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Former Equifax CIO Charged With Insider Trading (bloomberg.com)

OffTheLip writes: Jun Ying, a former CIO with Equifax has been charged with insider trading by the US Department of Justice. From the linked article:

Wednesday's announcement marks the first criminal charge brought in one of the largest data breaches in history. Ying, the former chief information officer for Equifax's U.S. information-solutions business, used confidential information entrusted to him by the company to determine it had been hacked, according to a separate complaint filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

ZDNet adds: According to a Justice Department statement, Ying sent a text message to a colleague two weeks before Equifax revealed the hack, in which he said the breach "sounds bad." Three days later, Ying searched the web to research the effect of Experian's 2015 own breach on its stock price. Later that day, Ying excised all his available stock options.


16 of 90 comments (clear)

  1. Incompetence and negligence by sinij · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Insider trading on his own incompetence and negligence is criminal, but incompetence and negligence itself is not punished in any way.

    1. Re:Incompetence and negligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Up next, Intel's CEO?

    2. Re:Incompetence and negligence by tlhIngan · · Score: 2

      Fucking rubbish, as usual.

      A surgeon does his best to save a patient, to no avail.

      A surgeon operates while drunk, on the wrong patient, while he's upside down.

      Are they the same thing?

      No, one is a guy doing his job and having bad luck. The latter is someone being negligent. Not incompetent. Incompetent would be said surgeon encountering something he was never trained for and trying his best to fix it, to no avail.

      Incompetence is not having the skills or training when you encounter something - i.e., youre not competent.

      Negligence is attempting to do something disregarding rules for safety and security (like being drunk)

  2. Gee really? by smithmc · · Score: 3, Funny

    I am Jack's complete lack of surprise.

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  3. Drag them all out into the street by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Bring back the guillotine. Chop all their heads off, plant them on poles as a warning to the rest of the 'financial community' to NOT FUCK UP.
    Like everyone else I'm sitting here wondering if the coin landed 'heads' or 'tails' so far as my entire identity having been stolen or not.

    1. Re:Drag them all out into the street by Tailhook · · Score: 5, Insightful

      as a warning to the rest of the 'financial community' to NOT FUCK UP.

      The "rest of the 'financial community'" understands that the "FUCK UP" here was a traceable use of the Internet and text messages.

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  4. Re:Forfeiture of assets? by slew · · Score: 5, Informative

    So all those stock options are going to be seized and used to compensate everyone who suffered as a result of the breach right?

    Maybe?

    Although it is traditional that all the money the SEC collects simply goes to the US treasury, it is also possible for the money to be used to re-imburse other investors (under the Fair Funds for Investors provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act).

    Of course this provision has rarely been used and is of no benefit to those that suffered from the breach (it only applies to investors).

    I wish they would bring back public stoning.

    So what other parts of Sharia law are you in favor of?

  5. Re:Forfeiture of assets? by iamhassi · · Score: 2

    Sharia law has public stoning? Didn't know that, I just think it sounds like a good punishment for when idiots really screw up. Sure beats rewarding them with free wifi, free food, free gym and a comfortable stay for a few months or years like our "justice" system does now.

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  6. Arrogance by amiga3D · · Score: 2

    Total arrogance is a kind of stupidity. This ass assumed he could get away with this crap because he's "special." The problem is, the stock market is one of the few places where elites get burned just like anyone else. If you blatantly screw the system the system will screw you no matter who you are. Martha Stewart found this out. She got caught up in insider trading and although the Feds case against her was weak they managed to put her in jail for lying to investigators. If you fuck with the sacred cow of Wall Street they will fuck you back.

  7. Former CIO? by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Interesting
    So this is the person replaced by the Music Major, right?

    And this guy is so inept he left behind an audit trail while planning to do some insider trading.

    How did anyone this incompetent rise to that level on such a critical position in the company? Just yesterday I interviewed a PhD candidate has published six papers as first author, fantastic work that must have taken couple of years of relentless of toiling. Whether I hire him or neither he nor a legion of candidates like this are struggling to get 100K jobs. And this doofus gets to be the CIO with stock options and million dollar pay benefit packages...

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    1. Re:Former CIO? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is easy to be a CIO.

      First, work in tech for a few years.
      Second, find a company that has never outsourced. Middle market banks make good targets. Middle Market health care too.
      Third, layoff and outsource.
      Fourth, put in linked in how you saved millions.
      Fifth, get CIO job at fortune 500 just before #3 backfires and your downtime hits twitter.

    2. Re:Former CIO? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 2

      And this guy is so inept he left behind an audit trail while planning to do some insider trading.

      Hey, leaving an audit trail is part of his job!

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  8. What happened to ... by whoever57 · · Score: 2

    What happened to all the BS about the execs' trading activity being normal pre-planned sales? Obviously that was a lie.

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    1. Re:What happened to ... by Luthair · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well there were 4 other C-level executives who also traded who have not been charged. Even if they don't have a smoking gun its impossible to believe they weren't aware there were problems.

  9. And his punishment will be ... by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... having is credit history maintained by Equifax.

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    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  10. Others got by just fine... by edi_guy · · Score: 3, Interesting
    From Bloomberg article: "Three Equifax Inc. senior executives -- Chief Financial Officer John Gamble, and unit presidents Joseph Loughran and Rodolfo Ploder -- sold shares worth almost $1.8 million in the days after the company discovered the breach. Equifax has said those three executives had not been informed of the incident when they initiated the sales."

    Sounds like his bosses found themselves a patsy.