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Trader pleads not guilty to insider trading

By ITWeb
New Jersey, 03 Sept 2015

A man charged over his alleged role in a more than $100 million insider trading scheme that involved hacking into networks that distribute corporate news releases pleaded not guilty yesterday.

Arkadiy Dubovoy, who spoke Russian and used an interpreter, entered his plea to securities fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy charges in a brief appearance before US district judge Madeline Cox Arleo in New Jersey.

A 4 November trial date was set. Dubovoy's son, Igor, appeared separately yesterday on related charges before US magistrate judge Cathy Waldor, also in New Jersey, and is expected to enter a formal plea at a 14 September arraignment.

Michael Critchley, a lawyer for Arkadiy Dubovoy, declined to comment. Lawrence Lustberg, a lawyer for Igor Dubovoy, said he hopes within a few days to conclude talks that would allow his client to be released on bail.

The Dubovoys were among 32 defendants, including traders and hackers, charged last month by US authorities over an alleged five-year scheme to steal more than 150 000 press releases from Business Wire, Marketwired and PR Newswire before the news became public.

Nine of the defendants were criminally charged, including seven who prosecutors said were traders and two who were said to be hackers. The Dubovoys were two of the traders.

Five of the nine were arrested in the US, and four were at large in Ukraine.

Prosecutors said traders gave hackers "shopping lists" of press releases they wanted to peek at in advance and then executed trades before more than 800 of the stolen releases were made public.

Arkadiy Dubovoy was among the more successful traders, accounting for more than $11 million of illegal profit through trades in companies such as Align Technology and Caterpillar, prosecutors said.

Another trader, Morgan Stanley alumnus and hedge fund manager Vitaly Korchevsky, made more than $17 million of illegal profit, prosecutors said. A federal judge in Brooklyn, New York, on 26 August ordered Korchevsky's release on $2 million bond.

Igor Dubovoy had last week been unable to post a $3 million bond set by a federal judge in Atlanta. Prosecutors said the Dubovoys are from Alpharetta, Georgia, an Atlanta suburb.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission, which brought related civil charges in the case, said the conspiracy included traders in New York, Cyprus, France, Malta and Russia.

Business Wire is a unit of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, and PR Newswire is a unit of Britain's UBM.

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