Feds Giving Hedge Funds The Mob Treatment to Fight Insider Trading
Today's American mafia bears little resemblance to the shadowy, fearsome organization that captured the nation's imagination throughout the 20th century.
During the 1980s and early 1990s, crime bosses like John Gotti, Vincent "The Chin" Gigante, and Paul Castellano routinely found their names in the headlines - and their wrists in handcuffs – with federal prosecutors looking to break their organizations after decades of apparently looking the other way.
For more than 10 years, Gigante amused New Yorkers - and avoided trial - by wandering around Greenwich Village in nothing more than a bathrobe and slippers while mumbling to himself. Meanwhile John Gotti was famously dubbed the "Teflon Don" after winning acquittals in three high-profile trials in the 1980s.
Both crime bosses were eventually done in by FBI informants, which is the main reason the so-called mafia now barely registers a blip in the public's consciousness beyond a reality show like VH1's "Mob Wives" or "Sopranos" reruns on A&E.
Yet the downfalls of men like Gatti and Gigante continue to be relevant, since the feds are now using tactics that helped them crush New York's most notorious crime families to root out insider trading on Wall Street. The use of undercover informants and wire taps helped the feds take down Galleon Group hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam, and have given prosecutors enough evidence to bring dozens of traders and other hedge fund employees to trial over the last three years.
And just as the number of mob rats soared following Sammy "The Bull" Gravano's infamous testimony against John Gotti in 1991, it appears the number of insider trading snitches is also poised for a surge.
According to a Reuters report, federal investigators have enough informants lined up to file charges against hedge fund employees of various stripes over the next five years. The parallels with how the feds infiltrated the mob and what they're doing to end criminality on Wall Street don't end there either. FBI agents likened the challenges they face in penetrating a hedge fund to trying to enter a secret society, Reuters said.
From Reuters:
During the 1980s and early 1990s, crime bosses like John Gotti, Vincent "The Chin" Gigante, and Paul Castellano routinely found their names in the headlines - and their wrists in handcuffs – with federal prosecutors looking to break their organizations after decades of apparently looking the other way.
For more than 10 years, Gigante amused New Yorkers - and avoided trial - by wandering around Greenwich Village in nothing more than a bathrobe and slippers while mumbling to himself. Meanwhile John Gotti was famously dubbed the "Teflon Don" after winning acquittals in three high-profile trials in the 1980s.
Both crime bosses were eventually done in by FBI informants, which is the main reason the so-called mafia now barely registers a blip in the public's consciousness beyond a reality show like VH1's "Mob Wives" or "Sopranos" reruns on A&E.
Yet the downfalls of men like Gatti and Gigante continue to be relevant, since the feds are now using tactics that helped them crush New York's most notorious crime families to root out insider trading on Wall Street. The use of undercover informants and wire taps helped the feds take down Galleon Group hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam, and have given prosecutors enough evidence to bring dozens of traders and other hedge fund employees to trial over the last three years.
And just as the number of mob rats soared following Sammy "The Bull" Gravano's infamous testimony against John Gotti in 1991, it appears the number of insider trading snitches is also poised for a surge.
According to a Reuters report, federal investigators have enough informants lined up to file charges against hedge fund employees of various stripes over the next five years. The parallels with how the feds infiltrated the mob and what they're doing to end criminality on Wall Street don't end there either. FBI agents likened the challenges they face in penetrating a hedge fund to trying to enter a secret society, Reuters said.
From Reuters:
"We have cooperators set up for years to come," said David Chaves, a supervisory special agent for securities and commodities fraud investigations. He told reporters that the informants include cooperating witnesses -- people who have been identified as conducting illegal trading but who have agreed to assist authorities to catch others in the hopes of receiving a lighter sentence -- and sources within hedge funds.http://advancedtrading.com/blogs/232601649
"I don't want to say it's infinite, but clearly in five years we think we will be working it," Chaves said.
The Galleon prosecution and other recent insider-trading cases have used secretly-recorded telephone conversations to gather evidence, an investigatory tool traditionally used in organized crime or narcotics cases.
The use of wiretaps sent a chill through the hedge fund industry closed to outsiders and what the FBI calls "undercover resistant."
Investigators have tracked mobile phone calls, instant messaging and social media to collect evidence.
The FBI says it is alert to new ways in which people may try to exchange information on publicly traded companies to gain an illegal edge.
"We will go to whatever lengths we have to to keep up with changes in technology," said Richard Jacobs, another FBI supervisory special agent for white-collar crime cases."
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