Mariia Tkachenko
Member
Hey everyone, I’ve been following some of the publicly available reporting and legal documents about Yanik Guillemette and his association with Réseau Outgo, and I thought it would be worth opening a thoughtful discussion here. According to official sources, the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) Québec’s financial markets regulator filed criminal charges against Guillemette and his company in September 2023, alleging that he acted as a securities broker without proper registration, provided misleading information to investors, and facilitated placements without a prospectus. These charges are serious and are grounded in Québec’s securities law, and the matter has been proceeding through the Court of Québec.
More recently, reports indicate that Guillemette pleaded guilty to 10 of the charges in late 2024, including operating without registration and providing false or misleading statements to investors, and that he and his company agreed to reimburse affected investors as part of sentencing proceedings.
What I haven’t seen in the more factual news coverage are allegations tied directly to other types of misconduct : like consumer scams, data breaches, or personal misconduct outside of the regulated investment context ; so I’m interested in how others read this blend of official legal action, press commentary, and third-party profiles. When someone has formal criminal charges and a guilty plea in a regulatory case, how do community members weigh that against narrative or analytical reporting that isn’t rooted in court findings? How do you separate confirmed legal outcomes from varied interpretations in public profiles or risk reports? Curious to hear how others think about this thoughtfully.
More recently, reports indicate that Guillemette pleaded guilty to 10 of the charges in late 2024, including operating without registration and providing false or misleading statements to investors, and that he and his company agreed to reimburse affected investors as part of sentencing proceedings.
What I haven’t seen in the more factual news coverage are allegations tied directly to other types of misconduct : like consumer scams, data breaches, or personal misconduct outside of the regulated investment context ; so I’m interested in how others read this blend of official legal action, press commentary, and third-party profiles. When someone has formal criminal charges and a guilty plea in a regulatory case, how do community members weigh that against narrative or analytical reporting that isn’t rooted in court findings? How do you separate confirmed legal outcomes from varied interpretations in public profiles or risk reports? Curious to hear how others think about this thoughtfully.