Court Refuses Ex-OpenSea Exec's Effort to Dismiss 'Insider Trading' Case
A federal indictment of former OpenSea Head of Product Nate
Chastain can proceed, a federal judge ruled Friday.
Chastain was indicted in June on allegations of insider
trading, and charged with wire fraud and money laundering. Chastain filed a
motion to dismiss in August, arguing that the government did not have enough
evidence to support a money laundering charge and that he did not
"misappropriate" information. He thus could not be charged with wire
fraud, he argued, and also could not be charged with insider trading because
the non-fungible tokens (NFTs) he allegedly traded in were neither securities
nor commodities under the relevant part of the law.
In denying Chastain's motion, Judge Jesse Furman said two of
Chastain's arguments – that prosecutors may not be able to prove that the NFTs
are not "property" and that he did not engage in the actions that
would prove money laundering – might have merit, but should be presented before
a jury, rather than in a dismissal motion.
Chastain's third argument – that he did not engage in
insider trading because that requires a security or a commodity to be traded in
– does not hold up at all wrote the judge, as prosecutors did not charge
Chastain with an insider trading-related allegation.
Furman wrote: "Chastain seizes on two references in the
Indictment and statements made by the Government (in a press release and at the
initial conference in this case) to assert that he is charged with 'insider
trading.' But he is not charged with insider trading, at least in the classic
sense of the term, which is a means of engaging in securities fraud in
violation of Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ... Instead,
he is charged with wire fraud in violation of Section 1343. See Indictment ¶
13. And in contrast to Section 10(b), which is limited to fraud 'in connection
with the purchase or sale of any security,' Section 1343 makes no reference to
securities or commodities."
Violation of rights?
On the same day Furman's ruling came out, Chastain filed three
other memos, arguing that his fourth and fifth amendment rights were violated,
supporting an argument he first made at the end of September.
Specifically, Chastain's attorneys wrote that FBI agents did
not read him his Miranda rights before questioning him or asking for his cell
phone password and collecting evidence from it. As a result, Chastain's
attorneys are asking for any evidence collected – including the contents of his
cell phone – during the execution of a search warrant be suppressed because
Chastain "was subjected to a custodial interrogation during the execution
of the search warrant" despite not being under arrest at the time.
"No reasonable person would have felt free to leave an
analogous encounter in which several FBI agents demanded entry into their home
in the early hours of the morning, wearing bullet proof vests, carrying
holstered firearms, and presenting them with a warrant that authorized a search
of their person," the filing said.
The cell phone's contents were also not within the scope of
the search warrant, the attorneys wrote.
In a separate filing, Chastain does actually ask the court
to order the Department of Justice to stop using the phrase "insider
trading," calling it prejudicial and inflammatory."
The term’s presence in the Indictment – and any reference to
it at a trial – serves no legitimate prosecutorial purpose and is simply a
means of increasing media attention and inflaming the jury in this
first-of-its-kind case in the digital asset space," Chastain's attorneys
wrote.
A third filing argues that Chastain is entitled to subpoena
certain communications about OpenSea's listing process and around his former
role.
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