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Federal Prescription Drug Charges
Drug importation is always a federal crime. There is no state equivalent. The moment controlled substances cross the United States border from any foreign country, federal jurisdiction attaches automatically and exclusively. State courts have no authority to prosecute importation because states have no jurisdiction over international boundaries. This means everyone caught bringing drugs across the […]
read moreFederal Cocaine Charges: Same Drug, 18:1 Disparity, Decades in Prison
Federal cocaine sentencing operates on a fiction that destroys lives: the weight on the scale determines your mandatory minimum, not the actual cocaine content. A kilogram of 25% pure cocaine counts as a kilogram at sentencing – even though 750 grams is cutting agent, filler, adulterant. The mixture weight triggers the threshold. Your purity argument […]
read moreD&O Insurance and SEC Investigations
Most executives believe their D&O insurance will protect them if the SEC comes calling. They’re often wrong. Directors and officers liability insurance is one of the most misunderstood coverages in corporate America. Executives assume they have protection that doesn’t exist. They discover the gaps only when they need coverage most – when they’re facing an […]
read moreArrested by the DEA: What to Do Next
Arrested by the DEA: What to Do Next The DEA didn’t just start investigating you when they knocked on your door. They finished investigating you. That’s the thing nobody understands about federal drug enforcement. By the time agents show up with handcuffs, they’ve already spent six months, twelve months, maybe two years building a case […]
read moreBest Federal Drug Defense Lawyer: What to Look For
Best Federal Drug Defense Lawyer: What to Look For The lawyer you hire in the first seventy-two hours after federal drug charges determines whether you’re looking at decades in prison or a manageable sentence. This isn’t exaggeration. The average federal drug sentence with a mandatory minimum is 144 months – twelve years. Without a mandatory […]
read moreThe 851 Enhancement
The 851 Enhancement: How Prior Drug Felonies Double Your Federal Sentence The 851 enhancement exists for thousands of defendants but is only filed against a fraction of them. In fiscal year 2016, exactly 6,153 defendants were eligible for the enhancement based on prior drug felonies. Only 757 had the enhancement filed against them – just […]
read moreCan Officers Go to Jail for SEC Violations?
Can Officers Go to Jail for SEC Violations? Yes. Officers go to federal prison for securities violations regularly. Bernie Ebbers got 25 years. Jeff Skilling got 24. Sam Bankman-Fried got 25. Bernie Madoff got 150 years – more than most murderers receive. These aren’t abstractions or theoretical possibilities. These are real executives who went from […]
read moreSarbanes-Oxley Personal Liability Explained
Sarbanes-Oxley Personal Liability Explained Every quarter, you sign documents that can send you to prison. That’s not hyperbole – that’s Sarbanes-Oxley. The certification you sign attesting to the accuracy of your company’s financial statements creates personal criminal liability. Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act makes it a federal crime to knowingly certify financial reports that […]
read moreMandatory Minimum Sentences for Federal Drug Crimes Explained
The prosecutor is the judge. You just don’t realize it yet. When Congress passed mandatory minimum sentencing laws, people assumed they were taking power away from judges. They weren’t. They were giving that power to prosecutors. The moment a federal prosecutor decides to charge you with an offense carrying a 10-year or 20-year mandatory minimum, […]
read moreWhat Is Control Person Liability?
Control person liability is the legal doctrine that makes you responsible for someone else’s securities fraud. Not your fraud – their fraud. You didn’t make the false statement. You didn’t participate in the scheme. You might not have even known about it. But you controlled the person who did it. And under Section 20(a) of […]
read moreSEC Defense Costs Insurance Coverage
SEC investigations are expensive. Really expensive. Mid-seven-figure legal bills are common. Eight-figure bills happen in complex cases. Every witness needs preparation. Many witnesses need individual counsel. Document review takes thousands of hours. And this goes on for years. The question of who pays for all this – and how much insurance actually covers – is […]
read moreDirector Liability in SEC Investigations
Director Liability in SEC Investigations Board directors exist in a strange zone of legal exposure. You’re supposed to provide oversight, not management. You’re supposed to ask questions, not run operations. You attend meetings quarterly, review materials sent in advance, and trust that management is telling you the truth. And when something goes wrong – when […]
read moreFederal Drug Trafficking Charges: Sentences, Penalties, and What to Expect
Federal Drug Trafficking Charges: Sentences, Penalties, and What to Expect The investigation is the conviction. You just don’t know it yet. By the time federal agents knock on your door, by the time you get that call from a panicked family member, by the time you realize something is wrong – the government has already […]
read moreCFO Liability in SEC Cases
CFO Liability in SEC Cases The signature on your financial certification is the most dangerous thing you do as CFO. Every quarter, you sign documents that can send you to prison. Not because you committed fraud – but because you certified financial statements that turned out to be wrong. The SEC doesn’t care whether you […]
read moreMandatory Minimum Sentences for Federal Drug Charges Explained
Mandatory Minimum Sentences for Federal Drug Charges Explained The difference between a mandatory minimum sentence and a regular federal drug sentence is five times the prison time. That’s not an exaggeration. According to the US Sentencing Commission, the average sentence for federal drug offenses carrying a mandatory minimum is 144 months. The average for similar […]
read moreDoes D&O Insurance Cover SEC Investigation
Does D&O Insurance Cover SEC Investigation The short answer is: probably some of it, but not what you think, and not as much as you’re assuming. Your D&O insurance will likely cover defense costs for individual officers and directors facing SEC investigation. It will probably NOT cover your company’s investigation costs. And the gap between […]
read moreFederal Drug Trafficking Sentences: What You’re Really Facing
Federal Drug Trafficking Sentences: What You’re Really Facing The federal government doesn’t arrest you for drug trafficking until they’re ready to convict you. That’s not paranoia. That’s a 93% conviction rate built on years of surveillance, informants, wiretaps, and evidence collection that happened while you were still walking around thinking you were free. By the […]
read moreHow to Fight a FINRA Bar
How to Fight a FINRA Bar Fighting a FINRA bar is possible but extraordinarily difficult. The system is designed to make it hard. FINRA wants bars to stick – they’ve made that clear through their enforcement patterns and public statements. When you challenge a bar, you’re not just fighting against specific evidence or legal arguments. […]
read moreHow Long Do SEC Investigations Take
The question isn’t “how long does an SEC investigation take.” The question is “why is YOUR investigation still going.” And every answer to that question is bad news. Fast means they see you as an ongoing threat – court filings within days, emergency asset freezes, the full machinery of federal enforcement at maximum speed. Slow […]
read moreCan FINRA Lead to Criminal Charges?
