Rajat Gupta should pay $15 million penalty: U.S.

November 16, 2012 06:40 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 04:48 am IST - New York

A file picture of Mr. Rajat Gupta outside Manhattan federal court in New York.

A file picture of Mr. Rajat Gupta outside Manhattan federal court in New York.

U.S. government has asked a court here to slap a maximum penalty of $15 million on India-born fallen Wall Street titan Rajat Gupta and permanently bar him from serving as director of any publicly-traded firm for his “terrible breach of trust” by indulging in insider trading.

Weeks after the former Goldman Sachs Director was handed down a two-year jail term and fined $5 million by U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said he should be ordered to pay a maximum civil penalty of $15 million, which would be thrice the $5million in gains and losses avoided as a result of his “illegal conduct.”

Gupta (63), who is set to begin his prison term in January, has filed an appeal against his conviction in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

According to the Notice of Appeal filed by his lawyer Gary Naftalis in U.S. District Court Southern District of New York, Gupta’s “appeal concerns conviction only.”

Apart from the criminal case filed against him by Manhattan’s federal prosecutor Preet Bharara, Gupta faces charges filed by the SEC of “abusing his position of trust” and passing confidential information about Goldman Sachs and Proctor and Gamble to now-jailed hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam.

Maximum penalty

“The court should impose the maximum three—time civil penalty of $15,096,585 to punish Gupta for his terrible breach of trust and his craven, criminal conduct and to deter others from engaging in such conduct in the future,” the SEC said in a motion filed in federal court here.

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