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Banned adviser faces dishonesty charges

The adviser has also been charged with providing unlicensed advice.

On Tuesday, ASIC announced that banned adviser Nizi Bhandari has been charged with engaging in dishonest conduct in the course of carrying on a financial services business and providing unlicensed personal financial product advice.

Mr Bhandari, from Bundoora in Victoria, was an authorised representative of The Australian Dealer Group between November 2017 and December 2020, an AFS licensee that helped consumers to find lost superannuation and consolidate their superannuation accounts.

He was also the sole director, responsible manager and key person under The Australian Dealer Group’s AFS licence over the same period.

ASIC alleged that, between January 2019 and March 2020, Mr Bhandari provided seven consumers with personal financial product advice that neither he nor The Australian Dealer Group was authorised to provide.

The corporate regulator also outlined a number of allegations regarding false statements about superannuation, including that Mr Bhandari had encouraged 15 consumers to tell their super funds that they were not working, had permanently retired, or were working less than 10 hours per week to enable them to access their super when they were not entitled to.

He also claimed to have told 15 consumers that they could access their super based upon having reached preservation age when he knew that those consumers also had to be retired or working less than 10 hours per week in order to have such access.

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ASIC said that, on the occasions where consumers allegedly followed Mr Bhandari’s advice, his business received fees.

Mr Bhandari received a permanent ban from the corporate regulator in March last year.

The matter, which is being prosecuted by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions after an investigation and referral by ASIC, is next listed for mention on 4 October in the Magistrate’s Court of Victoria.

The maximum penalty for an individual found guilty of engaging in dishonest conduct in the course of carrying on a financial services business is between 10 to 15 years’ imprisonment, a fine of $945,000, or both.

Additionally, the maximum penalty for an individual found guilty of providing unlicensed personal financial product advice while providing financial services on behalf of a person who carries on a financial services business is five years’ imprisonment, a fine of $126,000, or both.

Jon Bragg

Jon Bragg

Jon Bragg is a journalist for Momentum Media's Investor Daily, nestegg and ifa. He enjoys writing about a wide variety of financial topics and issues and exploring the many implications they have on all aspects of life.