Jury finds ex-congressman guilty of using inside information to profit from T-Mobile-Sprint merger
Buyer’s attorneys said that there was no evidence that the former congressman’s stock purchases were based on non-public information and claimed that the stock purchases were based on publicly available research. On the other hand, prosecutors said that Buyer’s purchases were made near the time that employees at companies that were clients of his consulting firm learned about the deals. Sprint’s shares nearly doubled from $4.37 at the end of January 2020 to $8.69 by mid-February of that year.
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