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Rajat Gupta Getty Images Rajat Gupta may be the most important businessman ever charged with a serious violation of securities laws. The standard defendants in insider trading cases are
low-level employees of corporations or Wall Street firms. Only very occasionally does anyone who has risen to the height of a Raj Rajaratnam—the founder of Galleon, and alleged
co-conspirator of Gupta—get charged with serious violations. The only people who even comes close to the stature of Gupta are Michael Milken and Bernard Madoff. But despite the vast wealth
people had given to Madoff to manage, he was never a member of the inner circle of corporate power in America. Gupta is one of the most connected people in corporate America that you've
never heard of, as Duff McDonald showed in his October 2010 Fortune magazine profile. Gupta spent 34 years at McKinsey, arguably the most important corporate consulting company in the
world. In 1994, he was elected head of McKinsey, a position he held for nine years. Under his tenure, McKinsey grew into a truly global powerhouse, opening at least 20 offices overseas and
more than doubling the number of consultants employed, McDonald writes. After he left McKinsey, Gupta was tapped to sit on the boards of five well-known public companies: AMERICAN AIRLINES
parent AMR, GENPACT, GOLDMAN SACHS, HARMAN INTERNATIONAL, and PROCTER & GAMBLE. He also sat on the supervisory board of Russia's Sberbank and the board of the Qatar Financial
Centre. With the possible exception of Michael Milken, never before in the history of US securities laws has anyone this established, this well-connected, this close to the central core of
American capitalism faced such charges. Madoff comes close—but he was always on the periphery of Wall Street rather than at its center. One of the reasons we rarely see such charges against
people with the stature and wealth of Gupta is that insider trading makes so little logical sense for such people. There’s really no reason Gupta should leak confidential information to a
hedge fund manager. He doesn’t need money, access, prestige or any favors at all. If he did tip off his hedge fund manager friend, it was something darker than greed or ambition. It was
something close to sociopathic narcissism—perhaps a belief that he was somehow above the law, immune to the rules that govern the rest of us. The sort of thing we see in Madoff. Of course,
there’s another explanation: that Gupta didn’t do what the SEC claims he did. That those phone calls to accused insider trader Raj Rajaratnam, made within seconds of the conclusion of board
meetings, were just social calls. Gupta is denying everything. His lawyer Gary Naftalis issued this statement: "The SEC's allegations are totally baseless. Mr. Gupta's 40-year
record of ethical conduct, integrity, and commitment to guarding his clients' confidences is beyond reproach. Mr. Gupta has done nothing wrong and is confident that these unfounded
allegations will be rejected by any fair and impartial fact finder. There is no allegation that Mr. Gupta traded in any of these securities or shared in any profits as part of any quid pro
quo. In fact, Mr. Gupta had lost his entire $10 million investment in the GB Voyager Fund managed by Rajaratnam at the time of these events, negating any motive to deviate from a lifetime of
honesty and integrity.” _____________________________________ _COMPANIES MENTIONED IN THIS POST_ AMR Genpact Goldman Sachs Harman International Procter & Gamble
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