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Two Indian Americans among six arrested for insider-trading

Updated on: 17 October,2009 09:37 AM IST  | 
PTI |

Six persons, including two Indian Americans and a Sri Lanka-born billionaire, have been arrested in connection with the largest hedge fund insider-trading ever.

Two Indian Americans among six arrested for insider-trading

Six persons, including two Indian Americans and a Sri Lanka-born billionaire, have been arrested in connection with the largest hedge fund insider-trading ever.


Besides Tamil-origin Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of Galleon Group, the two Indian Americans identified as Anil Kumar (51) and Rajiv Goel (51) were arrested in the $20 million hedge fund insider-trading case on Friday, said Preet Bharara, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York.


While Rajaratnam is a resident of New York, Kumar and Goel live in California. The other three involved in this case, unveiled on Saturday, are Danielle Chiesi (43) from New York; Robert Moffat (53) from Connecticut and Mark Kurland (60) from New York.


If convicted all of them face imprisonment of up to 20 years, according to the indictment, which reads that the defendants "routinely received inside information directly or indirectly from insiders and provided it to each other for the purpose of trading based on the information," filed in the US court.

Noting that this should be a wakeup call for the Wall Street, Bharara - an Indian American recently appointed to this powerful post by US President Barack Obama - termed it as a decisive action against fraud on the Wall Street.

"It should be a wakeup call for every hedge fund manager and every Wall Street trader and every corporate executive who is even thinking about engaging in insider trading," Bharara said. "As the defendants in this case have now learned the hard way, they may have been privy to a lot of confidential corporate information, but there was one secret they did not know: we were listening," he said.

"Today, tomorrow, next week, the week after, privileged Wall Street insiders who are considering breaking the law will have to ask themselves one important question: Is law enforcement listening?" Bharara said in a statement.

"Make no mistake - the $20 million in illicit profits come at the expense of the average public investor," Joseph Demarest, Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Office, said.

"Where knowledgeable businessmen are unscrupulous and act without control, the result is unadulterated greed. The FBI's role in combating white collar crime is to ensure integrity in the marketplace, to protect the average investor, and by extension, the economy," he said.

According to the two complaints unsealed in Manhattan federal court, Rajaratnam, Kurland, Chiesi, and others repeatedly traded on material, non-public information given as tips by insiders and others at hedge funds, public companies, and investor relations firms - including Intel, IBM, McKinsey, Moody's Investors Services Inc., Market Street Partners, Akamai Technologies, Inc and Polycom Inc.

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