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To: Janice Shell who wrote (1639)1/4/2005 7:03:14 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 5425
 
Ex-FBI Agent Admits Giving Data to Traders

MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
Posted on Tue, Jan. 04, 2005
Associated Press

NEW YORK - A former FBI agent admitted that he gave online stock traders confidential details of federal investigations, including a probe of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

One of the recipients was San Diego penny stock picker Anthony Elgindy. Elgindy was investigated by a Justice Department task force examining whether anyone might have known of the terrorists' plans and profited by selling vulnerable stocks just before the attacks, Jeffrey Royer said.

Elgindy was not charged in connection with that probe, but an investigation into the ties between Elgindy and Royer led to racketeering, securities fraud and other charges against the two men. They are on trial together in federal court in Brooklyn.

Taking the stand in his defense, Royer acknowledged Monday that he revealed the existence of FBI and SEC investigations, executives' criminal records and other sensitive information to Elgindy and associate Derrick Cleveland.

He said the apparent violations were justified because Elgindy and Cleveland were stock-market experts who helped him develop evidence of financial wrongdoing.

Prosecutors say the relationship was criminal. Elgindy was accused of paying Royer for the information and using it to manipulate stock prices and extort companies that were the subjects of investigations.

When pressed by Assistant U.S. Attorney Seth Levine about apparent violations of FBI rules, Royer grew testy, asserting that he was an independent-minded agent who had the right to decide what information to reveal.

"It's real easy for you to armchair quarterback when you don't have anything to do with the case," Royer told Levine. "Pursuant to a law-enforcement purpose, I can do anything I want with the files."

Cleveland has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud and testified against Elgindy and Royer.



To: Janice Shell who wrote (1639)1/4/2005 7:10:58 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5425
 
Ex-F.B.I. Agent Defends Role in Fraud Case
By ERIC DASH

Published: January 4, 2005

For nearly two months, Jeffrey A. Royer, a former F.B.I. agent, has sat silent as prosecutors accused him of providing confidential government information to a controversial stock adviser as part of an elaborate scheme. But yesterday, taking the witness stand for the first time, Mr. Royer testified that the adviser, Anthony Elgindy, was simply "a very valuable source."

Both Mr. Royer and Mr. Elgindy are accused of securities fraud, market manipulation and extortion in a conspiracy trial that is in its eighth week in the Federal District Court in Brooklyn.

In a spirited cross-examination yesterday afternoon, Mr. Royer admitted that between March 2000 and May 2002, he gave Mr. Elgindy information about confidential government investigations. But Mr. Royer maintained that he did so for law enforcement purposes and never expected anything but information in return.

The government contends that Mr. Royer supplied Mr. Elgindy with advanced news of criminal investigations into several small companies, which Mr. Elgindy published on two Web sites he operated, in a short-selling scheme that allowed both men to profit. Prosecutors also say that Mr. Elgindy used the confidential information to extort heavily discounted and sometimes free stock from companies that feared the impact of such a disclosure.

"I was interested in getting information back," said Mr. Royer, who was soft-spoken at first but grew more feisty as prosecutors continued with their cross-examination. He said he had no idea that Mr. Elgindy would use the information to sell stocks short, which involves borrowing shares in the hope that their price will fall.

Mr. Royer said that he thought that Mr. Elgindy's network of contacts in the investment world could provide the F.B.I. with useful information, and that he showed Mr. Elgindy some confidential e-mail messages and other documents related to companies under investigation as a way of winning trust.

Through his Internet investing site, Mr. Elgindy and others "offered a unique approach to information-gathering," Mr. Royer later added. "Mr. Elgindy was an individual, a conduit to 300 people who researched stock fraud.

"By sharing information, I would allow law enforcement and regulatory authorities to shut down companies that scammed the general public. That is what I planned to do."

Three other associates of Mr. Elgindy are expected to stand trial sometime this year on separate charges related to the case.

Mr. Elgindy, who is not scheduled to testify, has been in jail since April 2004, after he boarded a plane with false identification while awaiting trial in the securities fraud case.

