Answer: FINRA’s National Adjudicatory Council (NAC)
Explanation:
Decisions made by the Department of Enforcement may be appealed to FINRA’s National Adjudicatory Council (NAC).
The NAC is the national committee established to recheck or review initial pronouncements or decisions made in FINRA’s Department of Enforcements proceedings.
An individual or firm is given the right to appeal a hearing panel decision to the NAC under FINRA's disciplinary procedures. Sometimes the NAC may initiate a review of a decision on its own.
In the process of appeal, the NAC will evaluate whether the hearing panel's findings are right in legal context or not and in accordance with FINRA's Sanction Guidelines.
During a panel decision is on appeal, the sanction of the former proceeding on an individual or firm is not enforced.
However, an individual or firm can further appeal FINRA's decision to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and then to federal court.
Answer:
FALSE
Explanation:
We need more than that...those help, but you need to enjoy it and feel it, that'll help too.
Answer:
Explanation:
Dear company members. As an employee, I had to adequate my practices as you did. From now on, I will have to log in using the password and the token in order to do my job when I'm not in the office. I understand how problematic this measure could be, but it is implemented by thinking what is best for us. As company, we cannot allow to that one individual log in does not match with the responsible employee credentials, and additional authentication methods had to be granted. It is costly for the company, which has bought the tokens for all of you. In the long-term, this action will benefit all because you can trust on the system about the performance and stats collected corresponding with you. It is mandatory from now on that everyone used it while outside the office. Thank you
Answer: replacing held with clutched
The answer is Moral Panic
Also called 'Public Fear', it is described as a collective Public anxiety or a feeling of threat towards a particular situation which they believe can completely destroy the society they live in.
In history, there has been several cases of Moral Panic starting from early times when e.g. the Japanese saw foreigners as a threat or when so-called witches were burned in Europe.
Recent moral panic examples include the threat of Communism, HIV as a 'gay' disease and the threat of Global warming.
In history, many governments have created 'Moral Panic' as a propaganda tool in wars and to deviate public perception.