Texas Securities Adviser Hit With $719,000 Restitution
The Texas State Securities Board has ordered a Corpus Christi securities adviser pay $719,000 in restitution and serve 10 years of community supervision for withholding information from investors.
Authorities say 59-year-old William Erik Byrne sold about $1 million worth of fraudulent investment contracts and promissory notes but didn’t tell investors of sanctions against him.
Byrne in 2005 was ordered to stop selling unregistered annuities, was fined $10,000 three years later by the Texas Department of Insurance for engaging in unauthorized insurance business, and didn’t disclose to investors that participants in some of his investment programs didn’t receive expected payments.
The Corpus Christi Caller-Times reports the restitution is in addition to $100,000 Byrne was ordered to pay by a Nueces County judge earlier this month.
- Charges Dropped Against ‘Poster Boy’ Contractor Accused of Insurance Fraud
- Credit Suisse Nazi Probe Reveals Fresh SS Ties, Senator Says
- LA County Told to Pause $4B in Abuse Payouts as DA Probes Fraud Claims
- Why 2026 Is The Tipping Point for The Evolving Role of AI in Law and Claims