Posts tagged “criminal case”

SEC Wants Judge To Force Rajaratnam To Hand Over Wiretaps

December 22nd, 2010

Rajaratnam and Chiesi

Having lost his fight to keep thousands of wiretaps out of his criminal trial, Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam will now have to renew his fight to keep them out of the hands of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The SEC yesterday demanded that Rajaratnam and former co-defendant Danielle Chiesi, both accused of insider-trading, turn over some of the 18,150 wiretaps that they received from prosecutors in the crimin

al case. And it seems likely that the two will lose at least the first round: The judge presiding over the civil case, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff, had ordered them to turn over the taps even before U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell, who is overseeing the criminal case, ruled on their legality.

received an at least temporary reprieve when a federal appeals court ruled that Rakoff erred by granting the SEC’s request before Holwell ruled. But now that Holwell has ruled that the wiretaps were, in fact, legal, it is unclear that Rajaratnam and Chiesi will still have the appeals court’s ear.

“Given that the legality of the wiretaps has now been established, and given that the SEC is only seeking relevant intercepts, the SEC’s ‘significant’ right to obtain the relevant intercepts outweighs whatever arguable remaining privacy interests defendants and others may have,” the agency said in its filing.

“The SEC’s significant right of access to relevant, legally intercepted communications relating to the defendants’ insider trading scheme, and the substantial prejudice it will suffer if deprived of these intercepts, clearly outweighs any remaining, diminished privacy interests implicated in disclosing the relevant intercepts. Without the recordings, the SEC likely will be deprived of important admissions and in many instances the best, most direct evidence of wrongdoing.”

Rajaratnam and Chiesi may reprise their earlier arguments against giving the SEC the taps, noting that the agency lacks the authority to use wiretaps.

Source

Galleon’s Raj Rajaratnam Wins Another Round

October 1st, 2010

Raj Rajaratnam

The Securities and Exchange Commission will not gain access to wiretaps that are at the vortex of the insider-trading case against Galleon Group without first proving that the wiretaps were legally obtained, according to a ruling by an appeals court on Thursday.

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York reversed the February ruling of U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff that Galleon founder Raj Rajaratnam and co-defendant Danielle Chiesi must submit the wiretaps to the SEC. Rajaratnam and Chiesi garnered the wiretaps from prosecutors in the criminal case.

“While the district court was correct that the SEC had a legitimate right of access to the wiretap materials, it could not properly balance that interest against the privacy interests at stake while the legality of the wiretaps was still unresolved,” the three-judge appeals panel ruled.

A ruling on the legality of the wiretaps is expected following an Oct. 4 hearing before U.S. District Judge Richard Holwell, who is presiding over the criminal case against Rajaratnam and Chiesi. Last month, Holwell said that Rajaratnam “has made a substantial preliminary showing that the government recklessly or knowingly misleading omitted several key facts” from its wiretap applications.

“We are gratified that the Second Circuit appreciated the gravity of the privacy issues at stake, and therefore reversed the disclosure order,” Chiesi’s lawyer, Alan Kaufman, said.

There are more than 18,000 intercepted conversations at the heart of the government’s case against the 21 Galleon defendants, a dozen of whom have pleaded guilty. Rajaratnam and Chiesi have pleaded not guilty and have denied any wrongdoing.

Source

Bottom Logo Wall Bottom Logo Reuters Bottom Logo Forbes Bottom Logo Fortune Bottom Logo Cnn Bottom Logo Cnbc Bottom Logo Fox Bottom Logo Comunity