Broker Investigation Alert: James Pecoraro of Spartan Capital Faces FINRA Churning and Fraud Allegations

What Happened

James Pecoraro, a broker associated with Spartan Capital Securities, LLC, has been named in a FINRA disciplinary complaint alleging widespread churning and excessive trading over a multi-year period.

The complaint alleges that Pecoraro and other representatives engaged in a pattern of high-frequency trading designed to generate commissions, resulting in substantial investor losses and millions of dollars in trading costs (https://investorclaims.com/blog/james-pecoraro-spartan-capital-churning-fraud-complaint/, https://fxnewsgroup.com/forex-news/regulatory/finra-files-complaint-against-spartan-capital-securities/).


Key Allegations and Developments

FINRA has further alleged violations of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act, Rule 10b-5, Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI), and FINRA suitability rules (https://investorclaims.com/blog/james-pecoraro-spartan-capital-churning-fraud-complaint/).


Understanding Churning and Excessive Trading

Churning occurs when a broker engages in excessive buying and selling of securities primarily to generate commissions, rather than to benefit the client.

Key indicators include:

These practices can erode portfolio value even in otherwise stable market conditions.


Why This Matters for Investors

Investors affected by excessive trading may experience:

In many cases, investors are unaware that their accounts are being actively traded in a manner that primarily benefits the broker.


Firm Responsibility and Supervision

Brokerage firms have a duty to:

FINRA’s complaint alleges that Spartan Capital failed to act on clear warning signs, allowing excessive trading activity to continue across multiple accounts (https://www.advisorhub.com/new-york-broker-dealers-business-model-hinged-on-churning-client-accounts-finra/).

Where supervision fails, liability may extend beyond the individual broker to the firm itself.


Legal Considerations and Investor Rights

Investors who suffered losses may have grounds to pursue recovery through FINRA arbitration, particularly where:

Recovery may include damages tied to losses, excessive commissions, and account mismanagement.


The Bigger Picture

Excessive trading is not a strategy—it is a transfer of wealth from the investor to the broker.

When trading volume is driven by commissions rather than client objectives, the structure of the account itself becomes the source of loss.


Speak With a Securities Fraud Attorney

Investors who experienced losses involving James Pecoraro, Spartan Capital Securities, or excessive trading strategies may have legal options.

Sonn Law Group is actively evaluating claims involving:

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