Financial Exploitation of Specified Adults
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The astronaut scam and who FINRA protects
- 1:02 Specified adult: age 65+ or impaired adult 18+
- 1:42 Why the rep cannot freeze the account, only supervisors can
- 2:21 The hold covers only the suspicious transaction
- 2:52 25-day default versus 55-day maximum with state reporting
- 4:04 The 2022 amendment: securities transactions, not just disbursements
- 4:36 Trusted contact person has zero account authority
- 5:43 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Who counts as a specified adult: any senior investor age 65 or older, plus any adult age 18 or older with a mental or physical impairment that prevents self-protection
- Why a frontline registered representative cannot authorize a temporary hold, and why only supervisory, compliance, or legal personnel can pull that trigger
- The scope trap: a temporary hold applies only to the suspicious disbursement or securities transaction, not the entire account
- The duration math: 15 business days initial, plus 10 business days standard extension, for a default maximum of 25 business days
- How the 2022 amendment allows an additional 30 business days (up to 55 business days total) when the matter is reported to a state regulator, agency, or court of competent jurisdiction
- Why the 2022 amendment expanded the hold to cover both disbursements and securities transactions, not just cash leaving the account
- The trusted contact person rules: firms must make reasonable efforts to obtain one, the customer can decline, and the trusted contact has zero authority over the account
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