Rajaratnam Case Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ for Silicon Valley Companies - 10/20/2009

Home

Index of Filings

News and Press Releases

Filings

Decisions

Settlements

Litigation Activity Indices

Top Ten List

Annual/Quarterly Updates

Clearinghouse Research

Articles & Papers

Search

Related Sites

About Us

Local Rules

Sponsors


Register


_______________
Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2009 News and Press Releases

News News 2009


HEADLINE NEWS:

Rajaratnam Case Is ‘Wake-Up Call’ for Silicon Valley Companies
Brian Womack and Ari Levy

Bloomberg. October 20, 2009

_________________________________________________________________________

EXCERPT: The U.S. investigation into alleged insider trading by Galleon Group and technology executives may prompt Silicon Valley companies to clamp down on how employees handle sensitive financial information. “It’s a wake-up call, if not an extraordinary reminder that they need to make sure their employees understand the rules of insider trading and what they can and can’t talk about,” said Jahan Raissi, former senior counsel in the enforcement division of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. “It’s also a wake-up call that federal prosecutors aren’t going about this as business as usual.” Prosecutors said Galleon founder Raj Rajaratnam reaped as much as $18 million from investing on tips from a hedge fund, a credit rating firm and executives at International Business Machines Corp. and Intel Corp. The case may lead companies to be more guarded about the information they share with outsiders, said James Post, a professor at Boston University. Rajaratnam, 52, and the other defendants are charged with using insider information to trade in companies such as Google Inc., Polycom Inc. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Last week, prosecutors arrested Rajiv Goel, who worked at Intel Capital as a director in strategic investments, and IBM executive Robert Moffat, who ran the hardware business. In the case of Google, the most-used Internet search engine, prosecutors said a person at investor relations firm Market Street Partners provided tips about earnings. […] “It’s going to have an immediate chilling effect on communication between company sources and people in the investment community,” said Post, who co-wrote “Redefining the Corporation,” a study of governance and accountability. “I imagine that general counsels will immediately send out strong reminders -- not to be sharing information that has not been made public.” Edward Barbini, a spokesman for Armonk, New York-based IBM, said yesterday that Moffat would be placed on temporary leave.

Back to News page | Back to Archived News 2009 page | Back to Top