March 19, 2026
ChapmanAlbin is investigating Roger Roemmich (CRD 1293322) in connection with investor allegations involving private offerings, real estate securities, suitability concerns, and alleged misstatements or omissions tied to outside investments. The most immediate concern for many investors is that Roemmich is no longer registered and public records show multiple pending disputes, including claims alleging breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, and securities-fraud-related conduct. Roemmich’s most recent reported employing firm was Alexander Capital, L.P. This page is based on public records, including FINRA BrokerCheck and related regulatory filings, and summarizes the key issues in plain English for investors reviewing their options.
| CRD | 1293322 |
| Most recent firm | Alexander Capital, L.P. |
| Current registration status | Not currently registered according to the provided BrokerCheck report |
| Primary concerns | Multiple pending investor disputes involving private offerings/direct investments, suitability allegations, fiduciary-duty themes, and a May 2025 resignation while facing customer allegations |
| Products mentioned in dispute records | Private offerings; direct investment DPP/LP interests; real estate security/TIC-related investment |
| Potential investor claim themes | Unsuitable recommendations, misrepresentation and omission, breach of fiduciary duty, and possible firm-level failure to supervise |
Investors may also want to review ChapmanAlbin’s related investigation into 828 Media / Todd Lundbohm offerings, which is relevant because the BrokerCheck record references alleged investments tied to 828 Media Capital, LLC.
The public record shows a mix of older and newer dispute activity. The older settled matter centered on suitability and alleged misrepresentation involving a TIC-style real estate investment. More recent matters are more serious from a dollar-loss perspective, with pending claims tied to private offerings and direct investments, including allegations connected to 828 Media Capital, LLC, that allegedly involved false statements, omitted information, compensation disclosure issues, fiduciary-duty concerns, and negligence theories. For investors, the practical issue is whether the investment was fully explained, suitable for the investor’s needs, and approved through the proper channels.
Roemmich’s BrokerCheck record shows he was most recently associated with Alexander Capital, L.P. after prior associations with Dempsey Lord Smith, Coastal Equities, and Triad Advisors. The record states that he voluntarily resigned from Alexander Capital in May 2025 while he was the subject of a written customer complaint and a customer-initiated civil suit alleging, among other things, unsuitable recommendations, fraud-related conduct, and breach of fiduciary duty. An earlier separation in 2006 at H&R Block Financial Advisors was reported in connection with a review into whether he was receiving income or fees from outside business activity.
Private placements and other direct investments can be especially risky because they are often illiquid, lightly traded, and harder for ordinary investors to independently evaluate. When an investor later learns that important facts were left out, that a broker had compensation incentives that were not clearly disclosed, or that a recommendation did not fit the investor’s objectives or risk tolerance, the losses can be difficult to unwind. These issues can also raise questions about whether the firm supervising the broker was doing enough to review the offering, the sales process, and outside compensation arrangements.
If you invested with Roger Roemmich and are now concerned about private offerings, direct investments, or real-estate-security recommendations, it may be worth reviewing what you were told before the investment was made, what risks were disclosed, and whether any compensation arrangements were explained. Depending on the facts, a potential recovery claim could involve the broker, the supervising firm, or both. Investors often benefit from gathering their documents before speaking with counsel so the timeline, product type, and loss history can be evaluated more efficiently.
A pending dispute means the allegations have been made but have not yet been fully resolved. It does not by itself prove liability, but it can still be important for investors who are reviewing whether their own experience may have involved similar products, explanations, or sales practices.
These investments can be more complex, less transparent, and harder to sell than traditional publicly traded securities. That can make suitability, disclosure, due diligence, and supervision especially important.
Not automatically. But it is often a signal that investors should review the surrounding facts carefully, especially when the resignation happened while written complaints or civil allegations were already pending.
Yes. Depending on the facts, investor claims can involve the supervising firm, particularly where the issues include due diligence, suitability review, supervision of outside activities, or oversight of how an investment was presented to customers.
This page is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Past outcomes are not a guarantee of future results. Each matter is different and depends on its specific facts.
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