What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late
On the morning of May 6, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission unveiled one of the most sweeping insider trading prosecutions in recent memory. Thirty individuals were criminally charged; 21 faced simultaneous civil enforcement by the SEC. At the center of the scheme: a Yale Law-trained mergers and acquisitions attorney who had worked at Sidley Austin, Latham & Watkins, and Goodwin Procter — three of the most prominent M&A practices in the world. From 2018 to 2024, he allegedly extracted material nonpublic information from nearly 30 pending corporate transactions. That information moved through a structured network — participants reportedly used code words like "Torahs" and "Mitzvahs" — whose members traded ahead of public announcements and split the profits. Individual investors, reading the same press releases hours or days later, absorbed the other side of those trades. The Architecture of Information Asymmetry ...