Former GunnAllen Broker Accused Of A Ponzi

Apr 16, 2008 6:14 PM, By Christina Mucciolo


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines  

It seems GunnAllen has another embarrassment on its hands: Seven investors who say they were the victims of a Ponzi scheme by Frank Bluestein, a former GunnAllen rep, have filed an arbitration claim against the Tampa firm.

Bluestein’s association with Maximum Financial and b/d GunnAllen ended in October after being terminated by GunnAllen for selling unregistered securities. Bluestein is the object of extensive Detroit-area media coverage, and is being investigated by Michigan state securities regulators and the SEC. Apparently, after GunnAllen, Bluestein moved down the street where, according to a Detroit Fox News affiliate, he set up shop under the name “Frank Julian,” as a member of the “research team” at a company called Freedom Road, which claims to be in the business of “stock selection and market education.”

Bluestein was also allegedly involved in a fraudulent scheme to entice his clients to invest with Detroit-area resident Edward May, and May’s firm E-M Management Co. LLC. The SEC filed a lawsuit against May, and his firm, on November 20, charging him with defrauding $250 million from as many as 1,200 investors between 1998 and July 2007. May was selling shares of limited-liability companies, which he claimed had received revenues from telecommunication contracts (allegedly phony) with Las Vegas hotels, casino and resorts.

“Nobody is accusing GunnAllen of running a crooked business—indeed, the company says it goes to great lengths to investigate the nature of customer complaints, and to eliminate the truly bad eggs. And, today, the firm no longer hires reps with more than three marks—no matter the circumstances,” says founder Richard Allen Frueh (pronounced “free”). But the number of marked up reps still at the firm—and the notoriety of one of the firm's top producers, who has a whopping 24 hits on his U4—still raises questions,” as Registered Rep. reported in a 2005 story, Growth at a Price.


Commenting terms of use blog comments powered by Disqus

Current Issue

Registered Rep Cover

Humbled But (Somehow) Triumphant

By Kristen French With reporting from John Churchill and Halah Touryalai
October 1, 2008

Rescued by Bank of America from its near-death experience, Merrill Lynch is still managing to set the industry standard.



browse back issues


Featured Book

Cannon’s Concepts For Professionals: A Complete Library of Essential Financial Concepts 

This reference book was updated for 2008 and now contains over 900 pages of information on essential financial concepts and wealth management strategies for your work with wealthy clients. The book not only contains brief summaries of each topic, but it also contains many useful diagrams and charts that can be used with clients when explaining difficult financial concepts. The information in this book meets current FINRA/NASD guidelines....

Bookstore

Rainmaker
Mastering High Net Worth Mastering High Net Worth
Back to Top