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Morgan Fined for Failing to Retain E-Mails

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From Bloomberg News

Brokerage Morgan Stanley agreed to pay a record $15 million to settle a Securities and Exchange Commission probe into its failure to preserve e-mails.

Morgan Stanley said in a regulatory filing Monday that under the preliminary agreement, it would be cited with a violation of SEC rules.

The firm is also discussing resolution of “related charges” with the NASD, the Wall Street watchdog formerly known as the National Assn. of Securities Dealers.

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The fine is the highest ever levied by the SEC against a firm for failing to retain e-mails, a person familiar with the matter said. Regulators analyze e-mails for evidence when investigating possible securities-related misconduct.

“The SEC in recent years has been looking for and relying upon e-mail communication as a major source of evidence,” said John Sturc, a former enforcement lawyer at the agency now with Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in Washington. “It wants those records retained, and what you’re seeing here is a reinforcement of that concern.”

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