BBC News, 19
July 2013
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| The government says the illegal information helped the company make $275m |
SAC Capital
Advisors founder Steven Cohen, 57, faces civil charges over what the US
government has called one of the biggest such fraud cases ever.
Mr Cohen
did not properly supervise two traders who engaged in illegal insider trading,
the SEC alleges.
But the
fund said the charges had "no merit" and pledged to fight the case.
As a result
of the illegal information, the traders made about $275m (£180m) for the fund,
the government has alleged.
It added
that Mr Cohen was aware of the information but rewarded one of his employees
with a $9m bonus, instead of cracking down.
The SEC
said: "Cohen received highly suspicious information that should have
caused any reasonable hedge fund manager in Cohen's position to take prompt
action to determine whether employees under his supervision were engaged in
unlawful conduct and to prevent violations of the federal securities
laws."
The
government agency is seeking to have Mr Cohen banned from managing funds in
future, and seeks an unspecified amount of money.
The charges
will not proceed to trial, but were filed as an administrative proceeding.
A spokesman
for the defendant said: "Steve Cohen acted appropriately at all
times."
Traders
Mathew Martoma and Michael Steinberg have denied criminal insider trading
charges and face trial in November.
Friday's
charges are part of a long-running probe of SAC Capital Advisors, a fund worth
about $15bn, which has seen nine current or former employees charged or
implicated.

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