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A billionaire Raj Rajaratnam, head of Galleon Management, a hedge fund advisory firm based in New York, was charged along with five other individuals by the Securities and Exchange Commission in a scheme that generated over $25 million in illegal gains.
According to the SEC’s filing Rajaratnam and his associates used confidential information about company earnings or takeover activity at several firms including Google, Hilton and Sun Microsystems so as to conduct illegal stock transactions.
In a statement Robert Khuzami, SEC enforcement director, reported that Rajaratnam's financial results were not a consequence of savvy trading but of savvy networking. "He cultivated a network of high-ranking corporate executives and insiders, and then tapped into this ring to obtain confidential details about quarterly earnings and takeover activity," said Khuzami.
Apart from Rajaratnam the SEC charged New Castle Funds portfolio manager Danielle Chiesi of New York, N.Y., Intel Capital managing director Rajiv Goel of Los Altos, Calif., McKinsey & Company director Anil Kumar of Saratoga, Calif., New Castle senior managing director and general partner Mark Kurland of Mount Kisco, N.Y., and IBM senior VP Robert Moffat of Ridgefield, Conn.
According to the New York Times report all six were arrested Friday morning. Five of the six are set to be arraigned in federal court in Manhattan Friday afternoon. Mr. Goel is set to be arraigned in California.
Mr. Rajaratnam, a native of Sri Lanka, is listed as No. 551 on Forbes’s 2009 list of the world’s richest people, with an estimated net worth of $1.3 billion.
Law-enforcement officials on Friday said that Mr. Rajaratnam’s success appeared built not on “genius trading strategies,” but on his insider-trading connections.
“He is not a master of the universe,” said Robert Khuzami, “He is a master of the Rolodex.”

According to the SEC’s filing Rajaratnam and his associates used confidential information about company earnings or takeover activity at several firms including Google, Hilton and Sun Microsystems so as to conduct illegal stock transactions.
In a statement Robert Khuzami, SEC enforcement director, reported that Rajaratnam's financial results were not a consequence of savvy trading but of savvy networking. "He cultivated a network of high-ranking corporate executives and insiders, and then tapped into this ring to obtain confidential details about quarterly earnings and takeover activity," said Khuzami.
Apart from Rajaratnam the SEC charged New Castle Funds portfolio manager Danielle Chiesi of New York, N.Y., Intel Capital managing director Rajiv Goel of Los Altos, Calif., McKinsey & Company director Anil Kumar of Saratoga, Calif., New Castle senior managing director and general partner Mark Kurland of Mount Kisco, N.Y., and IBM senior VP Robert Moffat of Ridgefield, Conn.
According to the New York Times report all six were arrested Friday morning. Five of the six are set to be arraigned in federal court in Manhattan Friday afternoon. Mr. Goel is set to be arraigned in California.
Mr. Rajaratnam, a native of Sri Lanka, is listed as No. 551 on Forbes’s 2009 list of the world’s richest people, with an estimated net worth of $1.3 billion.
Law-enforcement officials on Friday said that Mr. Rajaratnam’s success appeared built not on “genius trading strategies,” but on his insider-trading connections.
“He is not a master of the universe,” said Robert Khuzami, “He is a master of the Rolodex.”