Mr. Elgindy, a controversial figure in the world of cheap and thinly traded shares, has been portrayed by prosecutors as the mastermind of a complicated scheme. He appeared yesterday in a dark suit, with a bloodied bandage wrapped tightly around his head - caused by a "mishap" in prison, his lawyer, Joel R. Isaacson, said.

But it is the supporting role of Mr. Royer that has provided the government with the basic foundation of its case.

Even though Mr. Royer said he was aware that Mr. Elgindy was a well-known short seller, he said that he did not know what Mr. Elgindy planned to do with the confidential information. Mr. Royer acknowledged that he used a case code for an A.T.M. theft in New Mexico when he searched a secure government database for information related to individuals at several companies that interested Mr. Elgindy. Mr. Royer also said that he took home confidential government reports after he left the F.B.I., apparently in violation of the agency's rules.

On cross-examination, Seth Levine, an assistant United States attorney, asked him: "Is it your prerogative that you could send confidential information to a convicted felon whenever you want?" Mr. Royer said that it was not.

"It's real easy for you to armchair-quarterback when you don't have anything to do with the case," Mr. Royer later said. "Pursuant to law enforcement purposes, I can do anything I want with the files."

(Page 2 of 2)

Mr. Royer also said that after the 9/11 attacks, he learned that Mr. Elgindy was being investigated by the Justice Department for potential terrorist ties. He said that he did not inform Mr. Elgindy because he did not want to interfere with the investigation.

It was not the first time that Sept. 11 had been invoked in this case. Earlier in the trial, the fact that Mr. Elgindy was a subject of a terrorism-related investigation shortly after 9/11 was introduced into evidence. Mr. Elgindy's lawyers have argued that there is no reason to suggest that their client was connected to terrorism. And yesterday, as before, Judge Raymond J. Dearie instructed jurors to keep in mind that this case has nothing to do with terrorism.

For the first five weeks of the trial, prosecutors called on several F.B.I. agents who worked with Mr. Royer, along with former businesses associates of Mr. Elgindy, some of whom have pleaded guilty as part of a deal with the government. Mr. Royer's testimony seemed to affirm many of the events, but offered an alternative explanation that appeared to be fairly consistent with Mr. Elgindy's defense case, delivered last month.

Mr. Elgindy's lawyers have maintained that their client worked with Mr. Royer in an effort to crack down on stock frauds and that he sometimes gained confidential information in the process.

Derrick Cleveland, a stock trader who introduced Mr. Royer to Mr. Elgindy, pleaded guilty to securities fraud conspiracy, and agreed to testify for the government in the case. In his 10 days of testimony, he outlined case after case in which he claimed that Mr. Royer provided important tips that he and Mr. Elgindy used to sell stocks short. In yesterday's testimony, Mr. Royer said that the information he provided was far more limited.

F.B.I agents testifying for the government have said that Mr. Royer freely admitted to gaining access to password-protected government databases to furnish confidential S.E.C. and F.B.I. information.

They also said that Mr. Royer told them he planned to work for Mr. Elgindy and other short sellers after he left the agency in December 2001. The agents also said that Mr. Royer told them at the time that he was interested in exposing corporate fraud because he had once lost a large investment in a bogus company. Mr. Royer's testimony yesterday appeared to affirm these remarks.

Closing arguments are in the case are expected to take place as early as next week.



To: Janice Shell who wrote (1639)1/4/2005 10:03:16 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 5425
 
UPDATE: Ex-FBI Agent Continues Testimony In Elgindy Trial

01-03-05 08:29 PM EST
(Updates with additional testimony, beginning in the fifth paragraph from the bottom of the story.)

By Carol S. Remond

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Former Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent Jeffrey Royer testified Monday that he had a typical agent-informant relationship with Anthony Elgindy and Derrick Cleveland, and that his goal was to gather information about stock fraud.

Royer told jurors that Cleveland and Elgindy were viable informants who " offered a very unique approach to information-gathering."

Royer and Elgindy are standing trial in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. They, and three others to be tried separately, are charged with several counts of securities fraud, market manipulation and extortion. The government alleges that Elgindy used a private investing Web site to share and trade on confidential information he obtained from Royer. Cleveland, who also was charged in the case, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit securities fraud and is cooperating with the government.

