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Safe Harbors In The Shadows: Extending 10b5-1 Plans To Cover Shadow Trading, Karen E. Woody, M. Cole Davidson Jan 2023

Safe Harbors In The Shadows: Extending 10b5-1 Plans To Cover Shadow Trading, Karen E. Woody, M. Cole Davidson

Scholarly Articles

Insider trading, or trading while in possession of material nonpublic information, remains the legal conundrum it has been for over four decades. The governing rule prohibiting insider trading is Rule 10b-5, passed in 1943 by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in order to clarify Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act. Notably, neither Rule 10b-5 and Section 10(b) mention the term “insider trading.” In fact, scholars and historians have opined that insider trading was not considered by Congress as one of the aims of Section 10(b) or Rule 10b-5. Without any statutory guidance regarding insider trading, the legal contours …


The New Insider Trading, Karen E. Woody Jul 2020

The New Insider Trading, Karen E. Woody

Scholarly Articles

Pursuant to the SEC’s Rule 10b-5, in order to obtain a conviction for insider trading based upon a tipper-tippee theory, the government must prove that the tipper received a personal benefit for the tip, and that the tippee knew about that benefit. The last five years of blockbuster insider trading cases have focused on this seemingly nebulous personal benefit test, and the Supreme Court has been unable to clear the muddy waters. As a result, the parameters of insider trading remain hard to pin down and often shift depending on the facts of the most recent case. Two terms ago, …


Myth Of The Attorney Whistleblower, Carliss N. Chatman Jan 2019

Myth Of The Attorney Whistleblower, Carliss N. Chatman

Scholarly Articles

Notwithstanding the political grandstanding and legal regimes put in place to prevent the next Enron, this article explores whether attorney whistleblower provisions provided in the Standards of Professional Conduct for Attorneys Appearing and Practicing Before the Commission in the Representation of an Issuer and in the Model Rules of Professional Conduct are effective. When faced with attorney involvement in Enron, Congress passed § 307 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act (Sarbanes), which required the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to amend its standards governing the conduct of attorneys practicing before the SEC. In response, the SEC and the American Bar Association …