Rajat Gupta strikes back at US regulator
March 19th, 2011 - 9:49 am ICT by IANSWashington, March 19 (IANS) Former Goldman Sachs Indian American director Rajat Gupta has sued the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), accusing the US regulator of “unfairly and unconstitutionally” connecting him to the biggest insider trading case in the US.
Earlier this month, the SEC filed charges against Gupta, former head of consultancy McKinsey & Co. accusing him of
giving inside information about Goldman Sachs to his friend and business partner Raj Rajaratnam.
Sri Lankan born Rajaratnam, former head of the Galleon hedge funds, is on trial in a Manhattan federal court on 14 counts of insider trading. He has denied any wrongdoing.
The SEC alleges that when he was a Goldman Sachs director, Gupta tipped Rajaratnam on Goldman earnings and the $5 billion Berkshire Hathaway investment, as well as other material, non-public information about the bank, which Rajaratnam then allegedly traded on.
In a suit filed Friday in the same federal court where Rajaratnam is being tried, Gupta, 62, said the regulator should have filed a lawsuit instead.
“Gupta denies all allegations of wrongdoing and stands ready to mount a defence against each and every one of the commission’s charges,” his lawyer, Gary Naftalis, said in the complaint.
Gupta seeks a jury trial and to have the SEC barred from asking for civil penalties. He is also seeking a court order keeping the agency from pursuing its administrative claims.
Under SEC rules, Gupta isn’t allowed a jury trial in an administrative action, or the right to use federal court rules on discovery, which require the exchange of evidence with the government, Naftalis said.
The suit argues that the SEC proceeding will deny Gupta a number of legal protections he would have in federal court, including a trial by jury.
Gupta’s lawyer has said Gupta did nothing wrong, and the new suit says “there is no plausible reason why Gupta would have deviated from a lifetime of probity and a career dedicated to safeguarding corporate confidences in favour of engaging in the significant and aberrational wrongdoing alleged.”
In addition to the complaints about the SEC’s methods, the new suit reviews Gupta’s background as the child of a
teacher and a “prominent freedom fighter” in India, and notes that “he has devoted approximately half of his time to a number of significant public service commitments.”
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
- Rajat Gupta asks US judge to hear his suit - Apr 13, 2011
- New insider trading probe may help Rajat Gupta - Apr 20, 2012
- US prosecutor says Rajat Gupta part of insider trading - Mar 05, 2011
- US drops charges against Rajat Gupta - Aug 06, 2011
- Rajat Gupta threw away his duties: Prosecution - May 22, 2012
- Rajat Gupta's lawyers say traders 'bragged' falsely about tipsters - May 31, 2012
- Rajat Gupta faces more insider-trading charges - Feb 01, 2012
- US court hears Rajat Gupta's call to Rajaratnam - May 24, 2012
- Rajat Gupta, Rajaratnam had animosity: defence lawyer - Mar 03, 2012
- Secret tapes show Rajaratnam traded on tips from Goldman source - Mar 31, 2011
- Rajat Gupta's trial set for April 9 - Oct 27, 2011
- Rajat Gupta's trial: Prosecutors play FBI wiretaps - May 25, 2012
- Rajat Gupta quits three boards ahead of Rajaratnam trial - Mar 08, 2011
- Rajaratnam made $63.8 mn through inside trading - Apr 07, 2011
- Rajat Gupta wins a key ruling, loses on wiretaps - Mar 28, 2012
Tags: administrative action, administrative claims, american director, berkshire hathaway, civil penalties, galleon, gary naftalis, goldman sachs, hedge funds, insider trading, jury trial, legal protections, mckinsey, new suit, plausible reason, probity, rajaratnam, rajat gupta, sec rules, securities and exchange commission