The case resumed Monday after a 10-day holiday recess. Closing arguments are now scheduled to begin next week, and the case should go to jurors in the week of Jan. 18.

Elgindy showed up in court Monday morning with a large bandage around his head, following an altercation with another inmate at the Metropolitan Detention Center, where he has been detained since April 2004 following his arrest after he tried to board a plane with fake identification.

Cleveland testified for the government that he had an agreement with Royer to share 50-50 any trading profit generated from confidential information he received from the agent. But Royer in court Monday told jurors that he never had any conversation with Cleveland about trading on information he shared with him. Royer said that he was very interested in the market and trading, and that he saw Cleveland, who at one time was an FBI informant for the agent, as a valuable source of information.

Royer told jurors that his desire to quash securities fraud was fueled by his own losses in a company called Webtel. Royer said he invested about $82,000 of his own and his friends' and family's money, which was lost when the company blew up.

Royer said he asked Cleveland to invest some short-term money that he got from a settlement of his Webtel losses and that Cleveland returned the same exact amount, $15,000, a few weeks later when the agent asked him for it.

Royer said he contracted Cleveland as an FBI informant to assist in an investigation into a fraudulent company called Broadband Wireless International Corp., which traded under the ticker symbol BBAN. Royer said that at one time he was himself an investor in Broadband Wireless but that he sold the stock when he realized the company's president, Don Knight, was under investigation.

The former FBI agent said he was putting together in 2000 a proposal for a government task force that would have included the use of undercover informants to detect securities fraud. Royer said he wanted to recruit Cleveland and Elgindy for the job. Royer said his proposal mirrored an undercover investigation out of the Newark, N.J., FBI office. Royer said he had contact with the agent in charge there and was putting together a similar proposal.

Royer said he took some documents related to the Newark securities fraud investigation to San Diego in February 2001 when he went to visit Elgindy to recruit him. These documents included confidential files obtained from the FBI database, some of which were seized form Elgindy's office at the time of his arrest.

Royer said he continued working on putting together his task force proposal after he was taken off the Broadband Wireless investigation in Oklahoma City and transferred to the Gallup, N.M., FBI office.

"It needed to be done. There was no limit to how much (Elgindy and other members of his investing Web site) could help," Royer said.

Asked by his lawyer why he provided detailed information about an ongoing Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into a scam company called SeaView, Royer explained that it is standard procedure for FBI agents working with undercover informants.

"I told Derrick about the SEC information so that they knew exactly what they had to do. You give; you get back. The more focused (information) you give, the more focused (information) you get back," Royer testified.

Royer said he started contemplating leaving the FBI in April 2001 because of his desire to move to Denver to be close to his children. He said that at that time he began talking to Elgindy about his plan to hire a private investigator to help uncover stock fraud.

Royer said that he discussed his financial woes with Elgindy but that the short seller never offered to lend him money.

The former agent said he wanted to testify in his defense because he wants to make things right. Royer said FBI agents told him after his arrest in 2002 that he was a dirty agent and that he had accepted $30,000 in bribes which originated from Elgindy. The government had first alleged that wire transfers totaling about $30,000 from Cleveland to Royer were payoffs. But the money turned out to be Royer's money and a loan from Cleveland for Royer to purchase a car. Royer had been repaying that loan to Cleveland before his arrest.

Under cross examination by assistant U.S. attorney Seth Levine, Royer agreed that he had provided non-public law enforcement information gathered from FBI databases or from SEC employees. But the former agent insisted he only did that in order to secure information in return from both traders.

"In the real world, that's what you do to get information. That's how it works," Royer told Levine.

Royer's testimony and cross examination drew quite a crowd Monday with several FBI agents and other curious people in attendance in the Brooklyn courtroom.

Royer's cross examination is expected to continue Tuesday.

-By Carol S. Remond, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2074; carol.remond@ dowjones.com

Dow Jones Newswires
01-03-05 2029ET
Copyright (C) 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



To: Janice Shell who wrote (1639)1/5/2005 1:10:39 AM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5425
 
Royer's Trading In BBAN Scrutinized In Elgindy Trial

01-04-05 11:45 PM EST

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--A former FBI special agent on trial for market manipulation in Brooklyn invested in the stock of a company even after he was informed that one of its insiders was dirty, a federal prosecutor alleged in court Tuesday.

