Crypto Insider Trading
So! We now know that “Crypto” is here to stay! How do we know this? We do because we’ve just had the first case of “Insider Trading” filed in that space! Yes, it has taken this long for some genius to figure out their foolproof way to pull it off. “Heck” they thought. “Its a brave new world and it will take regulators years to figure out “which way is up! We’ll have a blast until then!
Well, “years” came a bit quicker for the trio involved here…a cautionary tale. Ie: Doesn’t matter what or when or where! What goes around comes around!
But who is in charge of that? What or who is watching and pointing it out to the regulators? What is their email address and phone number?
Sorry, unlisted! Its a force you can’t feel or touch but is real and tangible just the same. Its called “The Law of Cause & Effect” and it just struck a blow for the honest and good folks, yet once again! Wise up! It’s not a he or a she. Its a “Principle” and it is always watching and always responding in perfect measure.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/21/tech/first-crypto-insider-trading/index.html
Ex-Coinbase Employee and 2 Others Charged With Insider Trading of Crypto Assets
The case is the first time criminal insider-trading charges have been filed that involve cryptocurrency assets, a U.S. attorney said.
This article is part of our Daily Business Briefing
By Matthew Goldstein and David Yaffe-Bellany
July 21, 2022
Federal authorities filed criminal and civil charges against a former Coinbase employee and two other men in an insider trading case involving confidential information about cryptocurrency assets that were about to be posted on Coinbase’s exchange, according to charging documents filed on Thursday.
The three men were involved in trades over 10 months using information about 14 listings on Coinbase that generated about $1.5 million in illegal profits, according to federal prosecutors in Manhattan. The men were charged criminally with three counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
The case is the first time the authorities have filed criminal insider-trading charges involving cryptocurrency assets, said Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
The prosecutors, as well as the Securities and Exchange Commission in civil charging documents, said Ishan Wahi, who at the time was part of a Coinbase team that listed assets on the exchange, passed on confidential information about when some cryptocurrency assets would be listed to his brother, Nikhil Wahi, and his brother’s friend Sammer Ramani.
Nikhil Wahi and Mr. Ramani used that information to buy the assets before Coinbase announced they’d be listed, the authorities said. After the announcement, the men sold the assets for a profit.
The alleged scheme came to light after Coinbase began an internal investigation in April in response to a post on Twitter about unusual trading.
Ishan Wahi booked a flight to India just before the company was to interview him in the investigation. The authorities said he had tipped off his brother and his brother’s friend about the interview as well. Mr. Wahi and his brother were arrested on Thursday morning in Seattle. Mr. Ramani remained at large, the authorities said.
Lawyers for Ishan Wahi said their client “is innocent of all wrongdoing and intends to defend himself vigorously against these charges.” A lawyer for his brother did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. Ramani couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. The S.E.C. said that Mr. Ramani is a Houston resident but that it believed he was in India.
The charges suggest that federal authorities are prepared to crack down on illicit trading in the world of digital assets in much the same way they have pursued such crimes in the stock, bond and commodity markets.
“Our message with these charges is clear: Fraud is fraud is fraud, whether it occurs on the blockchain or on Wall Street,” Mr. Williams, the U.S. attorney, said.
The S.E.C. said the cryptocurrency assets listed on Coinbase’s exchange are considered securities and, therefore, can be regulated like stocks or bonds — a stance that many in the digital currency world have objected to.
Last month, federal prosecutors brought an insider trading case involving the use of confidential information to purchase another kind of digital assets, nonfungible tokens, or NFTs. In that case, the authorities charged a former employee of an NFT marketplace with misappropriating confidential information about the timing of public listings for the digital tokens.
The S.E.C. did not file any enforcement action in the insider trading case involving NFTs.
The two criminal cases “are just the beginning of the D.O.J.’s crackdown on insider trading in the crypto space,” said Ian McGinley, a former Justice Department prosecutor. “Both of these cases are for relatively small amounts, but D.O.J. brought them to send a message: They are watching.”
In a post on Coinbase’s website, the company’s chief executive, Brian Armstrong, said Coinbase had turned over information about the three men to the Justice Department and had ended Mr. Wahi’s employment. “We have zero tolerance for this kind of misconduct and will not hesitate to take action against any employee when we find wrongdoing,” he wrote.
