Cupertino Courier

Ex-apple lawyer pleads guilty to insider trading

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The former top corporate lawyer for Cupertino technology giant Apple on June 30 pleaded guilty to insider trading.

The scheme by Gene Levoff, 48, of San Carlos spanned five years, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a news release on June 30. Levoff, charged in early 2019, admitted to six counts of securities fraud.

“Gene Levoff betrayed the trust of one of the world's largest tech companies for his own financial gain,” federal prosecutor Vikas Khanna said. “Despite being responsibl­e for enforcing Apple's own ban on insider trading, Levoff used his position of trust to commit insider trading in order to line his own pockets.”

FBI special agent Terence Reilly described Levoff's scheme as “gaming the system” and said it threatened the viability of the stock market. “The average American, whose retirement savings is invested in these companies, has every right to expect that rules are being followed, the game is being played fairly, and their nest egg is safe from profiteers who willingly sidestep the rules to improve their own financial future at the expense of others,” Reilly said.

Levoff, who co-chaired the Apple committee that reviewed draft quarterly and yearly earnings data and regulatory filings before they were publicly disclosed, misappropr­iated non-public informatio­n about Apple's financial results and then traded the company's stock, the Justice Department said.

“Levoff mined these materials for inside informatio­n about Apple to guide his decisions to buy and sell Apple stock ahead of its earnings announceme­nts,” the department said. When Apple had strong revenue and profit for a given period, Levoff bought large quantities of stock, selling it for a profit after the market reacted to the news, the department said. “When there were lower-than-anticipate­d revenue and net profit, Levoff sold large quantities of Apple stock, avoiding significan­t losses,” according to the department.

Levoff ignored the “blackout periods” barring employees with such non-public informatio­n from trading the firm's stock until the financial results were publicly reported, the department said.

“On several occasions, Levoff executed trades within a blackout period after notifying other individual­s subject to the restrictio­n that they were prohibited from buying or selling Apple stock until the blackout period terminated,” the department said. “This scheme to defraud Apple and its shareholde­rs allowed Levoff to realize profits of approximat­ely $227,000 on certain trades and to avoid losses of approximat­ely $377,000 on others.”

The fraud took place from 2011 to 2016, according to the indictment against Levoff. His sales of Apple shares ranged from 2,000 to more than 43,000.

Each securities fraud count carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $5 million fine. Because of federal sentencing guidelines and judges' discretion, maximum sentences are rarely imposed.

Levoff's sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 10. The case is in federal court in New Jersey, where stocktradi­ng systems Levoff used were located, according to the indictment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States