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Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

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  • #16
    Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

    A couple of months later comes this update on the Aleynikov case at U.S., ex-Goldman programmer get more time for talks:

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - The government will have another month to seek an indictment against or reach a settlement with a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) programmer accused of stealing trade secrets.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge James Francis has delayed further proceedings by 30 days until October 16 to let the government and the former programmer, Sergey Aleynikov, continue talks, a spokeswoman for prosecutors in the case said.

    In a court filing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Facciponti said talks to resolve the case were held as recently as September 14 and that justice would be served by allowing more time. Talks were previously extended on August 3 and August 17.

    It is common for prosecutors to ask to extend a deadline for seeking an indictment, while plea negotiations are taking place. The request does not mean a settlement is forthcoming.

    Prosecutors have accused Aleynikov of downloading stolen Goldman proprietary code onto a home computer, a theft that could cost the Wall Street bank millions of dollars.
    Aleynikov has told investigators Goldman knew he had worked on the relevant code from home previously without complaint and that he had no intent to steal.

    The FBI arrested Aleynikov on July 3 at Newark Liberty International Airport. He was later freed on $750,000 bail following several days of detention.

    At a hearing on August 10, Aleynikov's lawyer said she would seek a "deferred prosecution" agreement for her client. Such agreements let accused persons escape criminal charges so long as they do not break the law for some period of time.

    Aleynikov worked at Goldman in New York for two years before joining Chicago-based Teza Technologies LLC in June. Teza suspended him following his arrest.

    The case is U.S. v. Aleynikov, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan), No. 09-mag-01553.

    (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; editing by Andre Grenon)
    Most folks are good; a few aren't.

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    • #17
      Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

      Okay, I'm not going to say much on this since it is a bit old news. But, but... Doesn't anyone find it interesting that the FBI was at this guys door the very day AFTER he left GS concerning the alleged theft? That vs. not being able to take Madoff down even after 10 years of warnings by a guy that basically had to put the case together for the SEC? The Vampire Squid has long tentacles and access the likes of which Joe 6 Pack will never have.

      Second, these HFT programs are not exclusive to GS. There are several companies out there that have developed this technology not only for equities but for commodities as well. All you have to have is the $$$, and you can get your very own HFT server colocated right next to the exchanges data center. Screw the day trader and the long term investor. The waters are now full of sharks. Only a moron would dare trade in this environment (green shoots my ass).:rolleyes:

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      • #18
        Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

        Originally posted by bcassill View Post
        Okay, I'm not going to say much on this since it is a bit old news. But, but... Doesn't anyone find it interesting that the FBI was at this guys door the very day AFTER he left GS concerning the alleged theft?
        I don't think that is technically correct.

        My recollection is that the FBI was on his doorstep about a month after he left GS (though it was about a day after GS first called their "friendly local FBI office" to complain, so your point still stands.)
        Most folks are good; a few aren't.

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        • #19
          Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

          Posting this over a year later ... After Six Hours Of Deliberations, Sergey Aleynikov Found Guilty:
          A jury convicted a former Goldman Sachs computer programmer on criminal charges of stealing secret high-frequency trading code from Wall Street's most influential bank.

          Sergey Aleynikov, 40, was indicted in February under the Economic Espionage Act on accusations he copied and removed computer code from Goldman in June 2009 before taking a new job with Teza Technologies LLC, a high-frequency trading start-up firm.

          Jurors reached their verdict after a two week-long trial in U.S. District Court in New York. They deliberated for about six hours.
          Most folks are good; a few aren't.

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          • #20
            Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

            Unbelievable!

            GS is truly a vampire squid.

            There is no way this should have been done so easily. It's just unbelievable. If the code was so valuable than measures should have been put in place and the accused should have had to jump through many deceptive hoops to do what he did. All they would have needed was a closed network where all data was transfered in one way.

            Clearly what upset them was that a valued employee was leaving.

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            • #21
              Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

              HFT Geek: 1 Vampire Squid: 0


              Court Overturns Conviction of Ex-Goldman Programmer

              A federal appeals court reversed the conviction late Thursday of Sergey Aleynikov, a former Goldman Sachs programmer found guilty of stealing proprietary code from the bank’s high-frequency trading platform.

              The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit overturned the conviction and ordered the trial court to enter a judgment of acquittal. A judgment of acquittal generally bars the government from retrying a defendant.

              The reversal was without explanation; it said an opinion would follow “in due course.”

              The appeals court ruling came just hours after a three-judge panel heard oral arguments on Mr. Aleynikov’s appeal. Mr. Aleynikov, who was convicted in December 2010, is serving an eight-year sentence at a federal prison in Fort Dix, N.J.
              ...
              http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/02/...an-programmer/

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              • #22
                Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

                Federal prison?

                I guess they reserve the tough facilities for the mid-level underlings. Not sure I'm "glad" to see him go free - he still did steal, right? But I'm no fan of the vampire squid.
                Last edited by wayiwalk; February 21, 2012, 03:22 PM.

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                • #23
                  Re: Ex-Worker Said to Steal Goldman Code (or nobody but GS is allowed to manipulate the market?)

                  a casual converstation at the local hot dog stand went as follows with a 50 something blue collar worker ...

                  There was a picture of a local bank robber, and asking for help in IDing him.
                  The guy in front of me said, I might have to start doing that to make ends meet.
                  I said why not just print the money? Seems safer and if you get caught you will do less time.
                  He corrected me and said, I have two aquaintenance each one did one or the other (armed robbery, conterfeiting)
                  The conterfeiter is still behind bars, the armed robber got out earlier with good behavior.

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