FINRA has permanently barred broker Keith Craig Baron (CRD #3231494) after finding he promoted a $359,000 oil and gas investment with false guaranteed-return promises while pocketing nearly $285,000 in undisclosed compensation. The April 2026 enforcement action marks one of the most severe penalties FINRA can impose, reflecting the gravity of Baron’s misconduct.
What happened
Baron solicited clients to invest $359,000 in an oil and gas partnership by representing the investment as carrying guaranteed returns. In reality, the investment carried substantial risk. Oil and gas programs are inherently speculative. Commodity price volatility, drilling failures, and regulatory changes can wipe out invested capital entirely.
Baron also failed to disclose that he received approximately $285,000 in compensation from the investment sponsor. This hidden payment created a direct conflict of interest. Baron had every financial incentive to push the investment regardless of whether it suited his clients’ needs or risk tolerance.
The undisclosed compensation represents nearly 80% of the total investment amount. For every dollar clients put into the oil and gas deal, Baron pocketed roughly 79 cents in hidden payments. This staggering ratio reveals the extent to which the broker’s incentives were misaligned with his clients’ financial well-being.
Key facts about the Baron case
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Broker | Keith Craig Baron |
| CRD Number | #3231494 |
| Violation | Misrepresentation and undisclosed compensation |
| Investment amount | $359,000 |
| Undisclosed compensation | ~$285,000 (hidden kickbacks) |
| Enforcement status | Permanently barred (April 2026) |
| BrokerCheck | View CRD #3231494 |
The oil and gas investment trap
Oil and gas private placements rank among the most frequently abused investment products in FINRA enforcement history. Brokers earn substantial upfront commissions, often 8-12% of invested capital. Sponsors pay additional undisclosed incentives to brokers who bring in new investors. The result: brokers push oil and gas deals to clients who should never own them.
For a retiree who invested $100,000, the Baron case illustrates the full scope of the damage. Approximately $28,000 to $36,000 went to commissions before a single drill broke ground. If the well failed — as many do — the investor lost everything while Baron collected his hidden kickbacks.
Oil and gas programs have failure rates estimated at 60-70% for wildcat drilling. Even developmental wells in proven fields carry significant geological and operational risk. Investors who were told their principal was safe received advice that was not merely optimistic — it was false.
Why “guaranteed returns” in oil and gas is always a red flag
No legitimate oil and gas investment carries a guaranteed return. The SEC and FINRA have repeatedly warned investors about this specific claim. Drilling results depend on geological conditions, commodity prices, extraction costs, and regulatory approvals. None of these factors can be guaranteed in advance.
When a broker uses the word “guaranteed” in connection with any private placement, that statement alone may constitute securities fraud. Federal and state regulators treat guaranteed-return claims as presumptively misleading for speculative investments.
Impact on affected investors
| Investment Amount | Estimated Commissions Paid | Potential Loss if Investment Fails |
|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $28,000-$36,000 | Up to $100,000 |
| $250,000 | $70,000-$90,000 | Up to $250,000 |
| $359,000 | $100,000-$129,000 | Up to $359,000 |
Common red flags in private placement fraud
- Guaranteed returns: Any promise of fixed returns on a speculative investment is fraudulent.
- Missing risk disclosures: Legitimate offerings provide detailed risk factors in writing.
- Pressure to invest quickly: Limited-time offers designed to prevent due diligence.
- Unusual commission structures: If the broker seems unusually motivated to sell one specific product.
- Lack of independent verification: No third-party audit or outside review of the offering documents.
What affected investors can do
Even though FINRA has permanently barred Baron, affected investors still need to pursue recovery separately. A FINRA bar prevents the broker from working in the industry but does not automatically return money to victims. Investors must file arbitration claims to recover their losses.
Under FINRA rules, the broker-dealer firm that employed Baron may also bear responsibility. Firms have a duty to supervise their registered representatives. Failure to detect undisclosed compensation and misrepresentation constitutes a supervisory lapse that can make the firm liable for client losses.
Arbitration can recover not only the original investment amount but also consequential damages. Investors may be entitled to the return of their principal, recovery of the undisclosed commissions Baron received, and interest on the lost funds from the date of the investment. In cases involving elderly victims, some arbitration panels have also awarded expedited proceedings to accelerate recovery.
Haselkorn & Thibaut fights for investor recovery
Haselkorn & Thibaut is a securities law firm founded by former Wall Street defense attorneys who shifted their practice to represent investors. The firm has recovered over $520 million for clients in securities matters and maintains a 98 percent success rate in resolved nontraded REIT cases. Attorneys are AV Preeminent rated through Martindale-Hubbell, designated as Super Lawyers, and hold a 5.0-star client review average. The firm operates on a contingency basis — no recovery, no fee.
Contact Haselkorn & Thibaut today
Time matters in oil and gas recovery cases. The earlier you act, the stronger your position. The firm offers a free case evaluation to assess your losses, review your account history, and explain your options under arbitration or settlement.
- Main Phone: 1-888-885-7162
- Visit our website for a free consultation
Offices in Florida, New York, Arizona, Texas, and North Carolina. Former Wall Street defense attorneys with 95+ years of combined experience. No recovery, no fee.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
