New York, Dec 13: Former Goldman Sachs Group Inc board member Rajat Gupta can remain
free on bail while he appeals his insider-trading conviction, an appeals court
ruled.
Gupta had been scheduled to surrender January 8 to start a
two-year prison sentence. But after hearing arguments from Gupta's lawyer and
prosecutors, a two-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New
York granted Gupta's request to stay out of prison.
Gupta, 64, was
convicted in June of leaking Goldman boardroom secrets to Raj Rajaratnam, the
Galleon Group hedge-fund manager at the center of a U.S. government crackdown on
insider trading over the past four years. Gupta, also a former head of
management consultancy McKinsey & Co, has been free on $10 million
bail.
The former Goldman director attended the hearing with his family.
After the hearing, he hugged his lawyer, Seth Waxman, and patted him on the
back.
Waxman declined to comment on the appeals court's ruling. A
spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara declined to
comment.
The U.S. Justice Department had argued that Gupta should not be
able to delay going to prison while he awaits the outcome of his appeal, which
is expected to be heard by the 2nd Circuit as early as April.
At the
hearing, Waxman argued that Gupta's appeal would raise substantial questions
that likely would result in his conviction being reversed.
The government
hadn't proved its case, which relied on "classically inadmissible" or "entirely
circumstantial" evidence, Waxman said. "It totally failed in that
regard."
Waxman said the trial judge, Jed Rakoff, erred in admitting an
October 24, 2008 wiretapped conversation between Rajaratnam and David Lau, a
Singapore-based portfolio manager at Galleon.
On the call, Rajaratnam
told Lau that he "heard yesterday from somebody who's on the board of Goldman
Sachs, that they are gonna lose $2 per share." But Waxman said there was no
evidence Lau traded on the tip, and the call had been focused on the general
discussions of the global financial crisis.
Reed Brodsky, the prosecutor
who argued before the 2nd Circuit, countered that the wiretaps show that
Rajaratnam had provided information to Lau so he could also benefit from
it.
"The government's evidence showed this was in furtherance of the
conspiracy," he said.
The 2nd Circuit had earlier denied Rajaratnam's
similar bid to remain free on bail pending his appeal, which was argued October
25. The fund manager is serving an 11-year prison sentence.
Gupta is
facing a related civil proceeding brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission. In a court filing, his lawyers argued that he should not pay any
civil penalty in connection with the SEC's claims. The SEC has asked the court
to impose the maximum allowable penalty of $15.3
million.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Ex-Goldman director to stay free on bail: Court
Ex-Goldman director to stay free on bail: Court
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