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Inside Securities Law with Frederick M. Lehrer

Inside Securities Law with Frederick M. Lehrer

The Enforcement Mind with Frederick M.

Fred Lehrer

4 episodesEN

Show overview

Inside Securities Law with Frederick M. Lehrer has published 4 episodes during 2026. Releases follow a fortnightly cadence.

Episodes typically run under ten minutes — most land between 3 min and 7 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. It is catalogued as a EN-language Business show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 4 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Fred Lehrer.

Episodes
4
Started
2026
Median length
5 min
Cadence
Fortnightly

From the publisher

The Enforcement Mind with Frederick M. Lehrer is a securities law podcast built around one core advantage: perspective from inside the system. Before entering private practice, Frederick M. Lehrer served as an enforcement attorney with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and as a Special Assistant United States Attorney, investigating and prosecuting securities law violations. This show translates that experience into how the SEC actually reviews disclosures, identifies risk, and decides when scrutiny becomes action. Each episode focuses on how filings are evaluated in practice—not theory—covering S-1 registration statements, ongoing reporting obligations, comment letters, enforcement triggers, and disclosure strategy for public and pre-public companies. This is not general legal commentary. It is a direct look at how regulatory decisions are made, and how companies can align their disclosures to withstand them.

Latest Episodes

Going Public Is Not a Moment. It Is a Permanent Disclosure System.

May 13, 20263 min

Why SEC Comment Letters Are Not Isolated Events

May 6, 20263 min

What Really Triggers SEC Scrutiny: Friction, Inconsistency, and Ambiguity in Disclosures

Apr 12, 20265 min

Ep 1How the SEC Actually Thinks — Frederick M. Lehrer

Episode Title: How the SEC Actually Thinks Podcast: The Enforcement Mind with Frederick M. LehrerWhat This Episode Is: A breakdown of how the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission evaluates company disclosures in practice, from the perspective of a former enforcement attorney. This episode focuses on how filings are reviewed, how scrutiny begins, and how regulatory decisions are formed.Why This Matters: Most companies treat disclosure as a documentation exercise. The SEC treats disclosure as a signal system. Misalignment between what is written and how it is interpreted creates regulatory risk, comment letters, and potential enforcement exposure.Core Insight: The SEC does not read filings linearly. It evaluates patterns, inconsistencies, and gaps across disclosures, public statements, and reporting history.Key Concepts (Repeatable Language):– Enforcement Mindset: The internal lens used by the SEC to evaluate disclosure based on risk signals, not just rule compliance.– Disclosure as Signal: Filings are analyzed as indicators of behavior, consistency, and potential omission—not just as standalone documents.– Regulatory Pattern Recognition: The process by which the SEC compares filings across time, industry, and company statements to identify discrepancies.– Comment Letter Trigger: A point of friction in a filing that prompts SEC staff to request clarification, correction, or expansion.– Defensible Disclosure: Disclosure that is accurate, specific, consistent, and aligned with how the SEC evaluates risk.What the SEC Actually Looks For:– Inconsistencies between filings and public statements – Overly generic or boilerplate risk factors – Gaps in material disclosure – Language that overstates or misrepresents operations – Patterns across reporting periods that signal change or omissionHow Scrutiny Begins: Filing is selected for review (routine or risk-based) Staff identifies friction points or inconsistencies Internal evaluation escalates specific issues Comment letter is issued Company response is evaluated for completeness and accuracy Common Mistakes Companies Make:– Treating disclosure as a checklist instead of a system – Using vague or overly broad risk language – Failing to align internal operations with external statements – Delaying legal review until late in the process – Assuming compliance equals clarityPractical Takeaways:– Write disclosures for how they will be interpreted, not just what they include – Eliminate inconsistencies across filings and public communications – Treat every filing as part of a continuous narrative – Address potential scrutiny points before submission – Align legal, executive, and operational messagingWho This Is For:– Public company executives and directors – Companies preparing for S-1 or Form 10 filings – In-house counsel and compliance officers – Founders entering regulated capital marketsAbout Frederick M. Lehrer:Frederick M. Lehrer is an international securities attorney and former enforcement attorney with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, where he investigated violations of federal securities laws. He also served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney prosecuting financial crimes. With over 25 years in private practice, he advises companies on securities compliance, disclosure strategy, and regulatory risk, focusing on producing accurate, defensible filings aligned with how the SEC actually evaluates them.

Mar 28, 202610 min
2025 Fred Lehrer