Hedge fund manager dies of apparent suicide in NYC following arrest
Posted 11:53 AM, June 21, 2016, by Associated Press and Paige Leskin, Updated at 11:54am, June 21, 2016
NEW YORK, NY — A hedge fund manager charged with insider trading has been found dead in his New York City apartment of an apparent suicide days after his arrest.
Police said Tuesday that Sanjay Valvani’s wife found him with a slashed neck Monday evening. An apparent suicide note and knife were found, Detective Ahmed Nasser said.
The medical examiner’s office will determine the official cause of death.
Valvani’s lawyers called it a “horrible tragedy that is difficult to comprehend.” Prosecutors declined to comment.
Valvani pleaded not guilty last week to charges that he persuaded a former senior Food and Drug Administration official to give him inside information about generic drug approvals. Prosecutors say he earned about $25 million illegally between 2005 and 2011.
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Visium's Sanjay Valvani found dead in apparent suicide after insider trading charge
Rachael Levy,Business Insider 4 hours ago
Sanjay
Valvani, a portfolio manager at Visium Asset Management who was charged
with insider trading last week, was found dead Monday night.
A New York Police Department representative said Valvani was found by his wife and left a suicide note.
Valvani, 44, turned himself in to authorities last week. He was charged with netting about $25 million for an unnamed investment firm using inside information on the pending approval of a generic drug. Valvani had pleaded not guilty.
Visium had placed Valvani on leave earlier this year after it announced that it was under investigation. The hedge fund said on Friday that it would shut down its operations.
Valvani faced numerous charges, according to the complaint:
- Valvani was accused of committing securities and wire fraud with a former senior Food and Drug Administration official, Gordon Johnston, from about 2005 through 2011.
- Valvani "unlawfully obtained highly confidential and material nonpublic information from the FDA about the agency's approval of pending generic drug applications," according to the US attorney's statement.
- Valvani was also charged with passing material nonpublic info to Chris Plaford, a former Visium portfolio manager, who allegedly traded on that info.
- Johnston and Plaford have pleaded guilty and admitted their participation in the scheme.
- The complaint said Valvani instructed Johnston, the former FDA official, about the status and approval of a generic drug, and Johnston passed along that info back to Valvani. Valvani was accused of using that info to bet on two pharma companies that were likely to be affected by the inside tip, allegedly netting about $25 million in trading profits. Valvani was also accused of tipping off Plaford on this info.
Dow Jones earlier reported that the death was an apparent suicide.