Rajat Gupta asked to repay $6.22 million to Goldman Sachs

A federal judge on Monday ordered former Goldman Sachs Group Inc director Rajat Gupta to reimburse $6.22 million to help the Wall Street bank cover its legal expenses related to his criminal insider trading case.

A federal judge on Monday ordered former Goldman Sachs Group Inc director Rajat Gupta to reimburse $6.22 million to help the Wall Street bank cover its legal expenses related to his criminal insider trading case.

Goldman had sought to recover $6.91 million, and US district judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan said the bank had proved it was entitled to 90 per cent of what it requested.

Mr Gupta, 64, is appealing his June 15, 2012 conviction and two-year prison term for feeding confidential information he had learned at Goldman board meetings to Raj Rajaratnam, the Galleon Group hedge fund manager and former billionaire.

Mr Rajaratnam has been a central figure in a multi-year US government crackdown on insider trading. Mr Gupta is a former global managing director of the consulting firm McKinsey & Co, and is the highest corporate executive convicted in the probe.

Jurors found Mr Gupta guilty of leaks during the second half of 2008, including news related to a crucial $5 billion investment in Goldman by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc at the height of the global financial crisis.

Goldman had sought to recover fees it had paid its law firm Sullivan & Cromwell in connection with Mr Gupta's criminal case and related matters. It cited the federal Mandatory Victims Restitution Act, which requires restitution in some fraud cases.

Mr Gupta opposed restitution but Mr Rakoff, who presided over the criminal trial, said nearly all of what Goldman sought was a "necessary, direct, and foreseeable result of the investigation and prosecution of Mr  Gupta's offense of conviction."

The judge said Goldman could also recover legal costs linked to a related US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) civil case against Rajat Gupta, and to the criminal case against Mr Rajaratnam.

He said Mr Gupta's opposition to the latter "ignores the glaring fact" that he had been convicted of conspiring with Mr Rajaratnam to commit securities fraud.

But the judge said Goldman did not deserve all it sought.

Mr Rakoff said some entries in the "voluminous" 542 pages of billing records he reviewed did not qualify because they involved depositions in civil cases that followed the criminal conviction.

He further said Goldman on "a few occasions" assigned too many lawyers to the case - "perhaps perfectly appropriate on the assumption that Goldman Sachs wished to spare no expense on a matter of great importance to it," but more than reasonably necessary under the law.

Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally said, "We are pleased that the court ordered Mr Gupta to pay restitution."

Richard Davis, a lawyer for Mr Gupta, said his client plans to appeal.

Mr Rajaratnam is separately appealing his criminal conviction and 11-year prison term, saying FBI wiretap evidence should not have been admitted by US district judge Richard Holwell at his 2011 trial.

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