Case 2:19-cv-05536 Document 1 Filed 02/13/19 Page 1 of 14 PageID: 1
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                          DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY
__________________________________________
                                           :
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND               :
EXCHANGE COMMISSION                        :
                                           :
            Plaintiff,                     :
                                           :
            vs.                            : Civil No. 2:19-5536
                                           :
GENE DANIEL LEVOFF                         :
                                          :
            Defendant.                    :
                                          :
_________________________________________ :
       Plaintiff United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC” or the
“Commission”) alleges the following against Defendant Gene Daniel Levoff (“Levoff”):
                                          SUMMARY
       1.      This matter concerns insider trading by Levoff, the Senior Director of Corporate
Law and Corporate Secretary of Apple, Inc. (“Apple”). Levoff exploited his positions as a senior
attorney and a member of Apple’s Disclosure Committee to unlawfully trade Apple securities
ahead of Apple quarterly earnings announcements.
       2.      In two key respects, Levoff’s misconduct violated the duty of trust and confidence
he owed Apple and its shareholders. First, as head of the Corporate Law group at Apple, Levoff
was responsible for ensuring compliance with the company’s insider trading policy and
determining the criteria for those employees (including himself) restricted from trading around
quarterly earnings announcements. At the same time, as a member of Apple’s Disclosure
Committee, Levoff received material nonpublic information about Apple’s financial results. The
       Case 2:19-cv-05536 Document 1 Filed 02/13/19 Page 2 of 14 PageID: 2
Disclosure Committee reviews Apple’s periodic earnings results and draft public filings before
that information is released to the public.
       3.      On at least three occasions in 2015 and 2016, Levoff traded on the basis of insider
information. For example, in July 2015 Levoff received material nonpublic financial data that
showed Apple would miss analysts’ third quarter estimates for iPhone unit sales. Between July
17 and the public release of Apple’s quarterly earnings information on July 21, Levoff sold
approximately $10 million dollars of Apple stock – virtually all of his Apple holdings – from his
personal brokerage accounts. Apple’s stock dropped more than four percent when it publicly
disclosed its quarterly financial data. By trading on this material nonpublic information, Levoff
avoided approximately $345,000 in losses.
       4.      Levoff breached his duty of confidentiality to Apple and its shareholders and
exploited corporate information for his own benefit.
       5.      Through his illegal insider trading in 2015-2016, Levoff profited and avoided
losses of approximately $382,000.
       6.      By engaging in this conduct, Levoff violated the antifraud provisions of Section
10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) [15 U.S.C. § 78j(b)] and Rule
10b-5 thereunder [17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5] and Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933
(“Securities Act”) [15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)(1)]. Unless enjoined, Levoff is likely to commit such
violations again in the future.
                    NATURE OF PROCEEDING AND RELIEF SOUGHT
       7.      The SEC brings this action against Levoff pursuant to Section 21A [15 U.S.C. §
78u-l] of the Exchange Act and Section 20(b) of the Securities Act [U.S.C. § 77t(b)] seeking a
judgment from the Court: (a) enjoining Levoff from engaging in future violations of Section
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10(b) and Section 17(a); (b) ordering Levoff to disgorge an amount equal to the profits gained
and losses avoided as a result of the actions described herein, with prejudgment interest; (c)
ordering Levoff to pay a civil monetary penalty; and (d) prohibiting Levoff from serving as an
officer or director of a public company.
                                 JURISDICTION AND VENUE
       8.      This Court has jurisdiction over this action pursuant to Sections 21(d), 21(e), 21A
and 27(a) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. §§ 78u(d), 78u(e), 78u-l, and 78aa(a)] and Sections
20(b) and 22(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. §§ 77t(b) and 77v(a)].
       9.      Levoff, directly or indirectly, used the means of interstate commerce and/or the
facilities of a national securities exchange as described below.
