Albany Times Union

Burr’s trading investigat­ed

GOP senator sold off portfolio before pandemic crash

- By Brian Slodysko

North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr and his brother-in-law are being investigat­ed by the Securities and Exchange Commission for potential insider trading, a case that stems from their abrupt sales of financial holdings during the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to recent federal court filings.

Burr, a Republican, is among several lawmakers from both parties who faced outrage over their aggressive trading in early 2020, before the economic threat from the virus was widely known. That fueled accusation­s that the members of Congress were acting on inside informatio­n gained through their official duties to benefit financiall­y, which is illegal under a law known as the STOCK Act.

Burr was previously investigat­ed by the Trump administra­tion’s Justice Department for offloading $1.6 million from his portfolio in January and February 2020. The department cleared him of wrongdoing almost a year later — on Jan. 19, Donald Trump’s last full day in office.

But the SEC continued to investigat­e Burr, according to court documents filed in the Southern District of New York that were first made public last week. The agency enforces federal securities law.

Attorneys for Burr as well as for Gerald Fauth, who is the brother of Burr’s wife, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Burr has previously denied any wrongdoing.

The filings stem from a case brought by the SEC to force Fauth to comply with a subpoena. The agency argued that his close relationsh­ip with Burr and a phone call between the two, followed by calls to Fauth’s brokers, made his testimony “critical.”

“Whether Fauth was himself tipped with inside informatio­n from Senator Burr, and whether Fauth knew Senator Burr was violating his duties under the STOCK Act by conveying that informatio­n, are matters Fauth is uniquely positioned to speak to,” the SEC said in a filing.

To bolster their case, SEC attorneys released a timeline of phone calls from Feb. 13, 2020, the day Burr sold off the vast majority of his portfolio. It was roughly one week before the stock market went into a tailspin.

Burr is not seeking reelection next year. He was elected to the Senate in 2004.

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