UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Defendant-appellant Doug Whitman appeals from a January 29, 2013 judgment of the district court convicting him of two counts of conspiracy to commit securities fraud in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 78j(b) & 78ff, and 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, and two counts of securities fraud in violation of those same sections. The court sentenced Whitman to twenty-four months' imprisonment on each count (all to run concurrently), one year of supervised release, and a $250,000 fine. We assume the parties' familiarity with the facts and procedural history of this case, which we summarize only so far as is necessary to understand our rulings.
Whitman challenges his convictions by means of a series of objections to the district court's evidentiary rulings and jury instructions. Because all the challenged rulings were correct or did not prejudice the defendant, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Whitman challenges the district court's exclusion of three types of testimony: portions of experts' opinions, an unavailable witness's prior sworn testimony, and a corroborating witness's impression of Whitman's state of mind. "We review a district court's ruling to admit or exclude evidence under a deferential abuse of discretion standard."
District courts may admit expert testimony where "scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue." Fed. R. Evid. 702(a). A district court acts as a "gatekeep[er]" to separate sound analysis from sophistry, "mak[ing] certain that an expert, whether basing testimony upon professional studies or personal experience, employs in the courtroom the same level of intellectual rigor that characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field."
Whitman proffered two experts in this case — George Kelly, a Wall Street analyst tasked with decoding industry jargon and describing investment analysts' research methods, and Michael Mayer, a financial consultant who had analyzed patterns in Whitman's past trades. After hearing extensive argument from the government and the defense, the district court narrowed the scope of both experts' testimony. Whitman challenges these restrictions as unreasonable. But the district court acted well within its discretion, making fair judgments about the quality of each expert's methods and the reliability of their analyses.
The district court allowed Kelly to give the jury a primer on how hedge funds gather information about investment targets, or, in the words of defense counsel, on the "relationship between the analyst and the investment community." J. App'x at 609. The court reasonably declined to permit Kelly to extrapolate specific conclusions about Whitman's actions from this general knowledge about common strategies. The court also prevented Kelly from opining about Whitman's and his alleged co-conspirators' use of slang words like "mole" and colloquial phrases like "getting an edge." J. App'x at 745. The court reasoned that the jury could use common sense to unpack a double entendre, particularly where fact witnesses would testify about what they intended to convey, or their understanding of the meaning of messages they received. Both limits stemmed from the same reasonable conclusion — that despite his long experience on Wall Street, Kelly did not have "sufficient facts or data" to opine about the specific events in this case. Fed. R. Evid. 702(b).
The district court also prevented Mayer from making similar logical leaps. After analyzing "[s]even thousands lines of data," each entry capturing a trade Whitman made over the course of eleven years, Mayer purported to compare the trades challenged by the government — a sizable purchase of Polycom stocks just before a bullish earnings report, an aggressive short on Google shares days before a disappointing quarterly call, and sales of Marvell stock when the company appeared healthy to other observers — to Whitman's past investment choices. Mayer proffered his opinion that the challenged trades were similar to a handful of past trades that the government did not claim resulted from an inside tip.
The district court reasonably concluded that Mayer lacked a sufficient basis to jump from modest similarities between trades to a conclusion that the allegedly illegal trades resulted from sound research rather than inside information. Mayer himself admitted that "out of all those thousands of trades," he identified "ten or fewer that were comparable," and that he had not "appl[ied] a statistical test" to determine whether the similarities were statistically significant. J. App'x at 1372. Nor had Mayer used any objective methods to chose parameters to identify comparable trades. Mayer acknowledged that he simply made a "judgment" that setting an outer time limit of 30 days before an earnings report would capture similar trades because that is when similar trades occur. J. App'x at 1376. We cannot fault the judge's reasonable conclusion that Mayer's logic was circular and "ad hoc." J. App'x at 1379.
The district court thus reasonably allowed Mayer to describe the Polycomm and Marvel trades as comparable to other trades, but did not allow him to opine that they were therefore not the result of inside information. In the case of the Google short, the district court prohibited Mayer from opining about the trade, concluding that the jury could make the relevant comparisons without expert aid. In proffered testimony that defense counsel acknowledged did not "involve expertise," J. App'x at 1367, Mayer proposed to repeat the simple fact, to which the court correctly predicted Whitman himself would testify, that Whitman had traded Google before. The jury was able to evaluate this fact against the equally unchallenged facts that Whitman had never held a long-term position in Google, and had not traded Google stock for over two years when he made the challenged trade. Absent any reason that such a comparison required expert skill, the court concluded that the jury would learn nothing new by having an expert review what would already be in the record.
In sum, the district court set reasonable limits on Kelly and Mayer's testimony: Kelly was allowed to explain the general workings of a technical world, but was not allowed to render specific opinions about companies and people he knew nothing about. Mayer was permitted to draw comparisons based on his review of a large number of trades, but was not permitted to turn those comparisons into speculative conclusions about why Whitman made a specific trade. Under the circumstances, we cannot say that the district court's judgment about the proper scope of the experts' testimony was unreasonable.