       10.     Venue in this district is proper pursuant to Section 27 of the Exchange Act [15
U.S.C. § 78aa]. Certain of the sales of securities and acts, practices, transactions, and courses of
business constituting the violations alleged in this Complaint occurred within this District, and
were effected, directly or indirectly, by making use of the means, instruments or instrumentalities
of transportation or communication in interstate commerce, or of the mails, or the facilities of
national securities exchanges. Specifically, many of the securities trades alleged as part of the
violations in this Complaint were routed through servers in Carteret, Secaucus, and Jersey City,
New Jersey. In addition, the servers of the firm that executed many of the trades were located in
Carteret, Secaucus and Jersey City, New Jersey.
                                           DEFENDANT
       11.     Gene Daniel Levoff, age 44, resides in San Carlos, California. From 2008 to
2013, he was Director of Corporate Law at Apple. From 2013 until his termination in September
of 2018, he was Senior Director of Corporate Law at Apple, reporting directly to the General
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Counsel. Levoff also served on Apple’s Disclosure Committee from September 2008 to July
2018, including as chair of the committee from December 2012 to July 2018. Levoff previously
held positions at a major law firm and another publicly-traded company.
                                 OTHER RELEVANT ENTITY
       12.     Apple, Inc. is a consumer electronics and personal computer company
incorporated in the state of California and headquartered in Cupertino, California. At all relevant
times, Apple was registered with the SEC pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act [15
U.S.C.§ 78l(b)] and required to publicly file periodic reports containing financial results and
other material information. At all relevant times, Apple stock was publicly traded on the
NASDAQ Global Select Market under the ticker symbol AAPL.
                                              FACTS
   A. Levoff Was an Insider Who Had a Duty to Apple and Its Shareholders Not to Trade
      on Apple’s Material Nonpublic Information
       1. As a Senior Attorney and Member of Apple’s Disclosure Committee, Levoff Was
          Entrusted with Material Nonpublic Information
       13.     As Director, and starting in 2013, Senior Director, of Corporate Law, Levoff
oversaw the corporate law group at Apple, a group of approximately 20-30 attorneys and
paralegals responsible for Apple’s global corporate law issues. Levoff was responsible for
Apple’s compliance with securities laws, including providing legal advice in connection with
Apple’s SEC filings and financial reporting, and for managing Apple’s corporate subsidiary
structure. Levoff served as a corporate officer of every major Apple subsidiary.
       14.     Since at least 2010, Levoff also had responsibility for ensuring compliance with
Apple’s insider trading policies. Levoff sent, or supervised the sending of, notification emails to
the list of individuals subject to trading restrictions around Apple’s quarterly earnings
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announcements (the “blackout list”), and determined the criteria for placement on the blackout
list. In 2015, Levoff initiated and implemented an update to Apple’s insider trading policy. In
connection with that update, Levoff reviewed and commented on drafts and approved the final
version of the policy.
       15.     From 2008 until he was placed on leave in July of 2018, Levoff served on Apple’s
Disclosure Committee. According to its charter, the Disclosure Committee was established to
assist the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer in fulfilling their responsibility for
oversight of the accuracy and timeliness of disclosures made by Apple; determine Apple’s
disclosure obligations and ensure information contained in Apple’s filings to the SEC and all
other disclosures are timely, accurate, complete, and a fair representation of Apple’s financial
condition and results of operations; and ensure that Apple’s disclosure controls and procedures
are properly designed, adopted and implemented.
       16.     The members of the Disclosure Committee changed over time, but typically
included high level executives, including the Corporate Controller, the General Counsel, the
Senior Director of Internal Audit, the Vice President of Finance and Sales, the Senior Director of
Investor Relations and the Associate General Counsel of Corporate Law, which was Levoff’s
position.
       17.     In light of his position at Apple as a senior attorney and member of the Disclosure
Committee, Levoff was an insider who owed a duty of trust and confidence to Apple and its
shareholders not to trade on the basis of material nonpublic information that he learned through
his position at Apple.
       2. At the Time of His Trading, Apple Had Taken Steps to Prevent Employees, Such as
          Levoff, from Trading on Material Nonpublic Information
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       18.        Prior to Levoff’s illegal trading, Apple took steps to prevent employees from
trading on material nonpublic information, including the undisclosed financial results Levoff
received. Apple had an insider trading policy that applied to all employees. Many employees,
including Levoff, also received notice when restricted trading periods, known as “blackout”
periods, were in effect. The notices, emailed to employees subject to the blackout periods,
reminded them of the insider trading policy, and since at least 2015, included a link to the insider
trading policy.
