The Expert's Examiner


Compton v. Merrill Lynch and Buck, FINRA ID No. 20-02468 (Memphis, TN, May 6, 2022))
July 6, 2022

Compton v. Merrill Lynch and Buck, FINRA ID No. 20-02468 (Memphis, TN, May 6, 2022)

As widely reported in the media, a former Merrill Lynch broker, who had earlier this year been released from prison after serving a three-plus year sentence resulting from his misconduct, was hit with a more than $7 million Award. READ MORE

Financial services media widely reported recently that former broker Tom Buck had been released from prison in January after serving a 40-month sentence for “overcharging clients by more than $2 million” (see, for example, Months After Release from Prison, Ex-Merrill Broker Tom Buck Ordered to Pay $7.5 Mln, reported May 9 by  AdvisorHub. On May 9, the All-Public Panel in Compton v. Merrill Lynch and Buck, FINRA ID No. 20-02468 (Memphis, TN), rendered an Award of over $7.5 million against him (the claims against Merrill were voluntarily withdrawn with prejudice.) We analyze the case below.

Claims Asserted
In the customer’s Statement of Claim: “Claimant asserted the following causes of action: violation of Indiana’s Corrupt Business Influence Act - Operating An Enterprise Through A Pattern Of Racketeering; violation of Indiana Corrupt Business Influence Act - Use Of Racketeering Proceeds to Operate an Enterprise; violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act - Operating An Enterprise Through A Pattern Of Racketeering; Civil Recovery Under Indiana’s Crime Victim Statute; breach of fiduciary duty; fraud; and negligent supervision and ratification. The causes of action relate to overtrading of long-term securities and overcharging of commissions by Respondent Buck in Claimant’s MLPFS accounts, and the alleged lack of supervision by Respondent MLPFS.”

Damages Sought
Compton sought: “an amount equal to the returns Claimant lost due to Respondents’ alleged failure to prudently manage her accounts (e.g. well-managed damages); disgorgement of the balance of the commissions Claimant had not recovered to date from the SEC’s Victim’s Fund; pre-judgement interest at the highest rate allowed by law; treble damages; attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses; punitive/exemplary damages; and such other, different or additional relief and damages which the Panel deemed to be just and equitable.”

The Award
The claims against Merrill were dismissed voluntarily with prejudice, leaving the claims asserted against Buck individually. After denying Bucks’ motion to dismiss based on timeliness and eligibility, the Panel awarded as follows (ed: presented essentially verbatim):

The $40,050 in hearing session fees were assessed as follows: $6,412.50 against Claimant; $5,512.50 jointly and severally to Merrill and Buck; $28,125 to Buck.

(ed: *We checked with SAC’s Award Database to see how this fit among the largest awards in securities arbitration, etc. The Buck award is the largest compensatory award in a customer-initiated case, in which sole liability was assessed against an individual by a FINRA Panel. There are a fair number of bigger awards against individuals where punitive damages were the bulk of the award. Thus, the “compensatory” qualifier. “Sole liability” is also key, because there have been many larger joint and several awards against two or more individual respondents. **We reached out to one of Buck’s attorneys, David Robbins, who said: “I had the distinct privilege to be on teams of attorneys in Indiana and New York, with the significant participation of a stellar expert from Ohio, representing Tom Buck in the criminal case in Indiana and in the one arbitration filed against him, in Tennessee. We have discussed the options available to Tom and he is considering them.” ***This is definitely one to watch.)