Articles Tagged with J.P. Turner

David Mura was recently barred by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) over allegations concerning the sale of unregistered securities away from his associated brokerage firm.

From September 2002 through April 2011, Mura was a registered representative and branch office manager with J.P. Turner & Co., LLC (J.P. Turner), a broker-dealer headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.  Thereafter, Mura was associated with Aegis Capital Corp. from April 2011 until October 2012.  According to the SEC, from mid-2007 through 2012, Mura led a team of individuals that managed several limited liability companies (LLCs) including Charge-On Demand LLC (COD), Innovations Group Enterprises LLC (IGE), and Stucco LLC and directed and participated an effort to solicit investors in the sale of unregistered promissory notes issued by the LLCs (LLC Promissory Notes).

According to the SEC’s order, Rising Storm Technologies LLC (“Rising Storm”) was created 2006 to pursue various business ideas.  Mura invested in Rising Storm in 2008 and caused the LLCs to take over Rising Storm’s business.  Edward Tackaberry (Tackaberry), a resident of Fairport, New York was allegedly employed by Mura as a product salesman.  Tackaberry had been previously barred from associating with any broker or dealer based on a September 2007 case brought by the SEC accusing Tackaberry of securities fraud.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) recently entered a default decision against George Alexander Kardaras (Kardaras) and Brian Matt Borakowski (Borakowski) after having alleged that the two brokers perpetrated a Ponzi scheme.  FINRA found that the two solicited at least 12 customers over four years to invest more than $665,000 in total in Echo Canyon promissory notes.  The notes bore interest rates between 14 to 56 percent and had quarterly, semiannual, and annual maturity dates.

Kardas’ and Borakowski’s scheme involved soliciting customers to purchase promissory notes in Echo Canyon LLC, a limited liability company in Arizona.  Kardas and Borakowski told investors that their investment would be used to purchase used vehicles in U.S. auto auctions and shipped to Russia for re-sale.  FINRA determined that Kardaras and Borakowski never intended to use the customer funds as represented.  Instead, only two automobiles for EchoCanyon in or around late 2007 or early 2008 were actually purchased.

FINRA found that 95 percent of the funds raised, approximately $634,000 were used by the two brokers in order to pay personal expenses, to cover expenses at their employer firms’ branch office businesses, and to make payments to earlier investors in furtherance of the Ponzi scheme.

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