Thursday, February 28, 2008

Alberta Securities Commission helps out fraud?

Feb 25, 2008

Media Release and key question for Alberta Provincial Election Candidates

From: Larry Elford, founder of http://www.investoradvocates.ca/ Representing the interests of several hundred ethically proven investment industry professionals, and several hundred thousand investment consumers.

Fact #1 Financial industry dealers are allowed to self regulate (police themselves) in Alberta.

Fact #2 Financial industry participants are allowed direct access to the law and to the Alberta Securities Commission (the ASC). In contrast, consumers are directed to a non-government body.

Fact #3 If you were to approach the ASC with a complaint, you would be referred to “self-regulatory” agencies, which are private, funded, paid, and responsible only to the industry the consumer is complaining of. Consumers are not only denied access to the protection of Securities Law in Alberta, they are forced to report financial abuse directly to the association of dealers that they are complaining of.

Fact #4 If consumers wanted to rob a financial institution, they would not be allowed to alter the law to make their robbery “legal”. When financial institutions wish to rob consumers, they are allowed to go to the Alberta Securities Commission and apply for “exemptive relief” from the law. This makes anything they do to you, under this exemption “legal”.

Fact #5 There have been several thousand such exemptions to the law in Alberta over the years. All done with no public input, no involvement of a judge, no public notice, and no consumer representation in the actual decision making process. The Alberta Securities Commission refuses to provide reasons to show how those exemptions are in the public interest in any way. As a consumer you will get more notice of your neighbor’s plan to build a garage too close to your fence, than you will get if your financial advisory firm chooses to dump bad products on you using a legal exemption.

Fact #6 The Alberta Securities Commission is partially funded by financial dealers, and part time commissioners earn $180,000 per year. Top-level salaries at our ASC are above $500,000. Does this explain why our securities law gets “adjusted” for dealers?

Fact #7 Police are rarely invited to prosecute these kinds of financial crimes or frauds. Other criminal code violations get treated and handled by police agencies, while Securities Act violations are handled by an industry policy of letting the “financial industry look after the financial industry”. Fraud, forgery, breach of trust, etc., are among the types of illegal acts which fall under the “we look after ourselves” category. These acts will continue to occur unless we do something about it.

I ask candidates to call for a public inquiry under the Provincial Inquiries Act. An inquiry into failure to protect Albertans and failure to give the public access to the law. One case alone consists of an alleged $800 million dollar abuse of customers. Would you support such an initiative, and will you ask for public inquiry into these failures on behalf of all Albertan’s?


Larry Elford, (former CFP, CIM, FCSI, Associate Portfolio Manager, retired, 2004 after twenty years of trying without success to improve conditions in the industry)

lelford@shaw.ca