In June 2024 Western terminated Higgins for cause alleging that the firm was investigating the conduct of Higgins following his notification to Western that he had been misdirecting client investments and funds and misappropriating client investments and funds to his own use, starting in approximately 2007 at his prior broker-dealer firm, and that these activities have continued through to the current date.
On July 1, 2024, Higgins accepted a permanent industry bar with FINRA by failing to respond to the regulator’s requests for documents and information. According to FINRA, Higgins consented to the sanction and to the entry of findings that he refused to produce information and documents and refused to appear for testimony requested by FINRA during the course of a matter that originated from an examination by FINRA following a regulatory tip. FINRA found that Higgins’ member firm filed a Form U5 stating that he was discharged based on his notification to it that he had been misdirecting client investments and funds and misappropriating client investments and funds to his own use, starting at his prior broker-dealer firm, and that these activities have continued through to the date of termination.
Our law firm has significant experience bringing cases on behalf of defrauded victims when their advisors engage in receiving loans from clients or selling securities sales through OBAs. The sale of unapproved investment products, fake investments that cover misappropriated funds, and other fraudulent behavior – is a practice known in the industry as “selling away” – a serious violation of the securities laws. In the industry the term selling away refers to when a financial advisor solicits investments in companies, promissory notes, or other securities that are not pre-approved by the broker’s affiliated firm. Sometimes those investments have some legitimacy but often times these types of investments can end up being Ponzi schemes or the advisor can be engaging in the conversion of funds.
However, federal securities laws and the FINRA rules require firms to monitor and supervise its employees in order to detect and prevent brokers from offering investments in this fashion. In order to properly supervise their brokers each firm is required to have procedures in order to monitor the activities of each advisor’s activities and interaction with the public. Selling away misconduct often occurs where brokerage firms either fail to put in place a reasonable supervisory system or fail to actually implement that system. Supervisory failures allow brokers to engage in unsupervised misconduct that can include all manner improper conduct including selling away.
In cases of selling away the investor is unaware that the advisor’s investments are improper. In many of these cases the investor will not learn that the broker’s activities were wrongful until after the investment scheme is publicized, the broker is fired or charged by law enforcement, or stops returning client calls altogether.
Higgins entered the securities industry in 1997. From 1997 until August 2017 Higgins was registered with Financial West Group. From August 2017 until June 2024 Higgins was registered with Western International Securities out of the firm’s Baker City, Oregon branch office location.
Investors who have suffered losses are encouraged to contact us at (800) 810-4262 for consultation. Investors may be able recover their losses through securities arbitration. The attorneys at Gana Weinstein LLP are experienced in representing investors in cases of selling away and brokerage firms failure to supervise their representatives. Our consultations are free of charge and the firm is only compensated if you recover.