Morgan
Stanley says wealth management employee stole client
data
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[January 06, 2015] By
Lauren Tara LaCapra and Tanya Agrawal
(Reuters) - Morgan Stanley said on Monday
it had fired a financial adviser who allegedly stole account information
from about 350,000 of its wealth management clients and posted some of
it online.
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There is no evidence that clients lost money as a result of the
latest breach of customer information at a financial firm, Morgan
Stanley said in a statement.
A person familiar with the matter identified the former employee as
Galen Marsh, a 30-year-old financial adviser from one of Morgan
Stanley's New York branches.
Marsh appeared to be looking to sell the data, which pertained to
about 10 percent of Morgan Stanley's 3.5 million clients, the person
said. He published information on about 900 accounts as an apparent
advertisement, the person said.
Robert Gottlieb, who is representing Marsh with the law firm
Gottlieb & Gordon, denied that his client posted the information
online or tried to sell it. He also said Marsh is "devastated by
what has occurred and is extremely sorry for his conduct."
"This is an employment matter between Mr. Marsh and Morgan Stanley,"
Gottlieb said. "He has acknowledged that he should not have obtained
the account information and he has been cooperating fully with
Morgan Stanley to protect the firm and its customers."
The bank discovered the post as part of a routine Internet sweep on
Dec. 27 and quickly got the information taken down, said the person,
who was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.
Marsh did not immediately return phone calls or messages seeking
comment. He joined Morgan Stanley in April 2008 as a sales
assistant, entered its trainee program in 2010 and became a
financial adviser in March 2014.
The leaked information included clients' names and account numbers,
but not passwords or Social Security numbers. The account numbers
have since been changed, and Morgan Stanley has been notifying
affected clients.
Morgan Stanley's investigation into the matter is ongoing. It has
referred the matter to regulators and law enforcement authorities
who are conducting separate investigations.
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Another person with knowledge of the matter said the FBI was looking
into the alleged theft.
A spokeswoman for FINRA confirmed in an email that they were looking
into the matter. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission did not
immediately respond to requests for comment. The Manhattan District
Attorney's Office and U.S. Department of Justice declined to
comment.
Shortly after Morgan Stanley announced the breach in a press
release, Gregory Fleming, president of the wealth management
business, issued a memo that said the bank is offering affected
clients additional monitoring and fraud protection services at no
charge.
It was not immediately clear how Marsh was able to allegedly breach
compliance protocol to steal client information and post it on the
Web.
The person familiar with the matter said Marsh used an external
application to post the data online. Morgan Stanley has since
restricted employee access to that application.
Morgan Stanley shares fell 3.1 percent to close at $37.50 on Monday.
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