One of the World's Most Successful Hedge Funds is Facing an Employee Rebellion Over Donald Trump

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by RRY16, Feb 24, 2017.

  1. sle

    sle

    Regardless of what exactly the reason for dismissal of the original case, the fact is that got tried for the same crime twice (first as federal and then as a state crime). Unless new evidence has been unearthed, it feels like GS got themselves a way to get around the double jeopardy clause.

    PS. It comes from the same DA that charged the former head of the IMF with a rape he did not commit.
     
    #51     Mar 1, 2017
  2. bone

    bone

    Well, Mr. Magerman now has all kinds of time on his hands to pursue political activism without letting an employer get in the way. In the end, he got what he really wanted.

    Somehow - and I'm going out on a limb here, there are thousands of brilliant credentialed quants desperately waiting to fill Mr. Magerman's void.
     
    #52     Mar 1, 2017
  3. Sig

    Sig

    As I understand it the prosecutor just appealed the trial judges decision to throw out the case and the state supreme court overruled the trial judge. That's not double jeopardy at all, that's just an appeal.
    That said, as I mentioned in the last thread where we litigated this ad nauseam, GS has clearly made their point, they're getting the deterrent effect against a culture that clearly needed it since they apparently thought there was nothing wrong with theft of computer code, and got their pound of flesh from him. At this point putting the guy in jail for several years isn't warranted and makes them look like a bully. None of that makes the guy innocent though.
     
    #53     Mar 1, 2017
    dealmaker likes this.
  4. sprstpd

    sprstpd

    Yes, we all know that real juries are infallible.
     
    #54     Mar 1, 2017
  5. sle

    sle

    Yeah, there is no question there - the guy did take the code. This said, it's upsetting how GS stacks the odds against the little guy, be it in this case or let's say in case of Guillem Torre (who took the fall for them).
     
    #55     Mar 1, 2017
  6. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    Do you mean Fabrice Tourre? Fabrice did take the fall for GS but doesn't the small guy almost always take the fall eg Mathew Martoma for SAC IE Steve?


    https://www.wired.com/2015/05/programmer-convicted-bizarre-goldman-sachs-caseagain/
     
    Last edited: Mar 1, 2017
    #56     Mar 1, 2017
  7. Sig

    Sig

    They obviously aren't, but I'll certainly take one over a bunch of jackasses that Esquire put together who sit around pontificating without even knowing the actual facts of the case!
     
    #57     Mar 1, 2017
  8. sle

    sle

    Yes, Fabrice, sorry. There are some crucial differences between the SAC+Martoma case and GS+Tourre case.
     
    #58     Mar 1, 2017
  9. sle

    sle

    Waiting - yes. Can they? Not so sure. Depending on his exact role and who else is pissed off, they might have an exodus on their hands that would be hard to stop.
     
    #59     Mar 1, 2017
    dealmaker likes this.
  10. bone

    bone

    Consider the publication, the source, the source's strained remote working relationship well before the Presidential election and of course the agenda.

    This is pure treacle, and Renaissance will be just fine. The HF and bank desk trading environment has become so condensed and rarified that the idea of mass defections from a highly successful HF over of all stupid things politics is IMHO bullshit.
     
    #60     Mar 1, 2017