Rajat Gupta seeks reversal of insider trading conviction

New York, Jan 23 (IANS) Rajat Gupta, a former Indian-American director of Goldman Sachs Group, has asked a US court to reverse his insider trading conviction, objecting to prosecution's use of wiretaps supposedly implicating him.

In a brief filed Friday at the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, Gupta's lawyers argued wiretaps of now-imprisoned Sri-Lankan American hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam amounted to "hearsay statements" and should not have been presented to the jury.

"Without a proper basis for admission, these untestable, unreliable hearsay statements had no place in a criminal trial, and their admission alone compels reversal," Gupta's lawyers wrote.

A federal jury convicted Gupta, 64, in June of leaking Goldman boardroom secrets to Rajaratnam, the convicted Galleon Group hedge fund manager, who is currently serving an 11-year prison term for insider trading.

US District Judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan sentenced Gupta to two years in prison. But a federal appeals court in Manhattan in December granted his request to remain free during his appeal.

Rakoff, who presided over the trial, originally ordered Gupta to begin serving his sentence on Jan 8.

The judge erred when he allowed the government to present wiretaps of conversations not involving Gupta and limited Gupta's defence case by barring evidence that Rajaratnam had alternative sources of non-public information about Goldman Sachs, his lawyers wrote.

Rakoff "significantly curtailed" Gupta's principal defences and made erroneous rulings in the prosecution's favour that "decisively tipped the scales" against him, they argued.

Gupta challenged the government's use of court-authorised wiretaps, saying Rakoff shouldn't have permitted prosecutors to play recordings of September and October 2008 telephone calls between Rajaratnam and others that didn't include Gupta.

Rakoff also erred when he didn't allow Gupta's daughter to testify that he told her he had discovered that Rajaratnam had "swindled" him when he'd withdrawn money from the fund. Gupta lost $10 million, his lawyers said.

Related Videos

  • Batteries hold key to wearable device revolution
    Batteries hold key to wearable device revolution

    By Alexei Oreskovic and Gerry Shih SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Longer-lasting batteries are crucial for a new crop of wearable computers whose rise may upend Apple and Google's dominance of mobile devices, two of the field's pioneers say. Wearable devices - from bracelets that monitor physical activity and sleeping patterns to clothing with built-in sensors and Web-ready glasses - may mark the next big technology shift, just as smartphones evolved from personal computers. That transition has put …

  • IMG severs Kashmir from India
    IMG severs Kashmir from India

    Boundaries of the state altered in IPL manual. …

  • U.S. to hold Afghan peace talks with Taliban in Doha
    U.S. to hold Afghan peace talks with Taliban in Doha

    By Mark Felsenthal WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Th=e United States will meet the Taliban in Doha for talks aimed at achieving peace in Afghanistan, where the United States has battled the insurgents for 12 years, U.S. officials said on Tuesday. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, warned that the process would likely be lengthy. They said the Taliban would issue a statement on Tuesday opposing the use of Afghan soil for attacks on other countries and that they support an Afghan peace …

  • Sri Lanka in semifinal after Australia scare
    Sri Lanka in semifinal after Australia scare

    THE OVAL: Nail-biting finish follows the defending champions' exit from the title race. …

  • Dilshan swoops to send Sri Lanka into semi-finals
    Dilshan swoops to send Sri Lanka into semi-finals

    By Ed Osmond LONDON (Reuters) - Tillakaratne Dilshan took a brilliant one-handed catch to end a stubborn last-wicket partnership of 41 as Sri Lanka beat Australia by 20 runs on Monday to reach the Champions Trophy semi-finals. Australia, needing to reach their target of 254 in 29.1 overs to make the last four, came out all guns blazing but they lost wickets at regular intervals and, at 192 for nine, looked to be heading for a heavy defeat in the final Group A match. ... …

  • Monsoon covers India by mid-June, earliest ever
    Monsoon covers India by mid-June, earliest ever

    By Rajendra Jadhav and Ratnajyoti Dutta MUMBAI/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Monsoon rains have covered the entire country a month ahead of schedule, brightening the prospects for a bumper output of summer-sown crops such as rice, oilseeds and cotton in one of the world's leading producers. The rains usually cover all of India by mid-July, but this year it happened on June 16, the earliest such occurrence on record, a senior official at the India Meteorological Department said. A strong start to the …

  • United States to meet Taliban to seek Afghan peace
    United States to meet Taliban to seek Afghan peace

    By Mark Felsenthal, Hamid Shalizi and Dylan Welch WASHINGTON/KABUL (Reuters) - The United States will meet the Taliban this week for talks aimed at achieving peace in Afghanistan, where U.S.-led forces and the insurgents have fought a bloody and costly war for the past 12 years, U.S. officials said on Tuesday. The Taliban opened an office in Doha, the Qatari capital, on Tuesday to help restart talks and said it wanted a political solution that would bring about a just government and end foreign …

Yahoo! Answers