Tr?id=566623520170033&ev=PageView&noscript=1

Former Morgan Stanley Advisor Faces Trial Over Alleged Scheme Targeting NBA Players

Posted on April 28th, 2026 at 11:43 AM
Former Morgan Stanley Advisor Faces Trial Over Alleged Scheme Targeting NBA Players

From the desk of Jim Eccleston at Eccleston Law

A former Morgan Stanley financial advisor is charged with defrauding professional basketball players through complex investment transactions involving viatical settlements, according to reporting by InvestmentNews.

Federal prosecutors charged Darryl Cohen in March 2023 with six counts tied to alleged schemes to defraud clients, including several NBA players. InvestmentNews reports that the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York alleges that Cohen exploited his advisory and fiduciary relationships to carry out the misconduct.

According to the indictment, Cohen managed a scheme from 2017 through 2020 that resulted in losses exceeding $5 million for three professional athlete clients. The athletes identified as alleged victims include Jrue Holiday, Chandler Parsons, and Courtney Lee. Prosecutors allege that Cohen promoted viatical settlements, which involve the sale of life insurance policies by individuals with limited life expectancy, at inflated prices without disclosing key conflicts of interest.

The government contends that Cohen and an independent financial planner, Brian Gilder, induced clients to purchase these investments at significant markups, including rates exceeding 200 percent. Prosecutors allege that Gilder controlled the transactions, a fact that Cohen did not disclose to clients.

According to InvestmentNews, authorities also allege that Cohen misused client funds for personal and unrelated purposes. In one instance, he allegedly transferred $500,000 from client accounts under the guise of charitable donations and redirected a portion of those funds to construct athletic training facilities at his home.

InvestmentNews reports that the indictment further claims that Cohen and Gilder used client funds to resolve disputes with another investor, including payments routed through third parties. Prosecutors cite communications between the two as evidence of efforts to address complaints from a prior client.

Gilder has already pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy, according to InvestmentNews. Cohen is contesting the charges.

Cohen worked as a registered representative with Morgan Stanley from 2016 until his termination in 2021, according to InvestmentNews' review of his BrokerCheck record. That same year, FINRA barred him from the securities industry.

Eccleston Law LLC represents investors and financial advisors nationwide in securities, employment, transition, regulatory, and disciplinary matters.

Tags: eccleston, eccleston law, investment fraud, securities fraud, broker misconduct, viatical settlements, financial advisor fraud

Return to Archive

TESTIMONIALS

Previous
Next
Quotes Bigger

This was the best of all possible outcomes and I cannot thank you and the team enough.

Michael S.

LATEST NEWS AND ARTICLES

1782836587 Law
June 30, 2026
FINRA Signals Stronger Enforcement Focus on Reg BI, Excessive Trading, and Best Execution

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) plans to intensify its enforcement efforts against Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI) violations, excessive trading, options trading, churning, and best execution failures after bringing a record number of retail investor protection cases in 2025, according to ThinkAdvisor.

1782744905 Law
June 29, 2026
Former Arvest Wealth Representative Sanctioned by FINRA Over Improper Use of Mistaken Commission Payment

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) has suspended former Arvest Wealth representative Brandon Still for 18 months and fined him $5,000 after determining that he improperly used firm funds that were mistakenly deposited into his account.

1782497406 Law
June 26, 2026
FINRA Seeks to Make Remote Inspection Program Permanent

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is seeking approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to make its pandemic-era remote inspections program permanent before the current pilot is scheduled to expire in June 2027, according to AdvisorHub and FINRA's summary of its recent Board of Governors meeting.