Bangkok Post

Financier found guilty in Trump Media insider trading trial

- MATTHEW GOLDSTEIN

Afederal jury in Manhattan on Thursday convicted a financial executive on securities fraud charges arising from a multimilli­on-dollar insider trading scheme that involved the merger of former President Donald Trump’s social media company with a publicly traded shell company.

Federal prosecutor­s had charged the executive, Bruce Garelick, with five counts of securities fraud and conspiracy.

Authoritie­s claimed Garelick leaked confidenti­al informatio­n to his boss and at least one other person that Trump Media & Technology Group, the parent company of Truth Social, was getting close to announcing a merger in October 2021 with Digital World Acquisitio­n Corp, the shell company.

The informatio­n helped two brothers — Michael Shvartsman and Gerald Shvartsman — make nearly $23 million in illegal trading profits by buying Digital World securities in advance of the announceme­nt, which sent the stock soaring. Garelick, who worked for Michael Shvartsman at a small Miamibased venture capital firm, Rocket One, made about $50,000 by trading off what authoritie­s said was nonpublic informatio­n.

Last month, the Shvartsman brothers decided to forgo a trial and pleaded guilty to securities fraud charges. In their plea agreements, prosecutor­s have recommende­d a sentence of roughly four to five years for Michael

Shvartsman and three to four years for his younger brother.

Authoritie­s said Michael Shvartsman had used some of the proceeds from the scheme to buy a $14 million luxury yacht that he named Provocateu­r.

In court filings, prosecutor­s identified several other people who made profitable trades around the time of the merger announceme­nt, but none of them were charged with wrongdoing.

Garelick, in theory, could be sentenced to at least 25 years in prison.

He stood for the verdict, facing the jury, wearing a dark suit and gray tie. After the verdict was announced, Garelick sat down with his hand on his head and appeared emotional.

After leaving the courtroom with his family, Garelick declined to comment. The jury had deliberate­d for about five hours. He will be sentenced Sept 12.

Garelick, 54, a former hedge fund manager, had been a board member of Digital World. He joined the board after Rocket One agreed to be an early investor in Digital World, which was organised as a special purpose acquisitio­n corporatio­n, or Spac.

Digital World raised about $300 million from investors in its initial public offering in September 2021. A little over a month later, the Spac announced a deal to merge with Trump Media. After a long delay, the merger was completed in March, and Trump Media became a publicly traded company. Trump’s nearly 65% stake in the firm is worth about $6 billion.

SURGE SPARKED PROBE

Garelick ultimately resigned from Digital World’s board after federal prosecutor­s served subpoenas on the company in summer 2022 seeking informatio­n about Rocket One.

Exhibits introduced by prosecutor­s during the weeklong trial had shown that months before Digital World went public, Garelick had sometimes referred to the shell company as the “Trump Media Group SPAC” in emails with people who had invested alongside Rocket One.

In a closing argument, Daniel Nessim, a federal prosecutor, described Garelick as a “sophistica­ted profession­al” who “cheated” and used inside informatio­n to benefit himself and his boss, Michael Shvartsman.

Garelick testified on his behalf and said he had never tipped anyone about the status of the deal. He said he had been helping his boss develop a strategy for trading securities obtained before Digital World’s initial public offering. During the trial, Garelick’s lawyers suggested that another person, who was a friend of the Shvartsman brothers, might have been leaking updates on the deal.

The insider-trading investigat­ion was prompted by a surge in buying of Digital World’s securities on the open market just days before the official announceme­nt of a deal with Trump Media. At the time, Digital World was just one of many often obscure Spacs that had gone public.

Garelick’s trial coincided with Trump’s first criminal trial, which is taking place in a New York state courthouse just up the street. Trump is charged with taking part in a scheme to conceal hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels, an adult film star, in the final days of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign to suppress her story of a sexual liaison that she said she had with Trump.

 ?? ?? A man checks his phone as an electronic screen shows trading informatio­n about Truth Social, outside the Nasdaq Market in New York on March 26.
A man checks his phone as an electronic screen shows trading informatio­n about Truth Social, outside the Nasdaq Market in New York on March 26.

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