
("=New Key Figure Emerges In Galleon Insider Trading Probe," at
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
FBI investigators say that's the nickname for Zvi Goffer, a hedge-fund manager
who emerged Thursday as a key player in an alleged insider-trading scheme that
authorities say pilfered about
The insider trading probe, which led to Goffer's arrest Thursday, has expanded to implicate 14 people that the government claims are related to the earlier Galleon case because inside information they used allegedly came from the same original tipster.
The drama reads not much different from "
The latest allegations in the case includes bags of cash, wiretapping, and witnesses worried about "rats" selling them out to all-too-eager feds. The case being built by the FBI and Securities and Exchange Commission alleges that a complicated web of informants used covert methods to disseminate and pay for insider stock tips.
Goffer, who worked at Galleon from January to
A lawyer for Goffer declined to comment on the charges Thursday.
Before he worked at Galleon, Goffer worked at hedge fund Schottenfeld Group.
He later co-founded his own firm, Incremental Capital; both are based in
A person answering the phone at Incremental said the company had "no comment at this time."
Rick Schottenfeld, founder of Schottenfeld Group, said the employees named hadn't worked at the company for nearly two years, and the company is cooperating with the investigation.
In
The complaint later says that in a
Goffer and Plate eventually decided the person in question wasn't a "rat," according to the complaint. That person wound up being a cooperating witness, the complaint said.
In early 2008, Goffer is recorded as having asked Plate to call him on his " bat phone," which the FBI alleges is code for a prepaid cell phone. The FBI and SEC allege prepaid cell phones were used to shield conversations from authorities.
Other parts of the 24-page complaint against Goffer, some of which were mentioned by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara and SEC Director of Enforcement Robert Khuzami in a press conference Thursday, said Goffer bit cell phone SIM cards in half in order to destroy traces of the calls.
The government amended its Galleon complaint against Rajaratnam to include Goffer and some of the others charged Thursday as defendants. The SEC presented publicly a flow chart detailing the alleged insider trading ring but didn't directly say Goffer's and Galleon's trades were conducted in unison.
Rajaratnam's attorneys have denied the allegations against him. Lawyers for Goldfarb and Plate on Thursday declined to comment.
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires11-05-09 2136ET Copyright (c) 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.