       19.        Apple’s insider trading policy in effect from 2003 to 2015 stated that:
       Any person who possesses Material Nonpublic Information regarding the Company is an
       Insider for so long as the information is not publicly known. Any employee . . . can be an
       Insider from time to time, and would at those times be subject to this Policy. . . . No
       Insider shall engage in any transaction involving a purchase or sale of [Apple’s]
       securities . . . during any period commencing with the date he or she possesses the
       Material Nonpublic Information concerning the Company, and ending sixty (60) hours
       after public disclosure of that information, or at such time as such nonpublic information
       is no longer material.
       20.        The 2003 policy noted that the blackout period was required because “officers,
directors and other employees . . . often will possess, during that period, Material Nonpublic
Information about the expected financial results for the quarter.”
       21.        In 2015, under Levoff’s supervision, Apple updated its insider trading policy and
reaffirmed that employees should “[n]ever buy or sell stock when aware of information that has
not been publicly announced and that could have a material effect on the value of the stock.” It
also prohibited trading during blackout periods.
       22.        Both the 2003 and the 2015 policy listed “financial results” as the first example of
potential “material” information.
       23.        Both the 2003 and 2015 policy warned Apple employees that insider trading by
employees could result in criminal and civil penalties.
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    B. Levoff Learned Material, Nonpublic Information as a Member of Apple’s
       Disclosure Committee and Traded on That Information in Breach of His Duty to
       Apple
           24.   From 2008 to 2018, Levoff’s position on the Disclosure Committee provided him
access to material nonpublic information. The Disclosure Committee reviewed quarterly and
annual financial materials, together with draft quarterly and annual reports (“Form 10-Qs” and
“Form 10-Ks”) and press releases, prior to their public filing. About two weeks before the public
release, each member of the Disclosure Committee, including Levoff, received emails attaching
the information and drafts. A few days before the public release, members of the Disclosure
Committee, including Levoff, attended a meeting at which they discussed expected financial
results.
           25.   Levoff traded on material nonpublic information about Apple’s earnings three
times during 2015 and 2016. Levoff also had a previous history of insider trading, having traded
on Apple’s material nonpublic information at least three additional times in 2011 and 2012. For
the trading in 2015 and 2016, Levoff profited and avoided losses of approximtely $382,000.
                                The July 21, 2015 Earnings Announcement
           26.   On May 26, 2015, Levoff received an email notice stating that Apple had
instituted a blackout period that would begin June 1 and last “until 60 hours after earnings are
released in July 2015.” The email warned, “Note that trading is not permitted, whether or not in
an open trading window, if you possess or have access to material information that has not been
disclosed publicly.”
           27.   On Friday, July 10, 2015, Levoff and the other Disclosure Committee members
received draft earnings materials regarding Apple’s fiscal third quarter, including draft third
quarter financials, press release, and prepared executive remarks. The email stated that the
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materials were “for review prior to our meeting on Monday morning.” The materials showed
iPhone unit sales that fell short of analysts’ expectations.
       28.     Later that day, Levoff received a version of the draft Form 10-Q. The email
stated that the draft Form 10-Q “will also be discussed at the next Disclosure Committee
meeting,” and instructed members of the Disclosure Committee that they are “required to review
the entire Form 10-Q” and should pay “particular attention” to specific disclosures regarding
“material factors affecting the Company’s operating results.”
       29.     The Disclosure Committee met the following Monday, July 13, 2015. Levoff,
acting as co-chair, participated by phone. The Committee discussed material nonpublic
information regarding the earnings materials and draft disclosures, as well as draft prepared
remarks by the Chief Executive and Chief Financial Officers.
       30.     On Friday, July 17, 2015, Apple reported that it would release its fiscal third
quarter results on July 21.
       31.     Between July 17 and the public release of Apple’s quarterly earnings information
on July 21, Levoff sold over 70,000 Apple shares held in brokerage accounts in his name for
gross proceeds of approximately $10 million.
