Law Firm Cautions Case is Just “Tip of Iceberg” of Problem AXA
Brokers; News Event Features 81-Year-Old Widow Who Lost Entire Life
Savings to Same AXA Broker.
ROCHESTER, N.Y.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A FINRA arbitration panel has awarded
$3.2 million to an Alleghany County egg-farming family swindled in a
variable annuity (VA) and life insurance scheme promoted by a former AXA
financial advisor who was recently convicted for stealing from
another elderly AXA client. The Whitesville, NY, victims were
represented in the arbitration proceeding by the Peiffer Wolf Carr &
Kane law firm (PWCK). For more details about the case, go to www.brokerwatch.com/axa/upstate-ny.
The award is believed to be the largest ever paid in upstate New York
and also the largest imposed on AXA in arbitration.
The elderly victims oversaw the successful Fitzpatrick Poultry Farm in
Whitesville, NY, for many years before suffering millions of dollars in
damages at the hands of AXA and its financial advisor, Francesco Puccio,
formerly of Webster, NY. Puccio was affiliated with the AXA office in
Rochester.
At a news conference today, PWCK released a
fact sheet showing a disturbing pattern of AXA problems throughout
Rochester, Syracuse, Buffalo, and upstate New York. The PWCK fact
sheet documents multiple complaints, settlements, regulatory actions and
fines involving AXA and AXA brokers, including the
victimization of 81-year-old Scottsville, NY, widow Shirley Kerwin,
who lost her entire life savings to the same AXA broker who cheated the
Whitesville egg-farming family. Puccio was later found guilty of
stealing from Kerwin.
PWCK Partner Jason Kane said: “AXA sent a felonious broker to serve
unsophisticated and elderly clients and then completely abdicated its
supervisory obligations. Nonetheless, an unrepentant AXA contended
throughout the arbitration that everything was ‘perfectly suitable’ and
‘beyond reproach.’ This elderly couple may have had wealth, but they did
not have investment savvy. AXA and Puccio took them to the cleaners by
recommending obviously unsuitable variable annuities and life insurance
policies.”
“I’m not happy at all about the way AXA treated us,” said Sandra
Fitzpatrick, one of the egg-farming family victims. “We’ve learned
that you can’t just trust anybody. You have to be careful, and you have
to ask before you sign any papers. You have to find out what you’re
signing them for. That’s something that we didn’t do because we trusted
the person AXA sent to our door. We thought he was going to be honest. I
would like to warn other people to know what you’re signing.”
PWCK Managing Partner Joseph Peiffer said: “This arbitration award
sends a strong message to AXA and other financial giants that they are
responsible for the conduct of the financial advisors to whom they lend
their names. The definition of a suitable investment is not whatever
some felonious broker can talk somebody into buying. If there are no
rules of the road that AXA and other companies recognize, it will not
take long before individual investors lose even more faith in a system
that all too often fails them.”
Speaking to her separate claim against AXA, the widow Shirley Kerwin
said: “When Puccio stole my money, I was shocked. I turned to
AXA. When they refused to help, I was devastated. And, I
knew that I had to take action to protect myself and anyone else out
there that was harmed by AXA.”
The egg-farming couple fleeced by Puccio did not understand the nature
of the variable annuity and life insurance products in which they
invested millions of dollars. In what should have been a clear sign of
their lack of sophistication, the Fitzpatricks were found to have
earlier insurance policies stacked in egg carton boxes and did not seem
to be aware they existed. Instead of helping them, Puccio rolled those
old policies into newer and larger ones that paid hefty commissions to
him. The total commissions paid out in just one year to Puccio was well
over $200,000.
One of the more damning moments of the arbitration hearing occurred when
Puccio was caught impersonating a Fitzpatrick family member on an audio
recording and then had to admit he established a fraudulent email
account to pose as the eldest member of the family. That same day he
sold yet another life insurance policy to the Fitzpatricks.
Other resources available about the Fitzpatrick case include:
-
Full
details on the arbitration proceeding. -
A
short video providing an overview of the Fitzpatrick case. -
B-roll
footage of the Fitzpatricks for TV station use.
Peiffer Wolf Carr & Kane has extensive experience in handling investment
fraud cases in upstate New York and across the U.S.
In November 2017, PWCK won close to half a million dollars on behalf of
a retired Brighton, NY school teacher who was advised by Frank Monte at
Harbor Capital to overconcentrate her savings in variable annuities.
PWCK has since filed arbitrations on behalf of 10 families in follow-up
cases involving Harbor Capital’s annuity advice.
Last August, PWCK took legal action on behalf of victims of an elaborate
investment scheme that succeeded in large part through the credibility
lent to the affair by a network of “middlemen” insurance agents,
brokers, financial planners/investment advisors (IAs) and others who
roped in unwary investors for Future Income Payments LLC (FIP). PWCK
launched a coordinated wave of five lawsuits in and around Los Angeles,
Houston, Chicago, northern Florida, and Philadelphia/New Jersey
targeting the seemingly legitimate financial professionals who made the
FIP scheme work. Currently, PWCK has FIP-related lawsuits filed in Ohio,
Illinois, California, Florida, Texas, New Jersey, Utah, South Carolina,
and Minnesota. More at https://fiplawsuit.com.
In December, PWCK started assisting investors burned in the
OptionSellers.com hedge fund collapse. Even with a focus on
high-net-worth individuals, OptionSellers.com was aggressively marketed
to a wide spectrum of individuals, including unsophisticated retirees
with assets. In addition to $150 million or more lost in the hedge fund
itself, the margin calls disclosed to date total more than $35 million
but could add up to considerably more. More at https://www.optionsellerslawsuits.com/
ABOUT PEIFFER WOLF CARR & KANE
Peiffer Wolf Carr & Kane, APLC is a national law firm with offices in
New York, New Orleans, Cleveland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and
Missouri. https://brokerwatch.com/axa/.
EDITOR’S NOTE: A streaming
audio replay of this news event will be available as of 5 p.m. ET at www.brokerwatch.com/axa/upstate-ny.
Contacts
MEDIA CONTACT:
Max Karlin,
(703) 276-3255 or [email protected]