What Is a Regulatory Fraud Complaint — and Why It Matters
A regulatory fraud complaint is a formal submission to a national financial authority — documenting specific regulatory violations committed by a licensed or unlicensed operator — and requesting the authority to exercise its enforcement powers in response. It is distinct from a consumer complaint to a broker’s complaints department. It is a formal legal submission to a public authority with statutory enforcement powers — powers that include investigation, prosecution, license withdrawal, mandatory restitution, and asset freezing that operate entirely outside the civil court system. In the European regulatory framework, financial authorities do not respond to general allegations of wrongdoing. They respond to documented evidence of specific regulatory violations — mapped to the precise legal provisions of the directives and national regulations they are responsible for enforcing. A complaint that says “this broker stole my money” is a consumer grievance. A complaint that says “this entity, authorized by you under license number [X], violated Articles 24, 25, and 27 of MiFID II by [specific conduct], causing verified financial loss of [amount], as evidenced by [authenticated documents]” is an enforcement trigger. Veritas Advisory Group prepares the second type — built on the forensic record, structured to the evidentiary standards of the specific regulatory authority, and mapped to the precise legal provisions that the authority is empowered and obligated to enforce.
What Regulatory Fraud Complaint Preparation Covers
Our team prepares and manages the complete regulatory complaint process:
- Regulatory authority identification – Identifying the correct national competent authority for each complaint — determined by the entity’s home member state of authorization, the nature of the regulatory violation, and the jurisdictional scope of the applicable directive
- Regulatory violation analysis – Mapping the defendant’s specific conduct to the precise articles of MiFID II, AIFMD, AMLD, PSD2, MiCA, or applicable national regulations that were breached — producing a violation register that the authority can act on directly
- Forensic evidence file preparation – Compiling the complete evidentiary record — account analysis, transaction records, communication logs, platform documentation, and beneficial owner findings — formatted to the submission standards of the specific regulatory authority
- Complaint drafting – Preparing the formal complaint document — factual background, entity identification, regulatory violation register, evidence schedule, and requested enforcement action — in the format and language required by the applicable authority
- Multi-authority coordination – Where the fraud involves violations falling within the jurisdiction of multiple regulators — for example, both the home state regulator and the host state regulator under MiFID II passporting — preparing and filing coordinated complaints with each authority simultaneously
- Complaint follow-up and escalation – Monitoring the complaint’s progress, responding to regulatory information requests, providing supplementary evidence, and escalating to senior regulatory personnel or ombudsman bodies where the complaint is not receiving adequate attention
- Regulatory findings integration – Incorporating regulatory findings, enforcement actions, and investigation outcomes into the parallel civil litigation and asset recovery strategy
Scope of Services Within Regulatory Fraud Complaints:
- Regulatory authority identification and jurisdictional analysis
- MiFID II, AIFMD, AMLD, PSD2, and MiCA violation mapping
- Forensic evidence file preparation to regulator submission standards
- Formal complaint drafting in regulator-required format and language
- Multi-authority simultaneous complaint coordination
- Regulatory information request response and supplementary evidence
- Complaint escalation to senior regulatory personnel and ombudsman bodies
- Regulatory enforcement outcome integration into civil recovery strategy
The Regulatory Framework Behind European Fraud Complaints
European regulatory complaints derive their enforcement force from a specific and developed legal framework — one that creates defined obligations for regulated entities and defined enforcement powers for the authorities responsible for overseeing them.
MiFID II — Markets in Financial Instruments Directive
MiFID II is the primary regulatory framework for investment services in the EU. It creates specific, enforceable obligations covering: suitability and appropriateness assessment, best execution, conflicts of interest management, inducement prohibition, client communication standards, and the handling of client complaints and assets. Each of these obligations is referenced to a specific directive article — and each breach creates a basis for both regulatory enforcement action and civil damages claims. MiFID II complaints are the most common and most actionable category of regulatory fraud complaint for investment platform and broker fraud victims.
AMLD — Anti-Money Laundering Directives
The EU’s Anti-Money Laundering Directives — AMLD4, AMLD5, and AMLD6 — impose specific transaction monitoring, KYC, and suspicious activity reporting obligations on all financial institutions operating in EU member states. Where financial institutions processed fraud-related transfers without applying required monitoring — mule account activity, advance fee payments, unauthorized investment deposits — AML regulatory complaints to national financial intelligence units and banking supervisors create institutional liability that supplements civil claims against the institutions involved.
PSD2 — Payment Services Directive
PSD2 regulates payment services across the EU — imposing authorization requirements, transaction monitoring obligations, and consumer protection standards on payment service providers. Regulatory complaints under PSD2 are relevant where fraud funds were processed through EU-licensed payment institutions that failed in their authorization or monitoring obligations.
MiCA — Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation
The EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation creates a comprehensive regulatory framework for crypto-asset service providers — including licensing requirements, conduct of business obligations, and investor protection standards. MiCA complaints are increasingly relevant as European crypto fraud cases involve regulated or partially regulated service providers whose conduct falls within the MiCA framework.
How Veritas Advisory Group Prepares Regulatory Fraud Complaints
Our regulatory complaint preparation methodology is structured around the specific submission requirements of each regulatory authority and the evidentiary standards required to produce genuine enforcement engagement.