Garavi Gujarat USA

Prison term in Coinbase insider trading

-

THE brother of a former Coinbase Global product manager was sentenced on Tuesday (10) to 10 months in prison after pleading guilty in what US prosecutor­s have called the first insider trading case involving cryptocurr­ency.

Nikhil Wahi admitted to making trades based on confidenti­al informatio­n from Coinbase, one of the world's largest cryptocurr­ency exchanges, when he pleaded guilty in September to a wire fraud conspiracy charge.

Prosecutor­s said Ishan Wahi, the former product manager, shared the informatio­n with his brother and their friend Sameer Ramani about new digital assets that Coinbase was planning to let users trade.

Ishan Wahi has pleaded not guilty, and

Ramani is at large.

Prosecutor­s said Wahi made nearly $900,000 of profit by illegally trading ahead of 40 different Coinbase announceme­nts. They recommende­d a 10- to 16-month sentence.

At a sentencing hearing in Manhattan federal court, US District Judge Loretta Preska said his crime was ‘not an isolated error in judgment.'

The sentencing came as US prosecutor­s and regulators ramp up their scrutiny of cryptocurr­ency companies and executives.

‘Today's sentence makes clear that the cryptocurr­ency markets are not lawless,' Damian Williams, the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan, said in a statement.

Last month, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried pleaded not guilty to eight counts of fraud and conspiracy over the collapse of his now-bankrupt exchange, a Coinbase rival.

The crypto sector is also struggling, after the values of bitcoin and other digital assets plunged last year as interest rates and worries of an economic downturn rose.

Wahi's mother and about one dozen other family members and friends attended his sentencing.

He told Preska he had traded in an effort to repay his parents for funding his US college education.

‘I wanted to help my parents, but instead I put them through great suffering,' said Wahi, whose lawyer had urged Preska not to impose a prison sentence.

‘I'm very sorry for what I did.'

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States