Gene Levoff, Apple’s Former Director of Corporate Law Admits Insider Trading
July 1, 2022
The former corporate secretary and director
of corporate law at Apple today admitted
engaging in an insider trading scheme that
spanned five years, Attorney for the United
States Vikas Khanna announced.
Gene Levoff, 48, of San Carlos, California,
pleaded guilty by videoconference before
U.S. District Judge William J. Martini to
six counts of an indictment charging him
with securities fraud. Levoff was initially
charged by complaint in February 2019.
“Gene Levoff betrayed the trust of one of
the world’s largest tech companies for his
own financial gain,” Attorney for the United
States Khanna said. “Despite being
responsible for enforcing Apple’s own ban on
insider trading, Levoff used his position of
trust to commit insider trading in order to
line his own pockets. This Office will
continue to prioritize securities fraud
prosecutions.”
“This defendant exploited his position
within a company strictly for financial gain
that he would not have otherwise realized,”
Terence Reilly, FBI Acting Special Agent in
Charge in Newark, said. “That’s called
‘gaming the system.’ Insider trading is not
just illegal, it is a threat to the
viability of our markets. The average
American, whose retirement savings is
invested in these companies, has every right
to expect that rules are being followed, the
game is being played fairly, and their nest
egg is safe from profiteers who willingly
sidestep the rules to improve their own
financial future at the expense of others.
The FBI is here to make sure the playing
field is level.”
According to documents filed in this case
and statements made in court:
From February 2011 to April 2016, Levoff –
the top corporate attorney at Apple who also
served as the company’s assistant secretary
and corporate secretary – misappropriated
material, nonpublic information about
Apple’s financial results and then executed
trades involving the company’s stock. This
scheme to defraud Apple and its shareholders
allowed Levoff to realize profits of
approximately $227,000 on certain trades and
to avoid losses of approximately $377,000 on
others.
Specifically,
Levoff was co-chairman of Apple’s Disclosure
Committee, which reviewed and discussed the
company’s draft quarterly and yearly
earnings materials and periodic U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
filings before they were publicly disclosed.
Levoff mined these materials for inside
information about Apple to guide his
decisions to buy and sell Apple stock ahead
of its earnings announcements. When Apple
posted strong revenue and net profit for a
given financial quarter, he purchased large
quantities of stock, which he later sold for
a profit once the market reacted to the
news. When there were lower-than-anticipated
revenue and net profit, Levoff sold large
quantities of Apple stock, avoiding
significant losses.
Levoff was subject to Apple’s regular
quarterly “blackout periods,” which
prohibited individuals who had access to
material nonpublic information from engaging
in trades until a certain period after the
company disclosed its financial results to
the public. Levoff ignored this restriction,
as well as the company’s broader Insider
Trading Policy – which he was responsible
for enforcing – and instead repeatedly
executed trades based on material, nonpublic
information without Apple’s knowledge or
authorization. On several occasions, Levoff
executed trades within a blackout period
after notifying other individuals subject to
the restriction that they were prohibited
from buying or selling Apple stock until the
blackout period terminated.
The securities fraud counts each carry a
maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a
$5 million fine. Sentencing is scheduled for
Nov. 10, 2022.
The SEC previously filed a civil complaint
against Levoff based on the same conduct.
Attorney for the United States Khanna
credited special agents of the FBI, under
the direction of Acting Special Agent in
Charge Reilly, with the investigation
leading to today’s guilty plea. He also
thanked the SEC, for the assistance provided
by its Enforcement Division, and Apple,
which cooperated with law enforcement over
the course of the investigation.
The government is represented by Daniel V.
Shapiro, Deputy Chief of the Criminal
Division.