But Mr. Armstrong took issue in the post with the S.E.C.’s decision to file civil securities fraud charges. He wrote that the assets on Coinbase’s exchange are not securities and noted that federal prosecutors had not charged the men with securities fraud.
The move by the S.E.C. prompted a rare rebuke from an official with another regulator. Caroline D. Pham, a commissioner with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, wrote on Twitter that the S.E.C.’s complaint “was a striking example of ‘regulation by enforcement.’” Ms. Pham, who was sworn in as a commissioner in April after being nominated by President Biden, said the S.E.C.’s decision to pursue securities fraud charges in this case had broader ramifications for the crypto industry and the appropriate regulatory framework.
In response, an S.E.C. official said, “The complaint speaks for itself.”
In an interview, Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s chief legal officer, said the company had a team of 50 investigators, including former federal prosecutors, who monitored suspicious activity on the platform. “These signals that we’re looking for are extremely faint in a very loud, complicated system,” he said.
The impetus for the investigation into Mr. Wahi was a tweet from an account under the name Cobie that used public transaction records to identify the suspicious trading.
When the charges were filed on Thursday, the account — which is reportedly run by the crypto influencer Jordan Fish — struck a modest tone.
“Confusing that people actually read tweets from this twitter account in the real world and then do stuff about them,” Cobie wrote.
Matthew Goldstein covers Wall Street and white-collar crime and housing issues. @mattgoldstein26
David Yaffe-Bellany covers cryptocurrencies and fintech. He graduated from Yale University and previously reported in Texas, Ohio, Connecticut and Washington, D.C. @yaffebellany
Kirkus Reviews, the gold-standard for independent & accurate reviews, has this to say about
What Goes Around Comes Around:
A stable, positive, non preachy, objective voice makes the book stand apart from others in the genre. A successful guide that uses anecdotes to reveal powerful truths about life.
~ Kirkus Reviews
“I’ve read a number of books that focus on sharing a similar message, including “The Secret” by Rhonda Byrne, “The Answer” by John Assaraf & Murray Smith, “The Celestine Prophecy” by James Redfield, “Think and Grow Rich,” by Napoleon Hill, and I must say that I find Rob’s to be my favorite.” – Sheryl Woodhouse, founder of Livelihood Matters LLC
Crypto Insider Trading
Crypto Insider Trading
So! We now know that “Crypto” is here to stay! How do we know this? We do because we’ve just had the first case of “Insider Trading” filed in that space! Yes, it has taken this long for some genius to figure out their foolproof way to pull it off. “Heck” they thought. “Its a brave new world and it will take regulators years to figure out “which way is up! We’ll have a blast until then!
Well, “years” came a bit quicker for the trio involved here…a cautionary tale. Ie: Doesn’t matter what or when or where! What goes around comes around!
But who is in charge of that? What or who is watching and pointing it out to the regulators? What is their email address and phone number?
Sorry, unlisted! Its a force you can’t feel or touch but is real and tangible just the same. Its called “The Law of Cause & Effect” and it just struck a blow for the honest and good folks, yet once again! Wise up! It’s not a he or a she. Its a “Principle” and it is always watching and always responding in perfect measure.
Colombo Family Crime Boss and 12 Others Are Arrested, Prosecutors Say
An indictment unsealed on Tuesday accuses the organization of orchestrating a two-decade scheme to extort a labor union.
By Rebecca Davis O’Brien
For two decades, the leadership of the Colombo crime family extorted a Queens labor union, federal prosecutors said — an effort that continued unabated even as members of the mob clan cycled through prison, the family’s notorious longtime boss died, and as federal law enforcement closed in.
Over time, what began as a Colombo captain’s shakedown of a union leader, complete with expletive-laced threats of violence, expanded into a cottage industry, prosecutors said, as the Colombo organization assumed control of contracting and union business, with side operations in phony construction certificates, marijuana trafficking and loan-sharking.
On Tuesday, 11 reputed members and associates of the Colombo crime family, including the mob clan’s entire leadership, were charged in a labor racketeering case brought by the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn.
All but two of the men were arrested Tuesday morning across New York and New Jersey, prosecutors said. Another was surrendered to the authorities on Tuesday; another defendant, identified as the family consigliere, remained at large, prosecutors said.