Can FINRA Lead to Criminal Charges? FINRA cannot send you to prison. They don’t have that power. They’re not a government agency – they’re a private self-regulatory organization. The worst FINRA can do directly is bar you from the industry, suspend you, fine you, and destroy your career. But they cannot put you in handcuffs. […]
read moreHow Long Do FINRA Investigations Take?
How Long Do FINRA Investigations Take? There is no simple answer, and that uncertainty is part of what makes FINRA investigations so devastating. These investigations are known for their lengthy timelines, often stretching into years. Not months – years. You could receive an 8210 letter tomorrow and still be dealing with the consequences two or […]
read moreCan Employees Refuse SEC Interview
Can Employees Refuse SEC Interview Yes, you can refuse an SEC interview. Technically. If the SEC sends a “voluntary” request for an interview, you have no legal obligation to participate. You can say no. You can ignore the call. There are no direct sanctions for declining a voluntary interview request. But here’s what actually happens: […]
read moreDo I Need a Lawyer for FINRA?
Do I Need a Lawyer for FINRA? Yes. The answer is unambiguous. Every broker facing a FINRA investigation should have their own attorney – not their firm’s attorney, not a compliance officer’s guidance, their own independent legal counsel. Here’s why: FINRA will not hesitate to take full advantage of an unrepresented respondent. Those aren’t my […]
read moreSEC Investigation Confidentiality Rules
SEC Investigation Confidentiality Rules SEC investigation “confidentiality” is a one-way mirror. The SEC keeps your investigation secret from the public – you can’t call them and ask if you’re under investigation, they won’t confirm or deny anything to reporters. But you? You have to tell everyone who matters. Your board of directors. Your audit committee. […]
read moreSEC Subpoena Response Deadline
SEC Subpoena Response Deadline The deadline printed on your SEC subpoena isn’t the real deadline. It’s a negotiation starting point designed to create panic. The SEC knows you can’t possibly review thousands of documents, conduct privilege analysis, and prepare a complete production in 14 days. They know you’ll need more time. The aggressive deadline exists […]
read moreCan FINRA Bar Me From the Industry?
Yes. And they do it every single day. In the last two years, FINRA barred more than 730 people from the securities industry – an average of one person every twenty-four hours losing their career permanently. Courts have called a FINRA bar “the securities industry equivalent of capital punishment.” That’s not hyperbole. That’s how federal […]
read moreFINRA vs. SEC Investigation
FINRA vs. SEC Investigation You’re not facing one investigation. You’re facing two. And the decisions you make in one can destroy you in the other. That’s the reality nobody explains when they receive that first letter – whether it’s a FINRA 8210 request or an SEC subpoena. These two regulators are not the same. They […]
read moreE&O Insurance SEC Subpoena
E&O Insurance SEC Subpoena Your E&O insurance probably won’t help you with an SEC subpoena. That’s the uncomfortable truth most financial advisors discover too late. E&O – errors and omissions insurance – is designed to protect you from client claims. A client says you gave bad advice, they sue you, E&O covers the defense and […]
read moreHow to Respond to FINRA 8210 Request
More than one-third of the brokers FINRA bars from the industry are not barred for fraud. They’re not barred for churning accounts or stealing from elderly clients. They’re barred for violating Rule 8210 – for how they responded to the investigation, not what they were being investigated for. That’s the first thing you need to […]
read moreDetroit Tax Fraud Lawyers
Detroit Tax Fraud Lawyers Sameerah Marrell filed 122 false tax returns seeking $27 million from the IRS and six states. When federal agents arrested her, she was released on bond. Most people would stop at that point. Marrell continued filing fraudulent returns while on bond – committing new crimes while awaiting prosecution for old ones. […]
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