Sunday, June 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

India-Born Rajat Gupta Disagrees With US Court's Insider Trading Ruling

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Dec, 2016 11:23 AM
    India-born former Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta, who is arguing in appeal that the government lacked evidence to show he "received even a penny" for passing insider information, has disagreed with a US Supreme Court ruling that sharing corporate secrets is illegal even if the tipsters did not receive anything in return.
     
    In a landmark ruling earlier this month relating to the insider trading conviction of Illinois resident Bassam Yacoub Salman, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that sharing corporate secrets with friends or relatives is illegal even if the insider providing the tip doesn't receive anything of value in return.
     
    Mr Gupta is a free man now after completing a prison term on insider trading charges but is not giving up his legal battle to overturn his conviction, arguing that he served two years in jail for conduct that is not criminal even though the government lacked evidence to show he "received even a penny" for passing confidential boardroom information to now jailed hedge-fund manager Raj Rajaratnam. 
     
    In May, Mr Gupta's team of lawyers had argued in papers before the Second Circuit Court of Appeals that the judgement of the Manhattan district court finding Mr Gupta guilty of insider trading "should be reversed" and his "conviction should be vacated".
     
    Mr Gupta's appeal comes on the back of a ruling by the Manhattan appeals court that for an insider trading conviction prosecutors must show that a defendant received a personal benefit for passing illegal tips. Mr Gupta's lawyers have cited the ruling that led to the reversal of insider convictions of hedge-fund managers Todd Newman and Anthony Chiasson in December, 2014.
     
    In fresh court papers following the verdict in Mr Salman's case, Mr Gupta said there is "a fatal inconsistency" and he was "substantially prejudiced by the invalid theory of benefit pursued at trial; and that his entitlement to relief is in no way affected" by the verdict in the Salman case.
     
    "The issue on this appeal is whether the government's benefit theory (that Gupta tipped to maintain a good relationship with Mr Rajaratnam), and the district court's instruction that the benefit could be modest, intangible and non-financial, are fatally inconsistent with Newman's quid pro quo requirement: an exchange of a tip for a benefit that is 'objective, consequential, and at least potentially pecuniary'," Mr Gupta's lawyers said in court papers.
     
    The government said Mr Gupta's appeal lacked merit even under the Newman ruling and the Salman verdict "confirms the validity of the District Court's jury instructions and thus defeats Mr Gupta's claim of error at the outset".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Toronto Man Sentenced To 10 Years In U.S. Prison For Role In Drug Trafficking Op

    Toronto Man Sentenced To 10 Years In U.S. Prison For Role In Drug Trafficking Op
    Nguyen and a Canadian co-conspirator, Gurshuran Singh, recruited couriers to drive the drugs to Salem, Mass., where another man — Joshua Rabinovitch — then sold the drugs and returned the proceeds to Canada.

    Toronto Man Sentenced To 10 Years In U.S. Prison For Role In Drug Trafficking Op

    YouTube Star Adam Saleh Says Kicked Off Delta Flight For Speaking Arabic

    YouTube Star Adam Saleh Says Kicked Off Delta Flight For Speaking Arabic
    A Yemeni-American YouTube star from New York, Adam Saleh, called for a boycott of Delta Airlines after charging he was removed from one of its flights on Wednesday for speaking Arabic.

    YouTube Star Adam Saleh Says Kicked Off Delta Flight For Speaking Arabic

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Meets Rahul Gandhi, Hours After BJP's Big Win In Chandigarh

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Meets Rahul Gandhi, Hours After BJP's Big Win In Chandigarh
    Navjot Singh Sidhu, whose quest for a new political party has reportedly led him to the Congress, today met Rahul Gandhi in Delhi for talks that lasted 45 minutes. 

    Navjot Singh Sidhu Meets Rahul Gandhi, Hours After BJP's Big Win In Chandigarh

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora
    Vedic culture is still relevant and gradually becoming more popular among Indian diaspora, especially in the youth, said researchers and scholars at a seminar held in the national capital.

    Vedic Culture Growing Popular Among Indian Diaspora

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend
    A 21-year-old woman has been arrested for allegedly murdering her elder sister in northeast Delhi's Shastri Park area for showing interest in the former's boyfriend, police said on Monday.

    Delhi Woman Allegedly Murders Her Sister For Taking Interest In Boyfriend

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist
    A homeless man at a Dunkin Donuts store in US threw hot coffee in the face of a Muslim woman, called her a terrorist and assaulted her on Monday, police said.

    US Man Throws Hot Coffee Over Muslim Woman, Calls Her Terrorist

    PrevNext