Report Finds 'No Evidence' of Secret Agreement Between Wells Fargo, FINRA
A law firm hired by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority found “no evidence” of a secret agreement between an attorney for Wells Fargo and the self-regulatory organization to exclude certain arbitrators from a particular proceeding after a Georgia court overturned an arbitration award on that basis, according to a report released by FINRA.
In February, a Georgia Superior Court overturned an arbitration award previously decided in favor of Wells Fargo, arguing that counsel for Wells Fargo “manipulated the FINRA arbitrator selection process” and violated FINRA’s code for arbitration proceedings. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Belinda Edwards penned the decision vacating the award levied against petitioners Brian Leggett and Bryson Holdings for more than $80,000, saying they were denied the right to a computer-generated neutral list of arbitrators and that Wells Fargo counsel was able to have particular arbitrators removed as options for selection.
wealthmanagement.com
FINRA released a report from independent counsel Lowenstein Sandler, concluding there was no agreement between Wells Fargo’s counsel and the regulator to exclude certain arbitrators.

