South Australia-based financial adviser facing 52 charges



The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) has alleged in court that a South Australian adviser misappropriated $3.1 million in client funds.
Robert Owen Bean, of St Peters, South Australia, has appeared in the Adelaide Magistrates Court facing 52 charges of dishonest conduct.
ASIC alleges that Bean - who was permanently banned from providing financial services by the regulator on 17 May 2011 - misappropriated money from eight of his clients' investment or superannuation accounts between 30 June 2003 and 30 June 2010.
ASIC claimed in a statement that the majority of the $3.1 million was used to pay other unrelated clients to maintain expected investment returns or pension payments that he had recommended to them - while only "some" of the money was used to fund Bean's lifestyle.
If convicted, each of the 52 charges carries a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment or a fine of $22,000, or both.
The Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions is prosecuting the matter, which returns to court on 14 December 2012.
Recommended for you
BT is to launch a new low-cost “Focus” investment menu for its Panorama platform this October, in partnership with Vanguard, seeking to compete with industry superannuation funds.
Net gains of financial advisers have already doubled since the start of FY25, according to this week’s Padua Wealth Data, with momentum gathering pace far faster than the previous financial year.
National advice firm MiQ Private Wealth has appointed a new chief executive to lead the business through a “transformative era” after penning a partnership deal with AZ NGA earlier this month.
WT Financial’s managing director, Keith Cullen, believes the firm’s Hubco model with Merchant Wealth Partners will be a “repeatable growth model” for the business as it scales its adviser numbers.