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Gupta gets 2 yrs jail term for insider trading crimes

Last Updated 25 October 2012, 04:27 IST

Fallen Wall Street tycoon Rajat Gupta was today sentenced to two years in prison and ordered to pay a USD five million fine by a US judge who termed Indian-American's insider trading crimes as "disgusting" and a "terrible breach of trust".

Gupta, 63 was also ordered by US District Judge Jed Rakoff to serve a year of supervised release after the end of his prison term.

The IIT and Harvard-educated former Goldman Sachs director would have to surrender to a designated prison on January 8, 2013. Rakoff denied Gupta's request to remain free on bail while he appeals his case.

A court could have taken about two years or more to rule on Gupta's appeal.
While the judge agreed to a request from Gupta's lawyers that he be assigned to New York's medium-security prison in Otisville, the final decision rests with the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Dressed in a dark blue suit, Gupta looked tensed and appeared to hold back tears as his sentencing proceedings began in Manhattan federal court here yesterday. He sat expressionless as Rakoff read the 15-page sentence at the end of the hearing which lasted over two and a half hours.

Gupta's sentencing comes exactly a year after he was charged with securities and conspiracy fraud, for which he had faced a maximum sentence of 25 years and marks a stunning fall from grace for the Indian-American who rose through the ranks to become one of the most prominent titans on Wall Street.

Rakoff, who on multiple occasions gave Gupta credit for his life of philanthropic works, said at the heart of Gupta's offenses is his "egregious breach of trust."

"He is a good man," Rakoff said.

"But the history of this country and the history of the world is full of examples of good men who did bad things."

Rakoff said the evidence that Gupta passed illegal information about Goldman Sachs to now-jailed hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam was "not only overwhelming, it was disgusting in its implications... It was a terrible breach of trust."

Rakoff said the urgency and manner in which Gupta shared information about Warren Buffet's five billion dollar investment in Goldman Sachs with Rajaratnam "was the functional equivalent of stabbing Goldman in the back."

"In the eye of the law, Gupta's crime was to breach his fiduciary duty of confidentiality to Goldman Sachs; or to put it another way, Goldman Sachs, not the marketplace, was the victim of Gupta’s crimes as charged," the judge said.

Rakoff said he does not dispute Gupta's innumerable charitable works and his intentions to help out others selflessly but his personal history and characteristics "starkly contrast" with the nature and circumstances of his crimes.

Before Rakoff gave his judgement, Gupta made his first comments in court, reading from a prepared statement and expressing regret over letting his family and colleagues down.

Gupta's wife and four daughters sat right behind him in the spectators' gallery, holding each others' hands and often consoling each other as they wept through the hearing. Several of Gupta's close friends and other members of family were also present in the packed courtroom.

"The last 18 months have been the most challenging period of my life since I lost my parents as a teenager. I have lost my reputation that I have built over a lifetime. The verdict was devastating to my family, my friends and me," Gupta said.
At the end of the court's proceedings, Gupta smiled as he shook hands and hugged his team of defence lawyers.

Surrounded by his family, he said he had no comment on the sentence as he walked out of the courtroom.

Gupta's two year sentence is a lot less than the 8-10 years that the prosecutors had sought for him. It is also less than Rajaratnam's prison term of 11 years and the USD 92.8 million fine the Sri Lankan had been ordered to pay.

Judge Rakoff is known to deviate from federal sentencing guidelines in handing down punishment.

He said the tips that Gupta passed on to Rajartanam in September and October 2008 on Buffet's five billion investment in Goldman Sachs and the global financial giant's quarterly losses resulted in an illegal "gain" of over five million dollars to Rajaratnam's hedge fund galleon.

"In the court's view, the evidence at trial established, to a virtual certainty, that Gupta, well knowing his fiduciary responsibilities to Goldman Sachs, brazenly disclosed material non-public information to Rajaratnam at the very time when our financial institutions were in immense distress and most in need of stability, repose, and trust."

