Ex-WFG Investment Stockbroker Accused of Allegedly Defrauding Over 500 Senior Investors Agrees To Disgorge Ill-Gotten Earnings

Sidney Mondschein, a former WFG Investment stockbroker, must disgorge $53,000 in ill-gotten gains he allegedly obtained when he defrauded over 500 senior investors by selling their confidential data to insurance brokers. Last month, Mondschein settled Securities and Exchange Commission charges before the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

By settling, the SEC says that the former broker is not admitting to or denying the charges. As part of his agreement, Mondschein agreed to a bar preventing him from associating with any dealers or brokers for five years. He is also permanently enjoined from violating the 1934 Securities Exchange Act’s Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5, as well as Regulation S-P. He must also pay a $45,000 penalty.

The SEC complaint has alleged that Mondschein illegally sold for profit the confidential data of over 500 clients, almost all of them senior citizens, to six insurance agents. Information included contact information and, sometimes, the dollar figure that an investor had spent on the last annuity. This sale allowed the insurance brokers to sell the investors more annuity products, even though the majority of them already had purchased equity-indexed or fixed annuities.

The insurers reportedly paid the stockbroker anywhere from $50 to $150 for the information. Mondschein also allegedly received customer commissions from the investors that employed his services to sell securities so they could buy the new annuities.

Mondschein allegedly created UNCI Inc. so that he could carry out his investment scam. He did not tell the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority or WFG Investment that UNCI Inc. existed.

Elderly investor fraud is a problem that must be stopped. Our stockbroker fraud attorneys at Shepherd Smith and Edwards have helped many senior investor fraud victims recover their losses. Contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards today.

Related Web Resources:
Broker Allegedly Sold Customers’ Personal and Confidential Information to Insurance Agents as Sales “Leads” for Annuity Products, SEC.gov, December 6, 2007

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