
(Updates with additional details from SEC complaint, no comments from lawyers)
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The latest charges further paint a picture of unscrupulous executives and deal lawyers who advised companies on potential acquisitions passing along tips to hedge-fund managers and Wall Street traders about pending transactions, including a trader dubbed "the Octopussy" because of a reputation for having so many sources of inside information.
The case follows up on criminal charges brought last month against Raj
Rajaratnam, founder of hedge-fund firm Galleon Group, and five others in an
alleged insider-trading scheme that netted
"This investigation goes to the heart of fair play in the business world," said Preet Bharara, the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan, at a press conference Thursday. "If you cheat, there are consequences."
Eight people were taken into custody Thursday by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, including one in
They are Zvi Goffer, founder of Incremental Capital and a former Galleon
employee;
Lawyers for Zvi Goffer, Cutillo, Goldfarb, Drimal,
They were all released on bail Thursday, with the Goffer brothers, Cutillo,
Goldfarb, Drimal and Hariri each being released on
Five others have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with prosecutors in the probe.
They include Roomy Khan, who has been identified by people familiar with the investigation as the tipster at the center of the Galleon probe. Khan's lawyer didn't return calls for comment.
Deep Shah, a former Moody's analyst who allegedly passed information to her,
was among the nine charged Thursday. Shah, who is in
The charges outlined Thursday in eight criminal complaints include insider trading and conspiracy and revolve around tips about pending mergers and acquisitions.
The Securities and Exchange Commission brought a separate civil insider-
trading complaint against Zvi Goffer, 32 years old;
Shankar's lawyer didn't return calls for comment.
The regulator also amended its prior civil complaint against Rajaratnam, adding 13 individuals and entities, including several of the persons charged criminally on Thursday.
The SEC has alleged the two cases encompass about
In court documents, prosecutors alleged Zvi Goffer operated an "insider- trading network" through which he received material, nonpublic information regarding mergers and acquisitions and then traded on it, and passed it on to his co-conspirators.
The SEC said in its complaint that the scheme began in 2007 when Cutillo and his friend Goldfarb agreed with Zvi Goffer to trade on material nonpublic information about deals in which Ropes & Gray, Cutillo's law firm, was acting as an adviser.
Some of the alleged trades were made on information similar to that obtained
and traded on by Rajaratnam, including the announcement of an acquisition of
Hilton Hotels Corp. by Blackstone Group LP (BX) in
Zvi Goffer allegedly provided some of his cohorts with prepaid cellphones in order to avoid detection by law enforcement, prosecutors said.
The SEC said Zvi, who was dubbed "the Octopussy" by some members of the ring, gave one of his tippees a disposable cellphone with two numbers programmed into it, labeled "you" and "me."
After one deal closed, Zvi allegedly destroyed the cellphone given to a tippee by removing the SIM card, biting it and breaking the phone in half and having the tippee dispose of the other half, the SEC said.
The acquisitions include the 2007 deal with Avaya Inc. Avaya agreed to a merger with Silver Lake and TPG Capital, which were legally advised by Ropes & Gray. The firm also legally advised Bain Capital Partners LLC in its failed bid to acquire 3Com Corp. (COMS).
Like the Galleon case, investigators have intercepted telephone conversations with Zvi Goffer and recorded conversations with a cooperating witness in which Zvi Goffer or Drimal allegedly discussed how they received inside information on pending deals or discussed profits from the deals, according to the complaint.
Prosecutors have pointed to the use of wiretaps in the Galleon case as an important step forward in pursuing insider-trading crimes.
In
However, Zvi Goffer allegedly told Drimal in an intercepted telephone conversation from his cellphone that he was leading the cooperating witness " away from where Goffer really got the information," according to the criminal complaint. The cooperating witness, who isn't identified, has agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges in hopes of receiving a lesser sentence.
In a
Zvi Goffer worked at Schottenfeld from about
Besides Khan and Shankar, the five who pleaded guilty were
Lee's lawyer,
A Galleon spokesman didn't immediately comment. A person answering the phone at Incremental Capital said the firm had "no comment at this time."
A spokesman for Ropes & Gray said the firm was "deeply disappointed to learn about this situation, which suggests an extreme breach of this person's duty of trust to our clients and to the firm. We cannot comment in detail on an ongoing investigation but we are moving quickly to protect our clients and are cooperating fully with authorities."
3Com President and Chief Operating Officer
3Com was advised by law firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, which also is the defense counsel for Kimelman, one of the insider-trading defendants.
Rick Schottenfeld, founder of Schottenfeld Group, said in a statement: "We are deeply troubled and shocked by the criminal allegations made today against former employees of our firm. These individuals have not been affiliated with the firm for nearly two years. None of the principals nor any present employees of the firm have been named in connection with this criminal investigation. We plan to cooperate fully and completely with the authorities in their investigations of this matter."
In a separate complaint, prosecutors alleged that Shah, the former Moody's analyst, provided insider information to Khan, a hedge-fund manager who briefly worked for Galleon in the late 1990s.
Prosecutors also alleged that Hariri, who was vice president of
The cooperating witness isn't named, but is described as a
Wiretaps of the cooperating witness's phone were part of the Hariri case.
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires11-05-09 1931ET Copyright (c) 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.