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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Crime / US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls (29713 Views)
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Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 11:19am On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:No it is not but you cannot force me to discuss law with you I am not interested in any artificial argumentation if you quote it should be about what you quoted especially when you quote and start by saying DeepSight: . Something totally irrelevant to what you quoted He said she was wrong to have reported him I questioned that and you quoted to say what quite frankly was totally irrelevant to that conversation. Thus you were trolling and being a nuisance 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 11:25am On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Very well. I didn't realize that I came across that way and tender my unreserved apologies. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by tollyboy5(m): 11:25am On Feb 24 |
talk2hb1: I don't know what you're reading. Many defending this man only shows why Nigeria is where she is today.
1 Like 1 Share |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 11:27am On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:Accepted I edited my post BTW just for clarity 2 Likes |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by ThierryJay: 11:28am On Feb 24 |
DeepSight: So I'm wondering why you have to shift goalpost to create an imaginary case when the straightforward facts of this case has been laid bare. The technicalities are not exactly the same, so what's the need for the pointless exertions? My analogy was to demonstrate a common point which is negligence. And the answer to your fantasy 'case' is yes; the husband is still precluded from investing in shares of a company his wife is involved in whether he got the information from his wife or not. In these circles, the golden rule is that independence should also be in appearance/perception and not just in mind. And once the wife becomes aware, she is obliged to report or risk jail term. 2 Likes |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by fregeneh(m): 11:35am On Feb 24 |
MVLOX:hmmm! Nigrians i .. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by ThierryJay: 11:36am On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: 💯. This is a better analogy than mine in previous response to him. The guy is just on an expedition of pedantry. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 11:37am On Feb 24 |
Now a key point to make here is what constitutes criminality or what is prohibited? Trading in the stocks of a company whilst in possession of information not available to the public Doing so will constitute a criminal offence. Was that the case here and did the man know that he should not have done this? 2 Likes |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 11:48am On Feb 24 |
ThierryJay:There is nothing wrong in playing devil's advocate if you find a willing playmate For negligence cases the test is about a failure to exercise reasonable care rather than any active intent and thus considerations of mens rea are different 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 11:52am On Feb 24 |
@ Thierryjay what do you make of Pelosi's case. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:01pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Surely there can be a little nuance to things. Because if the definition is strictly as you put it, and if it can admit of no exceptions, then there will be problematic scenarios. Let us for just a moment put aside this present case and apply your definition strictly. Would it then be the case that anyone who accidentally comes across such information is precluded from investing in the concerned company. So to make it clear, I am walking down the corridor of an office I visited and overhear something interesting regarding a company. Am I therefore barred from investing in that company since what I have overheard is not available to the public. Isolate this example for itself and weigh it against your definition of insider trading. Mind you, your definition doesn't even take any note of the word "insider." Please if you find this post inappropriate in that you were speaking to someone else, kindly ignore me. I only chip in as I believe we are now in the clear. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by talk2hb1(m): 12:02pm On Feb 24 |
tollyboy5:You are not being realistic, you are just being emotional. From Morality view, the man is wrong. But this is reality, if the man was his son will she report him? 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:06pm On Feb 24 |
So whilst it may be argued that he betrayed the trust of his wife That is not the key issue The key issue is Trading in the stock whilst in possession of information not available to the public. 1 Did he have such information .can it be concluded reasonably that 2. he knew the information was not available to the public? That is all the matters How he got the information may be useful in establishing 1 and 2 but does not matter of itself. It would make no difference if he was a cleaner and found a document with the information in a dustbin or someone forgot a document next to him on a plane or train. Or it was a random phone call he heard at the airport 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by juwoonn(m): 12:13pm On Feb 24 |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:13pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:I have already addressed this in my penultimate post I think we are also in agreement that there is probably no limit to what can be argued in court However to my understanding it does not matter how the information is got what matters is that The information is not available to the public and the court is convinced that the accused knew or ought to know that |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:17pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Yes I saw your post on that. I have to disagree though, as I feel that is too exacting. The example of even overhearing something in an airport seems extreme to me. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by ObalendeCMS: 12:20pm On Feb 24 |
