SFT 6.2 Compliance with Redbrick

This is not “sales tactics”. This is deception — and it is a crime.


What the Law Says

Under Penal Code 1871, Section 420:

A person cheats when he deceives another person and dishonestly induces them to:

  • Give up property
  • Make a decision based on false information
  • Suffer harm (financial, reputational, or otherwise)

If the client is misled, it is cheating.


What This Looks Like in Real Life

  • Giving inaccurate or misleading loan advice
  • Hiding important terms or risks
  • Promising outcomes you cannot deliver
  • Using false information to push a deal through

Even if the deal closes — it is still cheating.


Common Offences

  • Cheating by impersonation
  • Dishonest inducement to obtain property
  • Illegally obtaining personal information
  • Obtaining services fraudulently

What This Means in Redbrick

  • No misleading advice
  • No hiding facts
  • No “say first, fix later”
  • No manipulating clients into decisions

If the client doesn’t fully understand — you have not done your job.


Consequences

  • Criminal offence
  • Immediate termination
  • Loss of license and reputation

No commission is worth this risk.

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