Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Loses US Extradition Case

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Oct, 2016 01:09 PM
     
    A UK court today ordered extradition to the US of an Indian-origin futures trader arrested for his alleged role in the 2010 Wall Street "flash crash" which wiped nearly $1 trillion off the value of US shares in minutes.
     
    London-based Navinder Singh Sarao, 37, must now be extradited to the US within 28 days to face charges that he contributed to the May 2010 crash, when the Dow Jones share index in New York briefly fell by more than 1,000 points.
     
    At the High Court, Lord Justice Gross said it was "clear" the court must turn down his application against extradition.
     
    Mr Sarao denies all 22 charges brought against him by US authorities. He faces a maximum sentence of 380 years.
     
    American prosecutors allege Mr Sarao made millions of dollars through online trades from his parents' west London home which amounted to market manipulation and caused the 1,000-point fall on the Dow Jones index on May 6, 2010.
     
    The 22 charges he faces include fraud and "spoofing" - the practice of buying or selling with the intent to cancel the transaction before execution.
     
    He has previously told the court that he was simply "being good at my job".
     
    The US justice department claims Sarao and his company Nav Sarao Futures Limited made $ 878,000 of profit from the flash crash and a total of 26 million pounds illegally over five years.
     
     
    He was arrested by British police on a US warrant in April last year and has been indicted by a US federal grand jury on 22 criminal counts, including wire fraud, commodities fraud, commodity price manipulation and attempted price manipulation.
     
    The former bank worker and Brunel University student, who lives and worked out of his parents' home in Hounslow near Heathrow airport, is accused of using an automated trading program to "spoof" markets.
     
    During the course of hearings last year, it emerged that he suffers from Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism.
     
    The so-called "flash crash" saw the Dow Jones industrial average briefly plunge more than 1,000 points on May 6, 2010, temporarily wiping out nearly $1 trillion in market value.
     
    Sarao has already spent four months in prison last year after failing to meet five-million-pound bail terms because his assets had been frozen.
     
    He was freed in September last year after US authorities agreed he could be released on bail of 50,000 pounds. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Act on Terror Havens, US Tells Pak In Blunt Message; Stops $300 Million Aid

    Act on Terror Havens, US Tells Pak In Blunt Message; Stops $300 Million Aid
    The continued existence of terrorist safe havens in Pakistan and its inability to take action against them affect the US-Pakistan bilateral ties, including security assistance, the Pentagon has said.

    Act on Terror Havens, US Tells Pak In Blunt Message; Stops $300 Million Aid

    China Offers Cloud-Seeding Technology For Drought-Hit Marathwada

    China Offers Cloud-Seeding Technology For Drought-Hit Marathwada
    China has over the years used the cloud seeding rockets tipped with silver iodide to cause precipitation. But it requires clouds to cause precipitation.

    China Offers Cloud-Seeding Technology For Drought-Hit Marathwada

    Putin Wants Improved Relations With Canada, But Says 'Specific Steps' Needed

    ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Russian President Vladimir Putin says he wants to work with Canada's new Liberal government to improve relations, but he won't say how.

    Putin Wants Improved Relations With Canada, But Says 'Specific Steps' Needed

    Hundreds Practise Yoga In Beijing

    Hundreds of people practised Yoga here on Saturday to mark the International Yoga Day which will be observed on June 21.

    Hundreds Practise Yoga In Beijing

    Indian-Origin Ex-Marine Imran Yousuf Hailed As Hero In Orlando Night Club Massacre

    Indian-Origin Ex-Marine Imran Yousuf Hailed As Hero In Orlando Night Club Massacre
    Former US Marine sergeant of Indian origin, Imran Yousuf, has been hailed as a hero for saving scores of lives at a Florida night club when a terrorist went on a rampage killing 49 people.

    Indian-Origin Ex-Marine Imran Yousuf Hailed As Hero In Orlando Night Club Massacre

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Making False Statements In U.S. Gun Purchases

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Making False Statements In U.S. Gun Purchases
      The dealer, who alerted authorities, said Baffoe produced an American passport and an expired New Hampshire driver's licence when he asked if he was a state resident, an affidavit from federal agent John Cook says.

    Canadian Man Pleads Guilty To Making False Statements In U.S. Gun Purchases