Stifel is adding $850,000 to its growing tab related to a now-barred broker accused of steering clients into unnecessarily risky investments.
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The settlement, reached earlier this month over allegations concerning former Stifel advisor Chuck A. Roberts, brings the firm’s tally for settlements and arbitration awards involving him to nearly $200 million. Roberts, who ran a Stifel-affiliated CR Wealth Management Group in Miami and New York, was banned from the industry in July following a barrage of customer complaints alleging he steered clients into risky and unsuitable structured notes, a type of debt security that can offer high returns but also carries substantial risks and fees.
Jeffrey Erez, the lawyer representing clients in the disputes against Roberts, said some of the cases also involve regular stock trades and leverage — or using borrowed money in the hopes of boosting investor returns. Erez, the managing partner of Erez Law, said he helped file two new customer disputes against Roberts this month, adding to a pipeline of cases that could increase Stifel’s legal tab still further.
“Clients have continued to contact us seeking recourse, and we continue to pursue claims on their behalf,” he said.
Stifel did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A $132.5 million arbitration was just the start
Roberts, who resigned from Stifel about a month before his industry ban, has been at the center of several large settlements and arbitration awards. The biggest came in March, when Stifel was ordered to pay a $132.5 million penalty that included $79.5 million in punitive damages. The award was the second largest in FINRA history, topped only by a $400 million penalty handed down in 2009 in a claim against Credit Suisse.
Stifel went to court in May to challenge that award, deeming it a “shocking, runaway” penalty amount. Before that, the firm had been ordered in October 2024 by a separate FINRA arbitration panel to pay a pair of investors $14.3 million over Roberts’ advice on structured notes; the following month, yet another arbitration panel ordered the firm to pay a $2.4 million award over Roberts’ recommendations of structured notes.
Roberts’ BrokerCheck page shows nearly 40 customer complaints filed against him since 2022. Stifel has settled nine of them for nearly $46.2 million. Three of the complaints have been denied.
When banning Roberts from the industry, FINRA said in its disciplinary notice that he had initially cooperated with its investigation into customer complaints about his recommendations of structured notes. But he later refused to respond to a request FINRA sent in May seeking additional on-the-record testimony from him. Roberts later consented to an industry bar forbidding him to associate with any FINRA member in any capacity.




















