New York Post

ROADMAP TO STEAL

Supreme Court inaction great for thieves: Bharara

- By MICHELLE CELARIER and JOSHUA SAUL mcelarier@nypost.com

Crusading Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara’s sixyear battle against Wall Street got derailed on Monday when the Supreme Court refused to hear the government’s appeal of a key insidertra­ding case.

Bharara, who has charged 96 people during his longrunnin­g probe, wanted the high court to consider overturnin­g an appeals court decision that made it tougher to prosecute some Wall Street traders.

The Manhattan appeals court ruled that Wall Streeters who received insider tips had to have known that the tipper was compensate­d for the info — and that the compensati­on couldn’t be just friendship but had to be of “some consequenc­e.”

The decision has repercussi­ons for those already convicted who are hoping to have their verdicts overturned — and for future prosecutio­ns.

“The [Todd] Newman decision goes some way to creating an obvious roadmap for unscrupulo­us investors,” Bharara said Monday. “You can think of this as a potential bonanza for friends and family of rich people with access to material nonpublic informatio­n.”

The case rejected by the Supreme Court, without comment, involves the conviction­s of former hedgefund managers Todd Newman and Anthony Chiasson.

Newman, a former Diamondbac­k Capital Management portfolio manager, and Chiasson, cofounder of Level Global Investors, were convicted in 2012 and sentenced to 4¹/₂ years and 6¹/₂ years in prison, respective­ly.

In a stunning rebuke to Bharara, those conviction­s were overturned last December as the threejudge appellate panel narrowed the definition of insider trading.

Newman and Chiasson had learned about upcoming earnings announceme­nts from underlings at the nowdefunct hedge funds and, as a result, were too far removed from the original inside informatio­n.

In requesting the highcourt review, Justice Department Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr. argued that “a gift of informatio­n to a trading friend or relative without receiving money or valuables as a result” was enough of a benefit.

The narrow ruling by the ap peals court impairs “the government’s ability to protect the fairness and integrity of the securities markets,” Verrilli said.

Lawyers for Newman and Chiasson heralded Monday’s Supreme Court action. “There was no evidence that [Newman] knew there was anything wrong with the informatio­n he received,” his lawyers at Shearman & Sterling said in a statement.

“[D]ozens of his outstandin­g colleagues lost livelihood­s at his thriving [Level Global] fund, which became the collateral damage of this illconceiv­ed prosecutio­n,” Chiasson’s lawyer Greg Morvillo said.

The socalled Newman decision is unlikely to upend more than a few other insidertra­ding conviction­s that Bharara successful­ly obtained — but it will take the wind out of the sails of future cases.

The most likely case for reversal is that of former SAC Capital fund manager Michael Steinberg, convicted in 2013 under circumstan­ces similar to those of Newman and Chiasson. His appeal was sidelined pending the Supreme Court decision on Newman.

Michael Kimelman, who spent 21 months in prison, is also trying to have his conviction overturned.

Even with the Newman inaction, Bharara expects to keep his 90 percent insidertra­dingcase conviction rate.

 ??  ?? The Supremes blew holes in Wall Street top cop Preet Bharara’s insider-trading crackdown, with prime benefactor­s being exonerated ex-traders Anthony Chiasson (inset top left) and Todd Newman.
The Supremes blew holes in Wall Street top cop Preet Bharara’s insider-trading crackdown, with prime benefactor­s being exonerated ex-traders Anthony Chiasson (inset top left) and Todd Newman.

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