Documents introduced into evidence in the federal securities case against Anthony Elgindy and former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent Jeffrey Royer show that Royer bought shares of Broadband Wireless International Corp (BBAN) in January 2000, months after another FBI agent told him that Don Knight, a man who controlled much of Broadband Wireless and its stock, was likely involved in criminal activities.

Royer said in court that he didn't know at the time of his investment that Knight was involved with Broadband Wireless. But his testimony came under attack by Assistant U.S. attorney Seth Levine Tuesday.

Royer and Elgindy are standing trial in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. They and others were charged in May 2002 with securities fraud, market manipulation and extortion. The government alleges that Elgindy used a private investing Web site to share and trade on confidential information he obtained from Royer. The government also claims that Elgindy and others used some of that information to extort discounted shares from at least two companies.

Testifying for his own defense, the former agent said in court this week that he sold his shares of Broadband Wireless as soon as he became aware of the involvement of Don Knight, a man he was investigating for insurance fraud. Royer later that year worked on an FBI probe into Knight and Broadband Wireless at Oklahoma City FBI office. He was removed from the investigation in late August when a federal prosecutor became aware of his previous involvement in the stock.

Under cross-examination by Levine, Royer testified that he first realized that Knight was involved with Broadband Wireless in late February or early March 2000. Royer said he first got audio tapes from an FBI agent in Newark, Jim McGuigan, in the Summer of 2000. The tapes related to an undercover securities and mob case run by the Newark FBI office and indicated that Knight may be involved in criminal activities.

But under tough questioning by Levine, Royer admitted that he first talked to McGuigan in the summer of 1999, not 2000. Levine introduced into evidence FBI documents showing that Royer received the Knight audiotapes in September 1999, not the summer of 2000, as Royer had first claimed.

Knight disappeared in late August 2000 after the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Oklahoma State Securities Department filed lawsuits alleging that he and Broadband Wireless' president, Ivan Webb, defrauded investors by releasing untrue Internet postings to artificially drive up Broadband stock 10, 000%, from pennies to more than $12 a share. In September 2004, the SEC permanently enjoined Knight from further violating securities law. Knight remains a fugitive and according to the SEC currently resides in Alajuela, Costa Rica.

Royer told jurors Tuesday that he was investigating Knight for insurance fraud but that he didn't know that Knight was involved with Broadband Wireless, or its predecessor company, Broadcom Wireless Communications Corporation, before late February or early March 2000.

But a financial report filed by Broadband Wireless in July 2000 with the SEC shows that from July to November 1999, Broadband was negotiating with Knight, who wanted to acquire a shell company to reverse merge assets into it. Both parties signed a memorandum of understanding in November 1999. According to the filing, Broadcom, a company controlled by Knight, owned about 64% of Broadband Wireless stock and exerted control over the company until May 2000.

None of this information was public in early 2000 when the former FBI agent invested in Broadband Wireless.

But prosecutor Levine was clearly dubious of Royer's claim of ignorance, given the former agent's investigation of Knight for insurance fraud and the fact that he had received information indicating that Knight might be involved in criminal activity.

"When you traded in BBAN, you knew that Don Knight was involved, right," Levine asked Royer. "Absolutely not, there was no link between BBAN and Don Knight until February or March 2000 when I sold my stock," Royer answered.

After first telling jurors that he sold his investment in Broadband Wireless as soon as he became aware of Knight's involvement, Royer admitted, under questioning by prosecutor Levine, that he sold his shares in the company in three installments to maximize his profits.

"You sold based on the price of the stock?" Levine asked to Royer who answered, "Yes."

Evidence introduced in court shows that Royer made about $12,000 on his investment in Broadband Wireless. The former agent sold his stock on two separate occasions in February 2000 and on March 3, 2000.

Royer's cross-examination is scheduled to resume Wednesday.

-By Carol S. Remond, Dow Jones Newswires, 201 938 2074, carol.remond@ dowjones.com

Dow Jones Newswires
01-04-05 2345ET
Copyright (C) 2005 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.