       32.     On Tuesday, July 21, 2015, at 4:30 pm Eastern Time, Apple released its earnings
for the fiscal third quarter. The market reaction to the release of this information was sharply
negative. On July 22, 2015, a Bloomberg article stated that iPhone unit sales had fallen short of
analyst expectations and estimates, “rekindl[ing] concerns over whether the company can keep
making must-have products.”
       33.     By the end of trading on July 22, Apple’s stock price had fallen more than four
percent, eliminating roughly $32 billion in market value.
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          34.   By liquidating his Apple holdings, Levoff avoided approximately $345,000 in
losses.
                          The October 27, 2015 Earnings Announcement
          35.   On August 27, 2015, Levoff received an email notice stating that Apple had
instituted a blackout period that would begin September 1 and last “until 60 hours after earnings
are released in October 2015.”
          36.   On Monday, October 12, 2015, Levoff and other members of the Disclosure
Committee received an email attaching Apple’s fiscal year 2015 draft annual report on Form 10-
K. The draft Form 10-K contained financial information which showed results that beat
analysts’ expectations for revenue and earnings per share.
          37.   On Tuesday, October 13, 2015, the Disclosure Committee, including Levoff,
received additional draft earnings materials regarding Apple’s fiscal fourth quarter, including
draft fourth quarter financials, press release, and prepared executive remarks. On Friday,
October 23, 2015, Apple reported that it would release its quarterly earnings results on October
27.
          38.   On Monday, October 26, 2015, Levoff bought 10,000 shares of Apple stock at
$115.70 per share in his personal brokerage account.
          39.   Apple released its quarterly earnings on Tuesday, October 27, 2015, at 4:30 pm
Eastern Time. The market reacted positively to the announcement. As a Fortune magazine
article put it, Apple “beat[] market expectations for both revenues . . . and earnings . . ., driven by
solid uptake for its large-screen iPhones and robust growth in Greater China.”
          40.   Between Apple’s announcement on October 27 and the close of trading on
October 28, Apple’s share price increased more than four percent.
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        41.       On October 28, Levoff sold the 10,000 shares he purchased two days earlier,
netting an illicit profit of roughly $4,700.
                             The April 26, 2016 Earnings Announcement
        42.       On February 25, 2016, Levoff received an email notice stating that a blackout
period would commence on March 1 and would last “until 24 hours after earnings are released in
April 2016.”
        43.       On Friday, April 8, 2016, the Disclosure Committee received an email attaching
Apple’s draft Form 10-Q for its fiscal second quarter. The draft Form 10-Q contained material
nonpublic information about the company’s quarterly financial results that revealed its first year
over year revenue decline since 2003.
        44.       On Friday, April 15, 2016, the Disclosure Committee received additional draft
earnings materials regarding Apple’s fiscal second quarter, including draft second quarter
financials, press release, and prepared executive remarks. Later that day, Levoff and the
Disclosure Committee met to discuss the draft earnings materials.
        45.       On Thursday, April 21, 2016, Levoff sold over 4,000 shares of Apple stock –
virtually all of the Apple shares in his personal brokerage account. The next day, Apple reported
that it would release its fiscal second quarter results on April 26.
        46.       On Tuesday, April 26, 2016, Apple publicly released its quarterly earnings. The
next day, Apple’s stock closed down more than 6%, erasing tens of billions from its market
capitalization.
        47.       By selling over 4,000 Apple shares just six days earlier – during the blackout
period when he knew that Apple was about to disclose its first revenue decline in thirteen years –
Levoff avoided approximately $32,000 in losses.
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                                The 2011 and 2012 Earnings Reports
        48.      Levoff also engaged in insider trading prior to the three instances alleged above.
On three separate occasions in 2011 and 2012, Levoff received nonpublic Apple earnings
materials, including draft Form 10-Qs and press releases containing material nonpublic
information, and then discussed them with the Disclosure Committee.
