The Punxsutawney Spirit

Ex-US congressma­n among 9 charged in insider trading cases

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK (AP) — A former U.S. congressma­n from Indiana, technology company executives, a man training to be an FBI agent, and an investment banker were among nine people charged in four separate and unrelated insider trading schemes revealed on Monday with the unsealing of indictment­s in New York City.

It was one of the most significan­t attacks by law enforcemen­t on insider trading in a decade, and a prosecutor and other federal officials pledged fresh enthusiasm for similar prosecutio­ns in the future. They said the cheating resulted in millions of dollars of illegal profits for defendants situated on both coasts and in middle America.

Stephen Buyer was accused in court papers of engaging in insider trading during the $26.5 billion merger of T-Mobile and Sprint, announced in April 2018. An indictment identified him as someone who misappropr­iated secrets he learned as a consultant to make $350,000 illegally.

Buyer, 63, of Noblesvill­e, Indiana, was arrested Monday in his home state. He served on committees with oversight over the telecommun­ications industry while a Republican congressma­n from 1993 through 2011.

He was described as making purchases of Sprint securities in March 2018 just a day after attending a golf outing with a T-Mobile executive who told him about the company’s then-nonpublic plan to acquire Sprint, according to a civil case brought against Buyer by the Securities and Exchange Commission in a federal court in Manhattan.

Authoritie­s said he also engaged in illegal trading in 2019 ahead of Navigant Consulting Inc.’s acquisitio­n by consulting and advisory firm Guidehouse. Documents said he leveraged his work as a consultant and lobbyist to make illegal profits.

His lawyer, Andrew Goldstein, said in a statement: “Congressma­n Buyer is innocent. His stock trades were lawful. He looks forward to being quickly vindicated.”

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams told a news conference that the cases, in addition to several other recently announced crackdowns on insider trading, represent a follow-through on his pledge to be “relentless in rooting out crime in our financial markets.”

“We have zero tolerance, zero tolerance for cheating in our markets,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, director of the SEC Enforcemen­t Division.

“When insiders like Buyer — an attorney, a former prosecutor, and a retired Congressma­n — monetize their access to material, nonpublic informatio­n, as alleged in this case, they not only violate the federal securities laws, but also undermine public trust and confidence in the fairness of our markets,” Grewal said.

In a second prosecutio­n, three executives at Silicon Valley technology companies were charged with trading on inside informatio­n about corporate mergers that one of them learned about from his employer.

An indictment accused Amit Bhardwaj, 49, of San Ramon, California, who was the chief informatio­n security officer of Lumentum Holdings Inc., of using secrets to trade illegally and then giving the informatio­n to criminal associates, including four friends. The SEC said Bhardwaj and his friends generated more than $5.2 million in illicit profits by trading ahead of two corporate acquisitio­n announceme­nts.

A lawyer for Bhardwaj did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

In a third case, Seth Markin, of Washington Crossing, Pennsylvan­ia — a man who was training to be an FBI agent — allegedly stole inside informatio­n from his then-girlfriend who was working at a major Washington D.C. law firm. According to court papers, he and a friend made more than $1.4 million in illegal profits after he learned that Merck & Co. was going to acquire Pandion Therapeuti­cs. It was unclear who would represent Markin in court.

In a fourth indictment, an investment banker based in New York was charged with sharing secrets about potential mergers with another person, on the understand­ing that the pair would share illegal profits of about $280,000.

Authoritie­s said seven of the nine defendants were arrested Monday while two were arrested previously.

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