Feds: 14 Charged In Insider Trading Case

Thursday November 5, 2009 9:38 p.m.

Lead Photo

United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, right, is seen standing next to a chart as he explains charges against 14 individuals accused of insider trading, during a press conference at the U.S. Attorney's office in New York, Thursday, November 5, 2009. (AP Photo/Robert Mecea)

NEW YORK (AP) — Two attorneys and Wall Street professionals were among 14 people charged Thursday in a widening $53 million insider trading case that has snared one of America's richest men and shown white collar suspects to be using the cover-up tactics of drug dealers.

The actions raise to 20 the number of people who have been charged in the case first disclosed last month with the arrests of Galleon Group founder and hedge fund operator Raj Rajaratnam and five others.

At the time, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara called the first arrests "a wake-up call for Wall Street."

"Today the alarm bells have only grown louder," he said at a news conference Thursday.

Bharara said the defendants borrowed a "page from the drug dealer's play book" by using anonymous hard-to-trace prepaid cell phones to dodge detection by law enforcement. He said they also discussed falsifying company files to make it appear trades weren't based on secrets.

"When sophisticated business people begin to adopt the methods of common criminals, we have no choice but to treat them as such," he said.

Two tactics prosecutors routinely use in drug cases — confidential informants and court-authorized wiretaps of phones — were used in the insider trading probe on a scale wider than ever before.

The complaints also described FBI agents trailing suspects as they do in drug cases to spot them passing money between one another. Court papers said agents observed cash appearing to be delivered in "an item that appeared to be approximately the size of a VHS tape."

Bharara said total profits alleged by prosecutors was $40 million while the Securities and Exchange Commission raised the total to $53 million, saying it includes millions in profits not described in the criminal complaints.

He said he knew people would ask if the insider trading case was the tip of the iceberg of illicit trading on Wall Street.

"We don't have an answer to that but we aim to find out," he said.

Bharara said eight people were arrested Thursday on securities fraud charges and another five have already pleaded guilty and are cooperating. Another person is still at large, he said.

At a bail hearing for Rajaratnam Thursday, defense attorney John Dowd criticized the government's case, saying it was "not as overwhelming as the government would like to believe."

A magistrate judge refused a request to reduce Rajaratnam's $100 million bail but he did relax his travel restrictions to let him travel throughout the United States.

Rajaratnam has denied participating in the scheme to use inside information to trade stocks at a profit ahead of public announcements.

In court papers, new details about the alleged scheme emerged.

According to papers filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Zvi Goffer operated an insider trading network in 2007 and 2008 that included a lawyer who fed tips gleaned from his firm's work on acquisition deals.

Goffer, 32, of Manhattan, worked at Shottenfeld Group LLC in Manhattan in 2007 and at Galleon Group for the first nine months of 2008 before he started his own trading firm, the papers said.

There are 6 comments

6.

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5.
SPFLDnet

Those are just the idiots that got caught. They probably didn't like the fees they had to pay to stay in the game. Once you're in a gang you can never leave. If you try to cut your driving service out of your budget, the board catches wind that you're trying to slip away, and what do they do? They throw you under the bus. But it's still not over, see, they have to keep you quiet so they get you a nice golden parachute for being real quiet see, keep your mouth shut and do your time at club fed and you'll be doing just fine, just like Jeff Skilling. http://houston.bizjournals.com/houston/stories/2009/10/12/daily1 .html

4.

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3.
Antillectual

Who could have imagined?

We wil see the usual crap of jailing the little guys while the big fish go free.

1.
pipefittergal

I'm shocked....SHOCKED, I tell you!

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