The indictment accuses the Colombo family of orchestrating a two-decade scheme to extort an unnamed labor union that represented construction workers, using threats of violence to secure payments and arrange contracts that would benefit the crime family.
The charges are an ambitious effort by the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to take down one of the city’s five Mafia families. In addition to the union extortion scheme, which is the heart of the racketeering charge, the indictment charges several misdeeds often associated with the mob, including drug trafficking, money laundering, loan-sharking and falsifying federal labor safety paperwork.
Detention hearings for the defendants in Brooklyn federal court continued into the evening Tuesday, as they entered not-guilty pleas to the charges; prosecutors had asked the court to keep 10 of the defendants in custody.
“Everything we allege in this investigation proves history does indeed repeat itself,” Michael J. Driscoll, F.B.I. assistant director-in-charge, said in a statement. “The underbelly of the crime families in New York City is alive and well.”
Around 2001, prosecutors said, Vincent Ricciardo — a reported captain in the family, also known as “Vinny Unions” — began to demand a portion of a senior labor union official’s salary. When Mr. Ricciardo was convicted and imprisoned on federal racketeering charges in the mid-2000s, prosecutors said, his cousin continued to collect those payments.
Starting in late 2019, prosecutors said, the senior leadership of the Colombo family became directly involved in the shakedown, which extended to broader efforts to siphon money from the union: for example, manipulating the selection of union health fund vendors to contract with entities connected to the family, and diverting more than $10,000 each month from the fund to the family.
Andrew Russo, 87, who prosecutors describe as the family boss, is accused of taking part in those efforts, as well as a money-laundering scheme to send the proceeds of the union extortion through intermediaries to Colombo associates. He was among nine defendants charged with racketeering.
Mr. Russo appeared in court virtually from the hospital Tuesday; he is set to be detained upon his release, pending a future bail hearing.
The family’s infamous longtime boss, Carmine J. Persico, died in federal custody in North Carolina in March 2019.
Federal law enforcement learned of the extortion scheme about a year ago, prosecutors wrote in a court filing Tuesday; investigators gathered thousands of hours of wiretapped calls and conversations recorded by a confidential witness, wrote the prosecutors, who also described law-enforcement surveillance of meetings among the accused conspirators.
The authorities said they repeatedly captured Mr. Ricciardo and his associates threatening to kill the union official. “I’ll put him in the ground right in front of his wife and kids,” Mr. Ricciardo was recorded saying in June.
On another occasion cited by prosecutors in the memo seeking his detention, Mr. Ricciardo directed the union official to hire a consultant selected by the Colombo family, saying: “It’s my union and that’s it.” Prosecutors said his activities were overseen by a Colombo soldier and the consigliere who remains at large.
Much of the activity outlined in the indictment took place while the defendants were either in prison or on supervised release for prior federal mob-related convictions. Theodore Persico Jr., described as a family captain and soldier, was released from federal prison in 2020 and, despite a directive not to associate with members of organized crime, “directed much of the labor racketeering scheme,” prosecutors said.
Mr. Persico, 58, is set to inherit the role of boss after Mr. Russo, prosecutors wrote.
Several of the defendants were named in what prosecutors described as a fraudulent safety training scheme, in which they falsified state and federal paperwork that is required for construction workers to show they have completed safety training courses.
One of the defendants, John Ragano — whom prosecutors say is a soldier in the Bonanno crime family — is accused of setting up phony occupational safety training schools in New York, which prosecutors said were “mills” that provided fraudulent safety training certificates to hundreds of people.
In October 2020, prosecutors said, an undercover law enforcement officer visited one of the schools in Ozone Park, Queens, and received, from Mr. Ricciardo’s cousin, a blank test form and an answer sheet; weeks later, the agent returned to pick up his federal safety card and paid $500.
The purported schools were also used for meetings with members of La Cosa Nostra — the group of crime families commonly known as the Mafia — and to store illegal drugs and fireworks, according to the indictment.
Mr. Ragano wasn’t charged on the racketeering count, although prosecutors also sought his detention pending trial. In addition to the racketeering count, several defendants, including Mr. Ricciardo and his cousin, were charged with extortion, conspiracy, fraud and conspiracy to make false statements.
William K. Rashbaum contributed reporting.
Correction:
An earlier version of this article misstated the number of people identified in an indictment as members of the Colombo crime family. It is 11, not more than a dozen.