
Can't lie to the feds, hun. At least you'll get less than the max
She's also guilty of really cheese attorney'isms. LOCK HER UP FOR LIFE!In closing arguments, defense attorney Robert Morvillo said that the conspiracy as outlined by the government was too sloppy to be true. He urged the jury to let Stewart get back to "improving the quality of life for all of us."
"If you do that," he said, echoing Stewart's slogan, "it's a good thing."
So let me get this straight, some insanly rich bitch becides to fuck everyone else and dump her stock for a mere $250,000 when she was worth over a billion dollars and you think it's OK? Dude, give me your phone number, I got some stock to sell you...Chmee wrote:
Complete and utter crock.
I hope she wins the appeal.
Nope wasn't on the jury (obviously as she was found guilty). I have been following the case though.Aslanna wrote:What makes you think that? Were you on the jury?Chmee wrote:Complete and utter crock.
I hope she wins the appeal.
Then agan, I wasn't either. Burn in hell, Martha!
Martha being rich is immaterial. Everyone is supposed to be equal before the law. Yes, I know there are problems that occur were rich people get off of charges when they want. That is also wrong, but it doesn't justify being wrong in the other direction as well.valryte wrote:So let me get this straight, some insanly rich bitch becides to fuck everyone else and dump her stock for a mere $250,000 when she was worth over a billion dollars and you think it's OK? Dude, give me your phone number, I got some stock to sell you...Chmee wrote:
Complete and utter crock.
I hope she wins the appeal.
Martha wasn't convicted of insider trading.Forthe wrote:I'm surprised someone with extremist free market views is so lax on insider trading.Chmee wrote:Complete and utter crock.
I hope she wins the appeal.
"So, am I correct in assuming she has been found guilty of covering up crimes the government couldn't prove she committed?"
True. However, its not just that they could not convict on it, they haven't even charged her with it. In my opinion she clearly isn't guilty of insider trading and while she may technically guilty of the charges she was convicted on, as Bainbridge in one of the links I provided earlier states they really shouldn't have been brought as a matter of prosecutional discretion.Aaeamdar wrote: There is nothing inherently wrong with being convicted of attempting to cover up a crime that the government could not independantly convict on. In fact, if it were, it would lead to the rather perverse result that if you openly took actions to obstruct justice successfully enough, that you success in covering up your crime also netted you immunity from prosecution for the coverup.
Well, certainly lucky in the sense that the jury might have found her guilty of that as well.Frankly, Stewart should consider herself lucky. The judge tossed out the most serious (if most difficult to prove) charge in a rather unconvicing opinion on sufficiency of the evidence. The resulting likely securities fraud conviction had the Judge allowed this to go to a jury would have been a huge. Minimum jail time would have been in the 5 year range, rather than the likely 4 concurrent 1 year sentances she is likely to get.
From my reading regarding the issue (granted as a non-lawyer) the even playing field concept has mainly been the one pushed by the SEC, the courts have not been as approving of it. Certainly not in the earlier cases. From the first of the reason articles I linked ...Aaeamdar wrote: The question comes down to this, and I don't personally think there is one right answer to it - do you want a system where only those with inside information trade in specfic securities? See, the harm, if any, to insider trading, is the the market in general. The harm exists, if it exists at all, because billions of shares of securities exist and to sustain a free market in them, general consumer investment is required. A decision was made back in 1933, based on the way public investment woirked in 1933, that consumers of these securties need to feel they were on an even playing field, at least in terms of avilability of information, with every other investor. At that time, it was undoubltably a good call. You needed investement in the markets from teh "little guy" and to get that investment you need him believing he stood a chance.
andOn appeal, however, the Supreme Court ruled that Chiarella could not have been guilty of securities fraud. His employer worked for the corporate raider, not the target. Chiarella therefore had no duty to shareholders of the target corporation. "Section 10(b) is aptly described as a catchall provision," Justice Lewis Powell wrote for the majority, "but what it catches must be fraud. When an allegation of fraud is based upon nondisclosure, there can be no fraud absent a duty to speak." Chiarella had no such duty, unless the law required all market participants to disclose what they know or to refrain from trading on such information. As Powell noted, "Neither the Congress nor the Commission ever has adopted a parity-of-information rule."
Things appear to get a bit more complicated later, especially with O'Hagan and the misappropriation theory. Even there though the ruling didn't appear to be based around the level playing field concept.The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld the SEC’s action. In a decision that can charitably be described as confused, the D.C. Circuit ruled that the Supreme Court really did not mean what it said in Chiarella. Even though Dirks had no fiduciary responsibility to Equity Funding, the appeals court said, he had an overriding obligation to the SEC and the trading public to disclose the fraud or to refrain from trading.
The Supreme Court, which ruled on Dirks’ appeal in 1983, was not pleased. In unusually blunt language, Justice Powell wrote: "We were explicit in Chiarella in saying that there can be no duty to disclose where the person who had traded on inside information was not [the corporation’s] agent...was not a fiduciary, [and] was not a person in whom the sellers [of the securities] had placed their trust and confidence."
Aaeamdar wrote:She wasn't guilty of insider trading. My response was to Deward who assumed that fact ("I own and trade stock too and I don't think her insider trading screwed me in any way."). My answer was just to explain, generically, what harm insider trading laws are meant to address (e.g. maintianing faith in the market - rightly or wrongly - not correcting specific wrongs to specific investors).
What she really should have done is say nothing (or at least say nothing without extensive consultation with her lawyers). She probably would have gotten off completely free then. Some people are speculating on how much of a chilling effect this will have regarding people's willingness to talk to government agents in investigations.Skogen wrote:What a dumbass. If she would have come clean right off the bat, she could have gotten away with a 6 figure fine. Instead, she gets caught trying to cover it all up, Now, she is loosing her billion dollar empire.
I can usually hold out for awhile. It's when they take that hanging light and shine it in my face that I crack.Deward wrote:For smart people it has been chilling all along. I will never talk to law enforcement of any kind without having a lawyer present. It is too easy for them to twist your words and find a way to charge you with something whether you are guilty or not. I won't take the chance and no one else should either. As someone else stated, the best thing you can do is just keep your mouth shut.
Damn, how many times have you been in trouble with the law?Aslanna wrote:
I can usually hold out for awhile. It's when they take that hanging light and shine it in my face that I crack.