        49.      In each instance, after receiving an email stating that Apple’s pre-earnings release
blackout period had begun, Levoff bought thousands of shares of Apple stock before the
company released its earnings to the public. He then sold them shortly after the public positive
announcements of Apple’s quarterly earnings.
        50.      By engaging in insider trading in 2011 and 2012, Levoff made approximately
$245,000 in profits.
   C.         Levoff Knew, or Was Reckless in Not Knowing, That He Traded on Material
              Nonpublic Information in Violation of His Duty to Apple and Its Shareholders
        51.      As a senior attorney at Apple that provided legal advice on securities laws, as a
member and chair of the Disclosure Committee, and as an employee that received – and was
primarily responsible for devising, implementing and enforcing – Apple’s insider trading policy,
Levoff knew, or was reckless in not knowing, that the earnings materials and filings the
Disclosure Committee reviewed were material and nonpublic.
        52.      Further, as a member of the core group of senior Apple insiders entrusted with
material nonpublic information, and as an attorney with a sophisticated understanding of
securities and corporate law, Levoff knew, or was reckless in not knowing, that he had a duty of
trust and confidence to the company and its shareholders.
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        53.     As Levoff also knew, Apple’s earnings information and related disclosures were
confidential, and Apple established policies and procedures designed to prohibit its employees
from trading on such information.
        54.     In fact, Levoff shared responsibility for ensuring that employees complied with
Apple’s insider trading policies. On at least three occasions in 2010 and 2011, Levoff sent
emails to company employees notifying them that a blackout period was about to commence and
that they were prohibited from trading Apple securities for the duration of the period. In fact,
Levoff sent two such emails immediately prior to his insider trading in 2011.
        55.     For example, on February 24, 2011, Levoff sent an email to Apple employees
explaining that a blackout period would begin on March 1, 2011, and remain in effect “until 60
hours after earnings are released in April 2011.”
        56.     The first sentence of Levoff’s February 24, 2011 email stated: “REMEMBER,
TRADING IS NOT PERMITTED, WHETHER OR NOT IN AN OPEN TRADING WINDOW,
IF YOU POSSESS OR HAVE ACCESS TO MATERIAL INFORMATION THAT HAS NOT
BEEN DISCLOSED PUBLICLY.”
        57.     In summary, Levoff, an Apple insider, traded on the basis of material, nonpublic
information about Apple’s earnings results in violation of the company’s policies and in breach
of the fiduciary duty that he owed to the company.
                                 FIRST CLAIM FOR RELIEF
         Violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 Thereunder
        58.     The Commission re-alleges and incorporates paragraphs 1 through 57 as if fully
set forth herein.
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          59.      By engaging in the conduct described above in 2015 and 2016, Levoff, with
scienter, by use of the means or instrumentalities of interstate commerce, in connection with the
purchase or sale of a security: (a) employed devices, schemes, or artifices to defraud; (b) made
untrue statements of material fact or omitted to state material facts necessary in order to make the
statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading;
and/or (c) engaged in acts, practices or courses of conduct which operated or would operate as a
fraud or deceit.
          60.      By reason of the actions alleged herein, Levoff violated Section 10(b) of the
Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. § 78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 thereunder [17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5] and
unless restrained and enjoined will continue to do so.
                                    SECOND CLAIM FOR RELIEF
                                  Section 17(a)(1) of the Securities Act
          61.      The Commission re-alleges and incorporates paragraphs 1 through 60 as if fully
set forth herein.
          62.      In 2015 and 2016, Levoff, by use of the means or instrumentalities of interstate
commerce or of the mails, in the offer or sale of securities, directly or indirectly, with scienter,
employed devices, schemes, or artifices to defraud.
          63.      By reason of the actions alleged herein, Levoff violated Section 17(a)(1) of the
Securities Act [15 U.S.C. § 77q(a)(1)] and unless restrained and enjoined will continue to do so.
