Galleon hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam and his principal co-defendant in a broad probe of insider trading at hedge funds will have separate trials on securities fraud and conspiracy charges, a US judge ordered on Friday.
Both Rajaratnam and Danielle Chiesi, a former trader at New Castle Funds LLC in New York, had been scheduled to go on trial together on Jan 17 in what US prosecutors have described as the biggest probe of hedge funds in the United States.
Rajaratnam's trial would begin on Feb 28 and Chiesi's trial on April 25, US District Judge Richard Holwell said in a written order.
Rajaratnam and Chiesi both pleaded not guilty to the charges following their arrest on Oct 16, 2009. The Sri Lankan-born Rajaratnam, once considered a billionaire, had since his arrest been the central figure in an investigation of hedge funds that has since widened.
Prosecutors initially focused on two overlapping networks of people allegedly trading on confidential tips about mostly tech stocks.
On Nov 24, Rajaratnam and Chiesi lost their bid to suppress as evidence at trial the FBI's secretly-recorded conversations of them in the investigation.
Rajaratnam and Chiesi face up to 20 years in prison if convicted. Both are free on bail pending the trials. Rajaratnam and Chiesi made about $53 million combined in profits from illegal trades, prosecutors have said.
At least two dozen former hedge fund managers, lawyers, traders and others have faced criminal or civil charges in the case. Fourteen have pleaded guilty to criminal charges, and 11 of them agreed to cooperate with prosecutors. One is at large.
The case is USA v Rajaratnam et al, US District Court for the Southern District of New York, No 10-01184.
Friday, 10 December 2010
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