Inside trading dey sweet! |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:20pm On Feb 24 |
Now, leaving both law and morals aside. If one were to be Machiavellian. That man should have just used one of many possible trustworthy proxy arrangements and thereafter sealed his lips forever. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by zumbigbo(m): 12:25pm On Feb 24 |
Wahala pro max |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:27pm On Feb 24 |
talk2hb1:You are also not being realistic People have sentenced their kids to death and executed them There is nothing new under the sun Her actions do not have to be seen as morality . In fact they can be sseen as self preservation Based on the knowledge that if she did not do so she would spend a very long time in prison Besides it was not an either or choice Whether or not she reports he likely will be discovered and go to prison. So why should she add herself t the prison population. We are Talking excess of ten years. So she was supposed to keep quiet and live in fear waiting for the day the police will knock. Many of you talk like this because you lack exposure. The chances of being caught are very high because systems trade on software and with Artificial intelligence it will pick out any traders who are "excelling" either to detect fraud or exceptional skill Also in The US he and his wife will file joint tax returns at the end of the year. Again if he has not been making that kind of money another red flag will be raised unless they decide tongues the money.another very serious crime Why should she risk spending the best years of her life in prison because of another person 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:29pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:You are entitled to your opinion The words are clear Trading with information not available to the public You can interpret it how you like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:36pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:From a trading perspective. Yes I was wondering when we should get to this part of the discussion How to chop and clean mouth |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:36pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Here is how the US SEC defines Illegal Insider Trading - "Illegal insider trading refers generally to buying or selling a security, in breach of a fiduciary duty or other relationship of trust and confidence, on the basis of material, nonpublic information about the security." https://www.investor.gov/introduction-investing/investing-basics/glossary/insider-trading Please note the words "in breach of a fiduciary duty or other relationship of trust and confidence." On the basis of that I humbly submit that that relationship must exist first. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:38pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight: Please do not make any submissions to me I am not interested in that game You are free to believe what you like MNPI is understood by those who have to 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:42pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: I taya for some people oh. He was smart enough to quickly take advantage but not smart enough to use a proxy. Haba. But now that we are away from strict law and morals, this is why I fear very strict people with high integrity. They can't negotiate a messy situation. I mean, as husband and wife how is there no possibility of putting heads together and saying, ah, na yawa be this oh, how we fit organize ourselves to escape. I mean, just put heads together. But for that very strict person of high integrity such a conversation may be impossible. I personally feel that marriages should be stronger than that even where one or both parties may have messed up. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:46pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Game ke? I am not playing any game. It appears you are still touchy on this matter. I thought we had progressed beyond that. It's okay, no worries. Have a good day. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:50pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight: Using a proxy sounds easy in theory but it is not in practice In this case he traded with nearly 3 million. So how will be transfer the money without detection Will the proxy use their own money? 3 million from where Finally the issue of TRUSTED is not that straightforward People are.People In summary it sounds easy on paper but not realistic to me Maybe he should have been less greedy and gone for a much smaller profit like 50 to 100K As the Yoruba say die to ninu nkan oninkan 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by PHAYOL81: 12:51pm On Feb 24 |
Impressive |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by aribisala0(m): 12:53pm On Feb 24 |
DeepSight:I am not touchy I am not interested in going down that road with you and already made it clear so what is your problem? |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:53pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Yeah, I hear you. I guess "wisdom is profitable to direct" as the good book says. But e sure me die say people plenty wey dey roll with deals like that all the time. 1 Like |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by DeepSight(m): 12:53pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0: Fair enough. That's cool. |
Re: US Man Accused Of Making $1.8m From Listening To His Wife's Remote Work Calls by talk2hb1(m): 12:56pm On Feb 24 |
aribisala0:Yet she is a betrayal |
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