                                         PRAYER FOR RELIEF
          WHEREFORE, the SEC respectfully requests that the Court enter a judgment:
    (i)         finding that Levoff violated the provisions of the federal securities laws as alleged
                herein;
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    (ii)      permanently restraining and enjoining Levoff from violating Section 10(b) of the
              Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder and Section 17(a) of the Securities Act;
    (iii)     ordering Levoff to disgorge an amount equal to the profits made or losses avoided as
              a result of the actions alleged herein that took place in the past five years and to pay
              prejudgment interest thereon;
    (iv)      ordering Levoff to pay a civil monetary penalty equal to three times his disgorgement
              amount pursuant to Section 21A of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. § 78u-1];
    (v)       issuing an order, pursuant to Section 20(e) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. § 77t(e)]
              and Section 21(d)(2) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. § 78u(d)], prohibiting Levoff
              from serving as an officer or director of a public company; and
    (vi)      granting such other relief as this Court may deem just and proper.
                                    DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
           Pursuant to Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Commission demands
trial by jury in this action of all issues so triable.
Date: February 13, 2019                           __/s/ Daniel J. Maher
                                                  Daniel J. Maher, Mass. Bar No. 654711
                                                  Pei Y. Chung, Ill. Bar 6282660
                                                  Securities and Exchange Commission
                                                  100 F Street, NE
                                                  Washington, D.C. 20549
                                                  Tel: (202) 551-4737 (Maher)
                                                  Fax: (202) 772-9292
                                                  Email: maherd@sec.gov
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  ~s44 cR~~.o~'~~~                                                             CIVIL COVER SHEET
  The JS ~ civil cover sheet and the information contained herein neither replace nor supplenient the filing and sen~Sce of pleadings or other papers as required by la~v, except as
  provided by local rules of court. This form, approved by the Judicial Conference of the United States in September 1974, is required for the use of the Clerk of Court for the
  purpose of initiating the civil docket sheet. (.SEE/NSTRUCT/ONSONNEXTP.IGEOF7'HISFORM.)
  I. {a) PLAINTIFFS                                                                                              DEFENDANTS
  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission                                                                      Gene Daniel Levoff
    (b) County of Residence of First Listed Plaintiff                                                            County of Residence of First Listed Defendant   San Mateo (California)
                                  (EXCEPT IN U.S PLA/NTIFF CASES)                                                                     (  IN U.S. PI.ALVTII'FCASESONLY)
                                                                                                                 NOTE:       IN LAND CONDEMN.ATfON CASES, USE THE LOCATION OF
                                                                                                                             1'HE TRACT OF I.:\`D INVOLVED.
        ~C~   AttOrtleyS (Fir»i Name, Address, and Te(epl~one Number)                                             Attorneys pfKno~,n)
  Daniel Maher, U.S. S.E.C., 100 F Street, NE, Washington DC 20549,                                            Kevin Marino, Marino, Tortorelia &Boyle, 437 Southern Blvd.,
  202-551-4737                                                                                                 Chatham Township, NJ, 973-824-9300
  Pei Chung, same address, 202-551-7713
  TI. BASIS OF JURISDICTION~P~aceaxi •`x"in Oneeoson[y)                                             III. CITIZENSHIP OF PRINCIPAL PARTIES (Placea~~ "x"rnoneEoiforPlotnd}~
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  O 2       U.S. Government                O 4    Divarsiry                                             Citizen of Anotlrer State        D 2      Q   2    IncoiToratecl and Principal Place    O 5      O 5
               Defendant                            {Indicate Citizenship ofParries rr~ Item /11)                                                             of E3usiness In Another State
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  O     f20 Marine                        ~J 310 Airplane                  O 3G5 Personal Injury -            of Pro~r[y 2l USC 881          O 423 Withdrawal                  O 376 Qai Tam (3l USC
  O     130 Miller Act                    O 315 Airplane Product                   Product Liability    O 690 Other                                28 USC 157                         3729(a))
  O     140 Negotiable Listniment                 Liability                O 367 Health Care/                                                                                  O 400 State Reapportionment
  r"J   150 Recovery of Overpaymznt       O 320 Assault, Libel ~                  I'haanaccuticai                                               PROPERTY RTGH"CS               O  410 Antitrust
