LD 509
pg. 8
Page 7 of 183 An Act To Adopt the Maine Uniform Securities Act Page 9 of 183
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LR 441
Item 1

 
(6) Article 5 on fraud and liabilities and the definition of
fraud in Section 102(9) are substantively little changed. This
includes the general fraud provision in Section 501, the filing
of sales and advertising literature in Section 504, misleading
filings in Section 505, and misrepresentations concerning
registration or exemption in Section 506. Technical changes were
made to the evidentiary burden Section 503 and the criminal
penalties Section 508.

 
Section 502(a), fraud in providing investment advice, is
unchanged. New rulemaking authority was added in Sections 502(b)
and (c) to succeed earlier statutory provisions in Section 102 of
the 1956 Act. This will give the administrator broad flexibility
and recognizes that most state provisions regulating investment
advisers in recent years have been adopted through rules.

 
Section 507 is a new qualified immunity provision to protect a
broker-dealer or investment adviser from defamation claims based
on information filed with the SEC, a state administrator, or
self-regulatory organization "unless the person knew, or should
have known at the time that the statement was made, that it was
false in a material respect or the person acted in reckless
disregard of the statement's truth or falsity." This Section,
which is consistent with most litigated cases to date and is a
response to concerns that defamation lawsuits have deterred
broker-dealers and investment advisers from full and complete
disclosure of problems with departing employees. The Drafting
Committee was also sensitive to the concern that such immunity
could allow broker-dealers and investment advisers to unfairly
characterize employees to protect their "book" of clients.
Because of this concern the Drafting Committee rejected proposals
for an absolute immunity.

 
Section 510 is a new rescission offer provision that should be
read with the definition of offer to purchase in Section 102(19)
and the exemption for rescission offers in Section 202(19).
Section 510 is consistent with administrative practice in many
states today, although some states also have a filing
requirement.

 
More thought was devoted to the civil liability Section 509
than any other provision. As ultimately drafted much in this
Section is little changed from the 1956 Act. New subsections were
added to recognize the preemptive Securities Litigation Act of
1998 (Section 509(a)) and civil liability for investment advice
(Sections 509(e) and (f)).

 
Significant changes were made in the statute of limitations
Section 509(j). Current state law provides a wide range of
statutes of limitations. The 1956 Act contained a "two years


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