Rakoff said, "All the evidence before the court -– not just the letters written on Gupta's behalf but also the objective facts of record –- establish beyond cavil that Gupta has selflessly devoted a huge amount of time and effort to a very wide variety of socially beneficial activities.

"Such activities are but illustrations of Gupta's big heart and helping hand, which he extended without fanfare or self-promotion, to all with whom he came in contact," Rakoff said.

He said the court can say without exaggeration that it has never encountered a defendant whose prior history suggests such an extraordinary devotion, "not only to humanity writ large, but also to individual human beings in their times of need."

The judge said he does not agree with a general perception that the nearly 400 letters of support, including from Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and former UN Chief Kofi Annan, for former McKinsey head "are simply the strategem of a rich, well-connected defendant."

"This is simply not the case, for the facts recited in most of the letters are well documented and, indeed, undisputed by the government."

Rakoff said one can only speculate as to why Gupta, who once sat on the boards of Procter & Gamble and American Airlines and was an advisor to the UN as well as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, ended up committing the crime of insider trading.

"Having finished his spectacular career at McKinsey in 2007, Gupta, for all his charitable endeavours, may have felt frustrated in not finding new business worlds to conquer; and Rajaratnam, a clever cultivator of persons with information, repeatedly held out prospects of exciting new international business opportunities that Rajaratnam would help fund but that Gupta would lead.

"There is also... an implicit suggestion that, after so many years of assuming the role of father to all, Gupta may have longed to escape the straightjacket of overwhelming responsibility, and had begun to loosen his self-restraint in ways that clouded his judgement," Rakoff said.

"But whatever was operating in the recesses of his brain, there is no doubt that Gupta, though not immediately profiting from tipping Rajaratnam, viewed it as an avenue to future benefits, opportunities, and even excitement. Thus, by any measure, Gupta's criminal acts represented the very antithesis of the values he had previously embodied."

Gupta's lawyer Gary Naftalis told the court that his client should be spared jail time as his loss of reputation due to the insider trading case was punishment enough.

"The fall from grace that Gupta has suffered as a result of the case is as steep as I have ever seen. This is a fall from grace of Greek tragedy proportions. This was a man who was an iconic figure, a role model for countless people around the world. He is no more," Naftalis said.

Naftalis added that Gupta has made extraordinary contribution to society and helped many people, which is why he deserves credit for his good deeds.

"Based on his body of work, it (insider trading case) is a total aberration. Gupta had one of the best reputations on the planet. His reputation was a lot more important to him than money. Loss of reputation is an extremely severe punishment as he has lost everything he spent six decades building."

Assistant US Attorney Richard Tarlowe argued for a sentence of at least eight years during the hearing, saying that Gupta "knew as much about the sanctity of these types of corporate confidences as anybody, and that's what makes it so shocking."

Gupta's defence had wanted no jail time and had requested a sentence of probation coupled with community service in Rwanda, a proposal which Rakoff said was "very innovative and ingenious."

"I thought this was the Peace Corps for insider traders," the judge said on Gupta's offer to work on healthcare initiatives in Rwanda.

"But I think if everything you told me about Gupta's character is correct, and I think it is, he would be doing this regardless of a court order or not. So looking at it in a cynical kind of way, it is not punishment."

Rakoff said insider trading is a crime which is easy to commit but hard to catch, thereby warranting a stronger need for deterrence.

"The effect of the crime places in jeopardy the integrity of the market place. If people say the markets are rigged, those with inside information are getting rich at the expense of rest of us, cynicism will be created. This is a very serious crime. This is a country where honesty pays off," the judge said.

Rakoff said Gupta is unlikely to repeat his "transgressions" after having suffered such a blow to his reputation.

"General deterrence, however, suggests a different conclusion. Others similarly situated to the defendant must therefore be made to understand that when you get caught, you will go to jail."

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(Published 24 October 2012, 20:53 IST)

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