Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

GOP congressma­n from New York charged with insider trading

- By Tom Hays

NEW YORK » Republican U.S. Rep. Christophe­r Collins of New York was arrested Wednesday on charges he fed inside informatio­n he gleaned from sitting on the board of a biotechnol­ogy corporatio­n to his son, helping family and friends dodge hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses when one of the company’s drugs failed in a medical trial.

Collins, a staunch supporter of President Donald Trump who was among the first sitting members of Congress to endorse his candidacy for the White House, pleaded not guilty to an indictment unsealed at a court in Manhattan. The indictment charges Collins, his son and the father of the son’s fiancee with conspiracy, securities fraud, wire fraud and making false statements to the FBI.

Speaking to reporters in Buffalo hours after his release on bail, Collins, 68, professed his innocence and said he would remain on the ballot for re-election this fall.

“I believe I acted properly and within the law at all times,” he said. “I will mount a vigorous defense in court to clear my name. I look forward to being fully vindicated and exonerated.”

Prosecutor­s said the charges stem from Collins’ decision to share with his son insider informatio­n about Innate Immunother­apeutics Ltd., a biotechnol­ogy company headquarte­red in Sydney, Australia, with offices in Auckland, New Zealand. Collins was the company’s largest shareholde­r, with nearly 17 percent of its shares, and sat on its board.

According to the indictment, Collins was attending the Congressio­nal Picnic at the White House on June 22, 2017, when he received an email from the company’s chief executive saying that a trial of a drug the company developed to treat multiple sclerosis was a clinical failure.

Collins responded to the email saying: “Wow. Makes no sense. How are these results even possible???” the indictment said.

It said he then called his son, Cameron Collins, and, after several missed calls, they spoke for more than six minutes.

The next morning, according to the indictment, Cameron Collins began selling his shares, unloading enough over a two-day period to avoid $570,900 in losses before a public announceme­nt of the drug trial results. After the announceme­nt, the company’s stock price plunged 92 percent. Prosecutor­s said the son passed the informatio­n to a third defendant, Stephen Zarsky. Their combined trades avoided more than $768,000 in losses, authoritie­s said. They said Zarsky traded on it and tipped off at least three others.

U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman, a Republican, said Collins was supposed to keep the trial results secret.

“Instead, he decided to commit a crime,” he said. “Representa­tive Collins, who, by virtue of his office, helps write the laws of this country, acted as if the law did not apply to him.”

Collins, a conservati­ve first elected in 2012 to represent parts of western New York between Buffalo and Rochester, has vehemently denied wrongdoing. When the House Ethics Committee began investigat­ing the stock trades a year ago, his spokeswoma­n called it a “partisan witch hunt.”

All three defendants pleaded not guilty and were freed on $500,000 bail.

In his Buffalo news conference, Collins acknowledg­ed being disappoint­ed that Innate’s drug trials didn’t go well.

“We firmly believed we were on the verge of a medical breakthrou­gh,” he said.

But he said that even after learning of the setback, “I held on to my shares rather than sell them” as the law required.

He said the decision not to sell cost him millions of dollars.

“That’s OK,” he said. “That’s the risk I took.”

Collins has remained a vocal Trump supporter, most recently calling for an end to special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into possible campaign collusion and blaming Barack Obama’s administra­tion for failing to push back on Russia.

On Wednesday, House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, said he was removing Collins from the House Energy and Commerce Committee, calling insider trading “a clear violation of the public trust.”

In a written statement Wednesday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said the charges against Collins “show the rampant culture of corruption and self-enrichment among Republican­s in Washington today.”

Collins ran unopposed in the Republican primary and holds what’s largely considered a safe Republican seat in a state that went to Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016. He’s being challenged in November by Democrat Nate McMurray.

McMurray said Collins has brought shame to the region, but he stopped short of saying he should resign.

“That’s his decision to make. I’ll leave it up to him, but I know what I would do if I was in his place,” said McMurray, the town supervisor in the Buffalo suburb of Grand Island.

The advocacy group Public Citizen filed a request for an investigat­ion of Collins’ stock dealings with the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics and the Securities and Exchange Commission in January 2017.

Tom Price, who was Trump’s first secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, also came under scrutiny for his purchases of Innate stock while he was a Republican member of Congress from Georgia.

Democrats made an issue of Price’s purchase at his Senate confirmati­on hearings in early 2017, after the Wall Street Journal reported that company officials had said Price was allowed to buy the stocks at a low price. Price, who bought about 400,000 shares of the stock, said he’d learned of the firm through Collins but said the price he received was available to any investor.

Price resigned as health secretary last September under criticism for taking pricey charter flights at taxpayers’ expense.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican U.S. Rep. Christophe­r Collins, center, leaves federal court, Wednesday, in New York. Rep. Collins of western New York state has been indicted on charges that he used inside informatio­n about a biotechnol­ogy company to make illicit stock trades
MARY ALTAFFER—THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican U.S. Rep. Christophe­r Collins, center, leaves federal court, Wednesday, in New York. Rep. Collins of western New York state has been indicted on charges that he used inside informatio­n about a biotechnol­ogy company to make illicit stock trades

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