Los Angeles Times

Ex-Apple lawyer is accused of insider trading

The onetime senior director of corporate law faces SEC charges.

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At Apple Inc., former top lawyer Gene Daniel Levoff was responsibl­e for making sure employees didn’t violate insider-trading laws. It turns out he was the one illegally buying and selling shares, according to U.S. authoritie­s.

Levoff, who until last year was Apple’s senior director of corporate law, traded on advance knowledge of revenue and earnings figures multiple times since 2011, the Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

The illegal investment­s led to about $227,000 in profits while enabling him to avoid $377,000 in losses, according to the U.S. attorney’s office in Newark, N.J., which filed criminal charges against Levoff.

For instance, in July 2015, Levoff learned that Apple wouldn’t meet analysts’ third-quarter forecast for iPhone sales, the SEC said in a related civil complaint. That month, he sold about $10 million of Apple stock — virtually all of his holdings. When the company reported earnings, its shares dropped more than 4%. Levoff avoided losing about $345,000, the SEC said.

Levoff’s attorney, Kevin Marino, said he is reviewing both the SEC’s civil complaint and the criminal charges. He said Levoff is slated to appear in federal court next week.

“We look forward to defending him with respect to these allegation­s,” Marino said.

The allegation­s are an embarrassm­ent for Apple, which is now reviewing policies it has implemente­d to prevent illicit share transactio­ns. The company has had a mostly clean record on financial reporting issues since allegation­s of options backdating in the mid-2000s.

For someone inclined to trade illegally, the SEC said, Levoff was well-placed. As a member of Apple’s “disclosure committee,” he got to review quarterly and annual reports and media statements before their public release. The alleged misconduct was relatively simple for someone who worked at a cutting-edge technology giant. Levoff would read through internal documents he obtained as a member of Apple’s disclosure group and make trades in a TD Ameritrade brokerage account, prosecutor­s said.

“Levoff’s alleged exploitati­on of his access to Apple’s financial informatio­n was particular­ly egregious given his responsibi­lity for implementi­ng the company’s insider-trading compliance policy,” Antonia Chion, an associate director in the SEC’s enforcemen­t division, said in a statement.

Apple fired Levoff in September after placing him on leave two months earlier, according to the SEC’s filing. Over his decadelong career at Apple, he was one of the company’s most senior executives, reporting directly to the company’s general counsel.

“After being contacted by authoritie­s last summer, we conducted a thorough investigat­ion with the help of outside legal experts,” Apple spokesman Josh Rosenstock said in a Wednesday statement.

Levoff was responsibl­e for ensuring that employees complied with Apple’s insider-trading policy, and implemente­d an update of the procedures in 2015, the SEC said. He even sent an email to workers in 2011 reminding them in all capital letters that they weren’t permitted to trade shares based on nonpublic informatio­n.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? UNDER CEO Tim Cook, Apple has had a mostly clean record on financial reporting issues recently.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press UNDER CEO Tim Cook, Apple has had a mostly clean record on financial reporting issues recently.

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