Ex-Barclays director accused by U.S. of
illegal tips to plumber
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[June 02, 2016]
By Nate Raymond
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A former director at
Barclays Plc was arrested on Tuesday on U.S. charges that he provided
inside information about impending mergers he learned about at the bank
to a plumber, who used the tips to make $76,000 illegally.
Steven McClatchey, 58, was charged in a criminal complaint filed
in Manhattan federal court with conspiracy, wire fraud and
securities fraud after the plumber, Gary Pusey, secretly pleaded
guilty on Friday and agreed to cooperate with authorities.
McClatchey, who worked at the British bank in its Manhattan offices
from December 2008 to December 2015, was arrested on Long Island,
where he resides. He was released later in the day following a court
hearing.
McClatchey's lawyer, Steven Kartagener, declined to comment. An
attorney for Pusey, 47, did not respond to requests for comment.
The charges were announced by Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara,
who has overseen an insider trading crackdown that has resulted in
102 people being charged and 78 being convicted since 2009.
That push has suffered recent setbacks following a 2014 appellate
ruling that limited the scope of insider trading laws, resulting in
charges being dropped or dismissed against 14 defendants.
According to the complaint and a related U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission lawsuit filed on Tuesday, McClatchey was
responsible for tracking all potential deals involving the bank.
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He began tipping Pusey, a friend he met through boating, as early as
2013, enabling the plumber to execute trades ahead of merger
announcements involving 11 companies, including Forest Oil Corp and
PetSmart Inc.
In exchange, Pusey paid thousands of dollars in cash to McClatchey,
sometimes placing cash in a gym bag that McClatchey brought with him
to a marina in Freeport, New York, and provided free bathroom
remodeling services, authorities said.
While Barclays was not identified by name in court papers, the bank
confirmed it was the British investment bank that had employed
McClatchey.
In a statement, Barclays said it has cooperated fully with
authorities, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the
SEC "since learning about this incident involving a former
employee."
The cases in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York,
are U.S. v. McClatchey, No. 16-mj-3433, and Securities and Exchange
Commission v. Pusey, No. 16-cv-04029.
(Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Matthew Lewis)
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