Rule 804(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Evidence exempts prior testimony given by an unavailable witness from the hearsay rule if the party against whom the testimony is now offered had "an opportunity and similar motive to develop [the testimony] by direct, cross-, or redirect examination." Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(1)(B). A party had a "similar motive" if it had a "substantially similar degree of interest in prevailing on that issue" at the two proceedings.
Whitman sought to read into the record the prior deposition of alleged tipper Sunil Bhalla, taken during an SEC civil investigation, in which Bhalla denied passing inside information to Whitman. Bhalla was unavailable to testify at trial, having asserted his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. After reviewing the deposition transcript, the district court concluded that the SEC's motive was investigatory, thus mirroring the
We cannot disagree. Assuming arguendo that the SEC lawyers and the trial prosecutors can be treated as the same party, the district court reasonably concluded that they had differing motivations to develop testimony by cross-examination. As we noted in
While
Whitman challenges the district court's refusal to allow Whitman's associate, Jason Ader, to describe Whitman's reaction to Roomy Khan's arrest. Defense counsel proffered that Ader would have testified that Whitman "evinced no anxiety or concern whatsoever upon learning that Khan was an FBI informant." J. App'x at 1850. The district court denied the request, either because the court thought the statement was hearsay, or because the court found the testimony more prejudicial than probative.
Assuming arguendo that the testimony should have been admitted, any error was harmless. During Whitman's direct examination, the defense played tapes of conversation in which Whitman joked about Khan's arrest, audibly laughing about Khan's audacious tactics. Asked by his counsel about his light attitude towards Khan's crimes, Whitman insisted that he had always stayed on the right side of the law, that he had "made a lot of fun of Roomy" and warned her that she be more careful or she could go "to jail for that." J. App'x at 1506, 1509. Thus, Whitman provided a first-person account of Ader's excluded, second-hand testimony: Whitman told the jury that he maintained a "jocular" attitude toward Khan because he had no reason to worry that he had benefitted from her suspect tactics, corroborated by recordings in which he displayed such an attitude. J. App'x at 1507. Ader's testimony, which as proffered would have primarily consisted of his evaluation of Whitman's tone and demeanor, would have at best provided limited corroboration of Whitman's testimony. On the whole record before us, we cannot conclude that the exclusion of this small piece of testimony was material to the outcome of the case. Assuming, without deciding, that the district court erred, we see no prejudice.
"We review jury instructions de novo with regard to whether the jury was misled or inadequately informed about the applicable law."
"A conscious avoidance instruction permits a jury to find that a defendant had culpable knowledge of a fact when the evidence shows that the defendant intentionally avoided confirming the fact."
Whitman concedes that the first condition was met: he denied knowledge of Khan and Motey's illegal tactics. He argues only that the factual predicate for a conscious avoidance instruction was lacking. Whitman relies on the Supreme Court's decision in
But as we have recently noted,
In
Whitman's insistence that Motey revive his compromised contacts at Marvell similarly provided a predicate for a conscious avoidance instruction as to Whitman's knowledge of Motey's research strategies. Whitman told Motey that Marvell's management had "caught you, dude," J. App'x at 2059, and that he failed to "protect" his Marvell sources, who then "g[o]t in trouble." J. App'x at 2060. He entreated Motey to call those sources back, using an internet phone number to mask his identity or to "hit star 67, [so] [y]our number won't show up." J. App'x at 2061. The jury could have reasonably found that Whitman knew that Motey's sources had violated a corporate policy, but avoided learning exactly what those sources had done wrong.
Whitman never expressly told Khan or Motey that he would rather not know the story behind a suspicious tip. But a defendant's "purposeful contrivance" to avoid knowledge,
We have yet to decide whether a remote tippee must know that the original tipper received a personal benefit in return for revealing inside information.
The district court told the jury — not once but four times — that Whitman could only be found guilty if he knew that a tippee received a personal benefit. In its opening lines outlining the elements of securities fraud, the court advised the jury that:
J. App'x at 2030. The court twice repeated the instruction when describing particular counts. Finally, towards the end of the charge, the judge noted that although the government need not prove that Whitman knew "the specific benefit given or anticipated," it had to prove that Whitman had "a general understanding that the insider was improperly disclosing inside information for personal benefit." J. App'x at 2032.
Whitman argues that these instructions were ambiguous. According to Whitman, the word "knowing" in the court's initial instruction was so far removed from the clause "in exchange for or in anticipation of personal benefit," that the sentence's structure could be read to create two separate elements: knowledge of a breach of fiduciary duty, and simple existence of a self-serving motive. Appellant's Brief at 48.
Whitman's argument is simply wrong. As a grammatical matter, the "personal benefit" language can only be read as part of the clause introduced by "knowing." We see no ambiguity whatsoever in the court's formulation. In any event, as the Supreme Court long ago held, a specific jury instruction "must be viewed in the context of the overall charge."
Insider trading depends upon insiders — people with access to information that the public does not have, and an obligation to keep that information secret. In
Defendants violate the law when they trade "while in knowing possession of nonpublic information material to those trades."
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is