Rajiv Goel, the executive with Intel's treasury unit who was charged in
connection with a massive Wall Street insider trading scheme that also
allegedly involved a high-ranking IBM
official, reportedly is no longer with the company.
Goel, who was placed on administrative leave after his arrest, left Intel
shortly before the start of 2010, according to an Intel spokesperson.
Goel was arrested in October as part of a federal investigation into a
massive hedge fund insider trading scheme that generated more than $20 billion
in illegal profits. He was one of several tech executives accused in the case.
Others included Robert
Moffat, a former senior vice president and group executive of IBM's
Systems and Technology Group who was considered by some to be a possible
successor of CEO Sam Palmisano.
Moffat has since left IBM.
Click
here to take a look at key players in the insider trading scandal.
Hector
Ruiz, onetime CEO of chip maker Advanced
Micro Devices and until Nov. 2 the chairman of AMD
spinoff Globalfoundries, was not charged in the case, but reportedly was a key
source of inside information given to hedge fund manager Danielle Chiesi of New
Castle Funds.
According to investigators, Goel gave nonpublic information regarding
Clearwire—a wireless company in which Intel had invested—to Raj Rajaratnam,
founder and managing partner of hedge fund Galleon Management, who then traded
on that information. Goel also allegedly gave Rajaratnam information regarding
Intel earnings.
In return, investigators said, Rajaratnam made favorable trades for Goel.
Rajaratnam and Chiesi are central figures in the case and have been
indicted.
According to court documents, Moffat gave Chiesi insider information about
several companies, including AMD, IBM
and Sun Microsystems.
Ruiz is not named in the court papers outlining the charges against Chiesi.
However, Department of Justice lawyers refer to an unnamed AMD
executive who gave Chiesi information regarding AMD's
joint venture with Abu Dhabi's ATIC
(Advanced Technology Investment Corp.) to spin off AMD's
chip manufacturing business, creating Globalfoundries.
The Wall Street Journal and other publications, relying on unnamed sources,
have reported that the unnamed AMD executive
was Ruiz.