The FBI in New York City has
undisclosed probes into about 30 suspected insider trading schemes, the agency
said, in a sign investigators remains focused on building cases despite a court
ruling that could curtail such prosecutions.
The number of probes, which
has not been previously reported, comes amid a resurgence of insider trading
cases, with prosecutors in Manhattan charging 11 people so far in 2016, up from
just four in 2015.
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation's New York office has about 50 ongoing insider trading
investigations, about 30 of which have yet to result in publicly-filed charges,
a spokeswoman for the agency said last week.
The probes follow a 2014
ruling by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that authorities have said
could allow some individuals to avoid prosecution and that has already led to
charges being dropped or reversed for 14 defendants.
John Casale, assistant
special agent in charge of the FBI's complex financial crimes unit in New York,
acknowledged the ruling could prevent some people from being charged in certain
circumstances.
But he said his agents have
not had to close any non-public investigations as a result of the ruling, which
reversed the convictions of hedge fund managers Todd Newman and Anthony
Chiasson.
That decision said that to
prove insider trading, prosecutors must establish that a trader knew the tipper
received something in exchange for the tip, like a quid pro quo involving
money, and that the benefit was of "some consequence."
The court rejected the
proposition that merely a friendship could constitute a benefit to the tipper.
As a result, Casale said agents are increasingly focused on showing the tipper
received a monetary or other tangible benefit.
"There's never been a
slowdown in our process of thinking about cases," Casale said in an
interview last week. "This was a hurdle we had to overcome."
It is unclear whether the
FBI and prosecutors will be able to ultimately bring charges in those 30
undisclosed investigations. Such probes can often be closed without charges
being brought.
The FBI would not comment on
the details of the undisclosed probes and did not provide information on how
advanced they were. Casale said some involved multiple individuals.
The law of insider trading
meanwhile remains in flux. The U.S. Supreme Court in January agreed to review
an appellate ruling out of California, and could use that case to clarify the
definition of insider trading.
The FBI has been pursuing
insider trading cases with, among others, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet
Bharara, whose office has since 2009 announced charges against 107 people, and
secured convictions of 81 individuals.
Those charged this year
include famed Las Vegas sports gambler William "Billy" Walters, who
has pleaded not guilty, and hedge fund manager Sanjay Valvani, who worked at
Visium Asset Management LP
and committed suicide last month following his indictment.
Casale said he was
optimistic that the FBI's undisclosed probes would result in more individuals
being charged, despite the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court's ruling. Still, he
acknowledged that the decision posed additional hurdles.
"It may take more
stones to overturn than it would have in the past," he said.
Credit:Reuters
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