Brokers' lawyer says Finra adds intimidation to Belesis shop query

An attorney for brokers who left John Thomas Financial claims Finra is probing whether the brokerage tried to intimidate the departed reps.
JUN 13, 2013
John Thomas Financial is facing questions by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. about accusations that it attempted to intimidate brokers who have left the firm, according to the attorney representing a group of the brokers. Finra sent a Wells notice in January to Anastasios “Tommy” Belesis, the owner and head of the firm, indicating that the brokerage industry's self-regulator may commence disciplinary actions against him. Asked whether Finra was investigating John Thomas for harassing brokers, an attorney for the independent broker-dealer, Robert Bursky, said he could not comment “on any pending regulatory investigation that is non-public.” Finra spokeswoman Nancy Condon declined to comment. John Thomas “has been around five years, hundreds of brokers have been employed and there's never been a claim filed regarding harassment,” Mr. Bursky said. Richard Roth, the attorney representing the group of five brokers who left John Thomas in December, said he became concerned when he saw a letter sent by John Thomas on Thursday to the brokers. In the letter, a John Thomas compliance officer said the firm had initiated a review of the broker's Form U-5, or the notice of the broker's termination. In the letter, the firm, which sued the brokers in January and later dropped the charges, said it had scheduled interviews with the reps at its headquarters in New York this month and that the interview would be transcribed by a court reporter. Should a broker not appear or decline to answer questions, it could spell trouble for the broker's U-5. John Thomas “may conclude that you are declining to provide reasonable cooperation in the internal review, which in and of itself, may be a conclusion the firm reports” to the group that maintains brokers' employment records, the Central Registration Depository. “This letter is outrageous,” said Mr. Roth. “I know Finra is conducting an investigation into how [John Thomas] treats its brokers that have departed and into the firm's intimidation tactics of its brokers. This letter insists that the broker come back and either be drilled by John Thomas and its attorneys, or, if they do not, threatens to again ding their U-5,” Mr. Roth said. “I have never seen such bad faith misconduct.” Mr. Bursky acknowledged that when the brokers left in December, John Thomas contacted the New York Police Department, Mr. Bursky said. “The authorities, the police, have been alerted to this, absolutely,” he said. The brokers “walked out with their books and they wound up returning them, most likely after copying them,” he said. “That's a crystal clear admission of taking what didn't belong to them.” Mr. Bursky added: “To my knowledge, there has been no outcome” of that complaint. The firm's internal review was standard industry procedure, he said. The group of brokers in question, led by Renos Gordos, filed their own affidavit last month alleging that Mr. Belesis ran a pump-and-dump stock scheme. “This is the brokers' time to put everything on the record,” said Mr. Bursky, noting that the firm has chosen to drop its lawsuit against the brokers but is pursuing the claim in Finra arbitration. “I challenge them to show up.” This latest dust up is another headache for John Thomas and Mr. Belesis, who is already facing a potential Finra disciplinary action, including for deceptive and/or fraudulent means of artificially inflating the price of a stock. John Thomas has about 200 representatives.

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