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In the Gupta case, Bharara's prosecution team charged and proved to the satisfaction of the jury that he passed on information about Goldman Sachs and P&G to Sri Lankan-origin businessman Raj Rajaratnam before they were publicly announced, enabling the latter's Galleon Funds to make multi-million dollar profits and avoid losses. Several other corporate managers of Indian-origin were involved in the case and received lighter sentences in exchange for testimony. Before Bharara's crusade against such actions, known as insider trading, white collar crimes of this kind were rarely punished, particularly when they involved well-connected elites. But Bharara, a Ferozepur, Punjab- born immigrant who was chosen by Obama to be the Manhattan prosecutorial watchdog, has ripped into this cozy Wall Street arrangement, often using controversial methods such as wiretaps and informants.
In the Gupta case, Bharara's team, using phone records and trading sequences, showed that Rajat Gupta placed a call to Raj Rajaratnam within a minute after disconnecting from a conference call in which the Goldman Sachs board (of which Gupta was member) approved billionaire investor Warren Buffett's $5 billion investment in the firm towards the close of market on September 23, 2008. Gupta and Rajaratnam spoke for 30 seconds. With minutes to go before the market closed, Rajratnam ordered his traders to buy shares of Goldman, making a neat profit for $1.2 million.
That phone call will now send Gupta to prison, where Rajaratnam is already cooling his heels after an 11-year sentence last October.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...faces-25-yrs-in-jail/articleshow/14161025.cms
In the Gupta case, Bharara's team, using phone records and trading sequences, showed that Rajat Gupta placed a call to Raj Rajaratnam within a minute after disconnecting from a conference call in which the Goldman Sachs board (of which Gupta was member) approved billionaire investor Warren Buffett's $5 billion investment in the firm towards the close of market on September 23, 2008. Gupta and Rajaratnam spoke for 30 seconds. With minutes to go before the market closed, Rajratnam ordered his traders to buy shares of Goldman, making a neat profit for $1.2 million.
That phone call will now send Gupta to prison, where Rajaratnam is already cooling his heels after an 11-year sentence last October.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...faces-25-yrs-in-jail/articleshow/14161025.cms