qU 6A - Thursday, October 25, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Ex-Goldman executive given two years for insider-trading Gupta gave information to hedge fund boss NEW YORK (AP) - A former Goldman Sachs and Procter & Gamble Co. board member was sentenced to two years in prison Wednesday, culminating a spec- tacular fall from grace for a man whose good deeds worldwide brought him leniency after he was convicted of feeding inside infor- mation about board dealings to a billionaire hedge fund owner who was his friend. Rajat Gupta, 63, of Westport, Conn., learned his fate from U.S. District Court Judge Jed Rakoff, who defended the length of the prison term he levied, blasting federal sentencing guidelines that he said called for Gupta to serve at least 61/2 years behind bars. He also ordered him to pay a $5 mil- lion fine. Citing information he received under seal, Rakoff said Gupta's crimes may have occurred because Gupta may have "longed to escape the straightjacket of overwhelm- ing responsibility, and had begun to loosen his self-restraint in ways that clouded his judgment." The Harvard-educated busi- nessman long respected on Wall Street was one of the biggest catches yet for the federal govern- ment in its five-year crackdown on insider trading that has so far resulted in 69 convictions. Gupta was ordered to report to prison on Jan.8. Reading from a statement, he said: "The last 18 months have been the most challenging period of my life since I lost my parents as a teenager. "I regret terribly the impact of this matter on my family, my friends and the institutions that are dear to me. I've lost my reputa- tion I built for a lifetime. The ver- dict was devastating." The dealings by Gupta that were highlighted at his spring trial stemmed from his relationship with Sri Lanka-born Raj Raja- ratnam. The one-time billionaire hedge fund boss controlled up to $7 billion in accounts, giving him a firm footprint in the financial mar- kets and influence that impressed someone as widely regarded as Gupta. "His conduct has forever tar- nished a once-sterling reputation that took years to cultivate," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said after sentencing. "We hope that others who might consider breaking the securities lawswill take heed from this sad occasion and choose not to follow in Mr. Gupta's footsteps." Prosecutors described how Gupta raced to telephone Rajarat- nam with stock tips sometimes only minutes after getting them from board conference calls, help- ing Rajaratnam make more than $11 million in illegal profits forhim and his investors. Rajaratnam is U serving an 11-year prison sentence after his conviction lastyear. The narrower insider trading case against Rajaratnam and his co-conspirators resulted in 26 convictions and was described by Bharara as the biggest insider i trading case in history, success- ful in part because of unprec- edented use of wiretaps more familiar to juries at mob and drug trials. Prosecutors say Rajaratnam earned up to $75 million illegally through his trades while Gupta's attorneys point out that their cli- ent earned no profits. At trial, Gupta was convicted of three counts of securities fraud and one count of conspir- acy, insider trading charges that prosecutors said should result in a prison sentence of up to 10 years in prison. Palestinian moumners grieve in the family home during the funeral of the body of Hamas militant Loay AbuJarad in Beit Lahia, northemn Gaza Strip, WednesdayOct.24, 2012. Gazans blast Israel with rockets, draws airstrikes Heaviest bombing in months, retaliation threats begin JERUSALEM (AP) - Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip fired dozens of rockets and mortar shells into southern Israel on Wednesday in the heaviest bom- bardment on the area in months, drawing ominous Israeli threats of retaliation and dangers of escalation. The violence came a day after a landmark visit to Gaza by the emir of Qatar. Israeli officials suggested the visit, the first by a head of state to the Hamas-ruled territory, emboldened the mili- tant group. The rocket fire began shortly after the emir left Gaza late Tues- day and continued through the night. Israeli officials said more than 80 projectles were fired,, and Hamas claimed responsibil- ity for many of the attacks. Israel responded with a series of airstrikes on rocket launch- ers, killing two Palestinian mili- tants, according.to Gaza medical officials. Two other Palestinians were killed Tuesday. Three Thai laborers working on an Israeli farm were wound- ed, two seriously, when a rocket hit a chicken coop. Other rockets badly damaged five houses and broke car windows. Schools in the area were closed. Many people spent the day indoors, while others stayed in close proximity to the make- shift cement shelters found in the streets of southern Israeli towns. In one farming commu- nity, shrapnel covered trees and a children's playhouse in a back- yard. "Sometimes it feels like a scene out of the movie 'Platoon,' something out of the Vietnam