Ex-U.S. Rep. Buyer of Indiana goes on trial over stock buys
During his 1993-2011 tenure in
“He took his clients’ information, inside information, and used it to line his own pockets, to give him an edge in the stock market the public would never have,” Assistant
Buyer’s lawyers counter that he was a stock market buff who did his research, made some profitable trades and didn’t even know about his clients’ private plans when he made the purchases that came under prosecutors’ scrutiny.
As for the payoffs when his clients bought two companies in which he'd invested, “Does lightning strike twice in the same place? Ask the
Buyer repeatedly bought Sprint stock in the weeks before the public announcement of the telecommunications giant's planned sale to his client T-Mobile. The next year, Buyer made a flurry of purchases of stock in the management consulting company Navigant, which his client Guidehouse was set to acquire in a deal publicly disclosed weeks later.
He sold the stocks after the various announcements, making over
Prosecutors say Buyer made the buys after a T-Mobile executive told him about the Sprint deal on a
Buyer's attorneys say the government is framing legal investment moves as a crime and won't be able to prove that he learned of the impending corporate deals before making the stock purchases.
According to Alonso, the T-Mobile executive hasn't said he's certain he told Buyer about the Sprint deal in advance of the ex-lawmaker's investment, and the Guidehouse sales director simply asked for Buyer's help getting information on the
“He did research about both the stocks," Alonso told jurors. “He actually had a good reason to want to buy them.”
Buyer, 64, listened intently to the arguments, at one point asking one of his attorneys for a legal pad so he could write something down.



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