BLBG:Ex-Goldman Director Gupta Says U.S. Case Hurt by Rajaratnam Lies
Ex-Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) director Rajat Gupta is trying to bolster his defense to federal insider- trading charges by using prosecutorsâ own words calling accused accomplice Raj Rajaratnam a liar.
Prosecutors are likely to argue at Guptaâs April trial that Rajaratnam told another person that Gupta gave him illegal tips, defense lawyers said in a Jan. 3 court filing. In response, Guptaâs lawyers may argue that the former hedge fund manager, convicted of directing the biggest insider-trading scheme in a generation, canât be believed and that even the government doubts him. They cite comments prosecutors made challenging an interview Rajaratnam gave to Newsweek magazine.
In the interview published in October, Rajaratnam, co- founder of the Galleon Group LLC hedge fund, said prosecutors pressured him to plead guilty to insider trading and become an informant against Gupta. Afterwards, a spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan called his remarks âinaccurateâ and FBI spokesman Jim Margolin said comments Rajaratnam attributed to agents were never uttered.
Now, Gupta is using the government officialsâ denials as a basis to ask a judge to order prosecutors to surrender documents casting doubt on Rajaratnamâs truthfulness.
âAny such statement, in which the government expressed its own doubts about Rajaratnamâs veracity -- or simply that he is not to be trusted, even if stopping short of calling him a liar -- would obviously be helpful to the defense,â Guptaâs lawyer, Gary Naftalis, wrote in the filing in Manhattan federal court.
Gupta, 63, is scheduled to appear in court today as part of a pre-trial conference. Prosecutors havenât responded to Guptaâs document request, and itâs unclear if the issue will be discussed today. The trial is scheduled to start April 9.
P&G, McKinsey
Gupta, who also sat on the board of Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) and led McKinsey & Co., was indicted in October on accusations that he passed inside information to Rajaratnam.
He was charged with five counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison on each of the securities fraud counts and as long as five years on the conspiracy charge. He denies wrongdoing.
Rajaratnam, 54, who was convicted by a jury last year, is serving an 11-year prison term.
Berkshire, Goldman Sachs
The Gupta indictment cites three instances in which he allegedly leaked tips to Rajaratnam. Heâs accused of telling Rajaratnam about Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A)âs $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs in September 2008, about the bankâs unexpected fourth-quarter loss that year, and about P&Gâs poor performance in late 2008.
The indictment cites close ties between the two men, saying Gupta invested $2.4 million in at least two Galleon offshore funds, put $10 million into a venture with Rajaratnam called Voyager Capital Partners, and committed $22.5 million to a fund they created to focus on emerging markets in Asia.
Guptaâs lawyers said they expect prosecutors to re-play at least some of the wiretapped recordings of Rajaratnamâs telephone conversations heard at his trial. In a call from Oct. 24, 2008, Rajaratnam told a colleague that heâd been tipped by a source on the Goldman Sachs board about unanticipated losses. In that call, Rajaratnam doesnât name Gupta, who prosecutors say was the source.
Rajaratnam also doesnât identify Gupta on two other wiretapped recordings that the government will likely play at the April trial, Naftalis wrote.
Ellen Davis, a spokeswoman for Bharara; Margolin, the Federal Bureau of Investigation spokesman; and Naftalis declined to comment on Guptaâs court filing.
âExaggeratedâ Contacts
Guptaâs document request was part of a wide-ranging legal filing that asks U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff to bar prosecutors from using wiretaps as evidence and to dismiss some counts. It also seeks an order for the government to surrender âany informationâ showing that Rajaratnam âboasted about or exaggerated his contactsâ with âprominent persons or his sources of information.â
The court filing provides insight into Guptaâs defense.
Unlike Rajaratnamâs case, âthere are no wiretap recordings of conversations in which Mr. Gupta passed material, non-public information,â Naftalis wrote. Nor is there evidence that Gupta traded on illegal tips or shared in illicit profits, he said.
Wiretapped Call
Naftalis said heâll challenge the use of a wiretapped call from July 29, 2008, in which Gupta and Rajaratnam discussed whether Goldman Sachs might buy a commercial bank. At Rajaratnamâs trial, prosecutors cited the conversation as proof that Gupta leaked news about New York-based Goldman Sachs. Naftalis said there was already public speculation about Goldmanâs possible purchase of a bank, and the information on the wiretap wasnât secret.
Naftalis also said the ârelationship between the two men deteriorated in 2008,â in part because Rajaratnam lost Guptaâs $10 million investment in the Voyager fund.
In the Newsweek interview, Rajaratnam was quoted saying: âThey wanted me to plea-bargain. They want to get Rajat. I am not going to do what people did to me. Rajat has four daughters.â
According to Newsweek, Rajaratnam said FBI agent B.J. Kang, the lead investigator on the case, told him, âTake a good look at your son. Youâre not going to see him for a long time,â and added, âYour wife doesnât seem so upset. Because sheâs going to spend all your money.â
Margolin said in an interview in October that statements attributed to Kang and other agents were never spoken.
The cases are U.S. v. Gupta, 11-cr-00907, and SEC v. Gupta, 11-cv-07566, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
To contact the reporters on this story: Patricia Hurtado in federal court in Manhattan at pathurtado@bloomberg.net; David Glovin in New York at dglovin@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Hytha at mhytha@bloomberg.net