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It's my money and you can't have it

Kevin_LKevin_L Member Posts: 2,011 ✭✭✭✭

My employer wants investment account disclosure because they themselves have a life insurance investment sector and because I have access (albeit indirectly) to life insurance policy holders' information. I'm supposed to disclose my and my wife's investment account information so my employer can monitor for suspicious activity. I've reached out to a couple of financial advisors and the response was "It's a legitimate SEC rule but I've never heard of this being applied to non-executives."

How this monitoring is done is a mystery to me. No one has discussed the mechanisms nor the depth of such monitoring. All I have in my possession is a reference to a website with all the rules associated to the demand. Of course all of those rules are written by lawyers for lawyers so they're just gibberish to me.

Being on the inside, I know how my company handles data. It's not good. I can't trust that they'd not carelessly put my info out on a shared network drive that's accessed by literally hundreds of people. A lot of our security is based on trust which, if you've ever worked in the IT world, is the equivalent of no security at all.

When I told my wife what was going on, she blew a gasket. Her exact words are not printable here. Suffice to say she's very much against complying with the demand for account information.

Last night I thought I'd talk to a lawyer about things and see if there's any way I can legally decline to disclose account info. But this morning, I'm at the point of just walking away and not looking back.

I think enough is enough.

🇺🇲 "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." - Thomas Jefferson 🇺🇲

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