Elite corporate lawyers accused of earning millions on decades-long insider trading plead not guilty

Fifteen people, including a lawyer who worked at several major law firms, pleaded not guilty on Monday to federal charges that they participated in a decade-long scheme in which attorneys fed an insider trading ring tips about nearly 30 underway mergers.Nicolo Nourafchan, who had worked at the law firms Sidley Austin, Latham & Watkins and Goodwin Procter, was among the defendants who appeared in federal court in Boston to enter pleas to securities fraud and other charges.Thirty people in total have been charged with participating in the decade-long scheme, which prosecutors say netted tens of millions of dollars and was orchestrated by Nourafchan and personal injury attorney ​Robert Yadgarov.Yadgarov also entered a not guilty plea, along with Nourafchan’s brother, Lorenzo, the founder of a fractional CFO and accounting firm.He is paying Nicolo Nourafchan’s attorney fees under an arrangement a judge warned risked creating a potential conflict of interest.“You may have different interests as this goes on,” US Magistrate Judge Judith Dein said.According to authorities, the scheme began in 2014 not long after Nicolo Nourafchan graduated from Yale Law School and landed a job at ‌Sidley Austin.Prosecutors said Nourafchan, while working at Sidley and other law firms, tipped Yadgarov and others off to impending corporate transactions in exchange for kickbacks generated from any trading profits.Nourafchan and Yadgarov also recruited other attorneys into the scheme to feed tips to them, including one who worked at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and another who was employed by Weil, Gotshal & Manges and Willkie Farr & Gallagher.The latter, Gabriel Gershowitz, secretly pleaded guilty last year and is now a cooperating witness in the case.

Guilty pleas for eight other people dating back to 2024 were unsealed the day prosecutors announced the case on May 6.Many of the defendants are Jewish, and an indictment alleged that they spoke in coded mess...

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Publisher: New York Post

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