How Not to Get Caught Insider Trading |
Date: Thursday, February 10, 2011
Author: HFN Daily
First, don't buy a million dollar apartment in a building with good surveillance
systems.
Former SAC Capital Advisor Donald Longueuil must be regretting
the choice to purchase a two-bed, two-bath condominium in the Lenox Hill
neighborhood of Manhattan for almost $1.73 million in 2008, according to public
records.
Longueuil got the apartment at quite a discount as it was
originally listed at $1.9 million, according to the real estate Web site
Street Easy. But he also probably never imagined that the high-rise
tower, built in 2003, would have such good security systems that the government
could use them in their insider trading case against him.
One of the
counts against Longueuil was for destruction of evidence. When the Wall
Street Journal reported in November, that federal prosecutors were preparing
charges against hedge fund managers who dealt with expert network firms,
Longueuil met with another ex-SAC manager, Noah Freeman, to describe his
reactions to The Journal's revelations.
Unfortunately, for
Longueuil, Freeman was already cooperating with the FBI and taping the
conversation.
Longueuil was recorded by Freeman describing his efforts
to get rid of a computer log which prosecutors allege kept track of Longueuil's
use of inside information in his trading.
Those efforts included chopping
up a computer USB drive, putting the pieces into four baggies, and stuffing the
baggies into his black North Face jacket. Then at about 2 a.m. on Nov. 20,
Longueuil went for a long walk, depositing the baggies into the back of four
different garbage trucks, according to the criminal complaint.
When
Freeman expressed amazement at how he was able to chop up the drive, Longueuil
said, "Oh, it's easy. You take two pairs of pliers, and then you rip it open . .
. and then it's just a piece of NAND [a type of flash memory storage]."
Longueuil could claim that this was all a bunch of trader bravado, but
there were those pesky surveillance cameras.
Surveillance video showed
Longueuil leaving the building at about 2 a.m. with another person and then
returning about half an hour later, prosecutors alleged.
Longueuil was
arrested Tuesday and released on $1.5 million bond. His defense attorney did not
return immediately return a telephone message.
SAC has said that it was
outraged by Longueuil's and Freeman's conduct which violated its policies and
that the firm continues to cooperate with the government's investigation.