(Bloomberg) — The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued a former Oppenheimer broker and a clerk at a New York law firm over claims they made illegal trades on inside information that netted $5.6 million over four years.
Steven Metro, managing clerk at law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, accessed confidential documents in the firm's computer system and tipped information on corporate mergers to a middleman at meetings in a coffee shop, the SEC said in a complaint filed at federal court in New Jersey.
The middleman passed the tips to his broker, Vladimir Eydelman, who was then with Oppenheimer and now at Morgan Stanley, near the information booth at Grand Central Terminal. The middleman showed Eydelman a Post-It note or napkin with the name or stock symbol of the company whose shares were likely to increase, and on at least one occasion, proceeded to chew up the note, according to the complaint.