war. We can stay at home and just hear the noise of the war," said Tamara Cohen, a resident of the border community of Ein Habesor whose children, ages 9 and 5, spent the night in a forti- fied "safe room" in their home. A video issued by Hamas' mil- itary wing showed six rockets peeling off in rapid succession, then later, from what appears to be a different location, eight rockets shoot off, leaving plumes of black smoke behind them. Hamas said the video earlier in the day, thou vided no proof. Hamas officials schools in border ar dents said they worrie lation of fighting wool upcoming Muslim c of Eid al-Adha, whent dents feast, visit fami their children in new c take them out to play. Despite the violenc in Gaza City were crov residents snapping u and food ahead of Fri( of the holiday. Tra blocked main roads, a leaders chanted song feast. Israeli leaders t tougher action against fire. "We didn't ask for t tion and didn't initiate Minister Benjamin. huisaid after touring defense battery. "But i ues, we are preparedt on a far more extensiv( etrating operation."I said the "Iron Dome system intercepted at1 rockets. was made agh it pro- shuttered eas. Resi- d an esca- d ruin the elebration Gaza resi- lies, dress lothes and ce, streets wded with p clothes day's start ffic jams nd prayer s for the White House notified hours after attack that group claimed credit 11 Islamist group took responsibility two hours after seige called for an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli. The document may fuel Republican efforts to show that the White House knew it was a terrorist attack, even as the WASHINGTON (AP) - Two U.S. ambassador to the United hreatened hours after the U.S. Consul- Nations was saying - five days the rocket ate came under attack in Beng- afterward - that it appeared to hazi, Libya, the White House be a protest gone awry. his escala- was told that a militant group The Obama administration's it," Prime was claiming responsibility for account of the Benghazi events Netanya- the violence that killed the U.S. has become a campaign issue, a missile ambassador and three other with Republican challenger f it contin- Americans. Mitt Romney and GOP lawmak- to embark A State Department email ers accusing the White House of e and pen- sent to intelligence officials and misleading Americans about the The army the White House situation room nature of the attack. " defense said the Islamist group Ansar al- The Associated Press and least eight Sharia claimed responsibility on other news organizations Facebook and Twitter, and also obtained the unclassified email Call:#734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com i RELEASE DATE- Thursday, October 25, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 70 Passe demo item 33 Culprit in some 54 "You've got to be 1 The grand 71 Scholarshipfactor food recalls kidding" concert one has 34Sevre - 55Grace 47 strings DOWN 35 "Without delay!" 56 Nourishmentfor 5Teen hangout 1 "_afied now?" 40 "The Matrix" 7un be spl 2'led hero 57 Patli a request 14 French nbosomstfreely 41rpotforone in 55qDeparmentof possessive ..." 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Con- gressional . staffers combing through the documents have found a kaleidoscope of some- times conflicting intelligence, backing up much of what intel- ligence officials explained over the past several weeks. But members of both commit- tees are still complaining that the original briefing they were given just after the Tuesday, Sept. 11 attack, differed marked- ly from the explanation the CIA director David Petraeus gave them by the end of that week. In that first briefing, just 12 hours after consulate was burned down, the intelligence commit- tees received a report that it was a military style assault, but just days later, Petraeus stressed that militants had infiltrated amob, a U.S. official said. U.S. intelligence officials have said Petraeus outlined that extremists were believed to be in the crowd, and carried out the attack, and also stressed the picture was still evolving. A U.S. intelligence official said Wednesday that it was "clear from the outset that a group of people gathered that evening," but that it took until the week . after the attack to determine "whether extremists took over a crowd or if the guyswho showed up were all militants." The offi- cial said the briefing included the analysis that the "attacks that appeared spontaneous," but also mentioned possible links to regional al-Qaida groups. Meanwhile, the Tunisian government said it has arrested a 28-year-old Tunisian linked to the U.S. Consulate attack. Inte- rior Ministry spokesman Tar- rouch Khaled said Wednesday that the suspect, Ali Harzi, was in custody in Tunis. Khaled told The AP "his case is in the hands of justice," but did not elaborate. Flip back two pages to read the opinion page. IT'S ON PAGE 4. EVERY DAY. 4 THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE, organization, format. All disciplines. 734/996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net