              & Enforcement of Judgment          Slander                          Personal Injury                                            O 820 Copyrights                  O 430 Banks and Bankinn
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              Student Loans               O 340 Marine                             Injury Product                                                   New Ding App~icaiion       O 470 Racketeer Influenced and
             (Excludes Veterans)          C~ 345 tilarine Product                  Liability                                                 O 840 Tndenk~rk                          Corrupt Organizations
  O     153 Recovery of Overpayment               Liability                  PERSONAL AROPERTY                   1.:~$~R:                       SOCIAL SECf1RI7"1'             O 480 Consumer Credit
              of Veteran's Benefits       i7 350 Motor Vehicle             O 370 Other Praucl       Cl 710 Pair Labor Standards              O 8G1 HIA (139>ffl                O 490 CablelSat TV
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                                          O 362 Personal Injury -                                   O 751 Family and Medical
                                                                                  Product I.,iabiliry                                                                          O 893 Environme~nal ~v9attcrs
                                                 A4edical Mal ractice                                       Leave .Act                                                         O 895 Freedom of Information
       REAi;PROPERTY                          '.CNIL R[(sT£I S             7>RISONER PET'ITTO;VS = O 790 Other Labor Litigation           )FEDERAL TAX SLITS                           Act
O 210 Land Condeimiation                  O A40 Other Civil Rights           Habens Corpus:         n 791 F..mployee Retirement         q 370 Taxes (IJ.S. Plaintiff           O 896 Arbitration
D 220 Foreclosure                         O 411 Voting                     O 4G3 Alien Detainee            Income Security.~ct                  w Defendant)                    O 399 Administntivc Procedure
O 230 Rent Lease & Ejechnent              O 442 Emplo~anem                 O ~ 10 Motions to Vacate                                     i~ 871 (RS—Thircl Pam                         AcU'Review or Appeal of
O 240 "i ons ro Land                      O 443 HousinS/                         Sentence                                                       26 USC 7609                            Agency Decision
[1 2d5 Ton Product Liability                     Accommodations            O X30 Genera(                                                                                        E7 9>0 Co~utitutionaliry of
O 290 All Other Real Property             C1 445 ,amer. w/Disabilities -   O X35 Death Penalty             9119tYI1fYRA`FFON`                                                         State Statutes
                                                 Employment                  Other:                 O 462 i~~aturalization Ap}~licatian
                                          O d46 Amer. w/Disabilities -     O X40 Mandanms &Other    O ~76~ (hher Iirunigration
                                                 Other                     O 5~0 Civil Rights              Actions
                                          O 44~ Education                  O »> Prison Condition
                                                                           O 560 Civil Detaia~e~ -
                                                                                  Conditio~u of
                                                                                 Confinement
 'V. ~RI~iYN (Place an "X" in Ooze l3os O~~l})
        1   Original          t~ 2 Remo=ed from               D 3          Remanded from            L7 4 Reinstated or       ~ ~ 'iransfe~red from          `~ b 1~1ultidistrict          O 8 Muitidistrict
            Proceeding             State Court                             A~~~ellate Court              Reopened                 Another District               Litigation -                  LitigatSon -
                                                                                                                                  i~„~~;r,;i                     Transfer                     Direct File
                                                    the U.S. Civil Statute under which you are tiling (D~ nor cirejurinJicrionaLsrarures u»tess di,~ecsiry):
                           ~han e Act Section 10 b 15 U S C Section 78' b ~ Securites Act Section 17                                                                                                  77
  VI. CAUSE OF ACTION gi-~efdescriptionofcause:
                       I nsider Trading
  VII. REQUESTED IN                           Q     CHECK IF T"HIS IS A CLASS ACI'IOV                       DEMAND ~                                      CHECK YES only if demanded in complaint
              COMPLAINT:                            UNDER RULE 23,F.R.Cv.P.                                                                               JURYDE~~tANll:                  Yes    C7 No
  VIII. RELATED CASES)
                                                  (See instructions):
              ~F ANY                                                       JUDGE                                                                 DOCKL`l- NU1~4E3EK
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  F012 OFFICE USF, O\LY
        ItECE[PT                    A~9011NT                                      APPLYING 1f=P                                   IC'rDCfi                          ivtAG. JUDGE