his record, including four settlements worth a total of $462,500 with Newbridge customers, according to Finra's BrokerCheck system. Mr. Evansen said the firm settled over the sale of private placements that he was not involved with, and that he did not contribute to the settlements. He left the industry in July 2010, and now works as a logistics consultant.

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