United States v. Chan

352 F. Supp. 3d 54
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 24, 2018
DocketCriminal No. 16-cr-10268-IT
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 352 F. Supp. 3d 54 (United States v. Chan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Chan, 352 F. Supp. 3d 54 (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

The evidence showed that in late November and early December 2013, Chan and Wang engaged in the first of several cash transactions. The government documented a $4,000 cash withdrawal from a checking account in Wang's name on November 21, 2013, Ex. 250, and another $6,000 cash withdrawal from that account on December 2. Id. The government further documented a December 3 cash deposit of $10,000 into Chan's personal checking account, and a subsequent transfer of $10,000 from that account into a newly opened Scottrade brokerage account in Chan's name ("Chan's Scottrade account"). Id. The government further documented a December 3 order to purchase $9,979.17 of Merrimack stock placed using Chan's Scottrade account. Ex. 255.

The government documented two cash withdrawals totaling $13,000 from Wang's checking account on December 5, 2013, a December 6 cash deposit of $12,000 into Chan's checking account, and a December 6 transfer of $12,000 from Chan's checking account to the Scottrade account. Ex. 250. The government further documented that on December 6, an order to purchase a total of $12,006.10 of Merrimack stock was placed using Chan's Scottrade account. Ex. 255.4

During this same period, Chan began to make more frequent and larger purchases of Merrimack shares than he had in the past.5 Chan and his wife, Linda Wang,6 placed orders7 to purchase $53,516.92 of Merrimack stock on November 19; $58,343.06 of Merrimack stock on November 21; and $124,492.47 of Merrimack stock on November 26. Ex. 255.8

Chan and Linda Wang continued to place orders to purchase Merrimack stock through their personal brokerage accounts. Not including Chan's purchases through the Scottrade account, Chan and Linda Wang placed orders to purchase a combined total of $272,966.44 between December 3 and December 11, 2013. Ex. 255.

*64On February 3, 2014, Chan placed three separate orders to purchase a combined total of $139,820.98 of Merrimack stock. Id.

On February 13 or 14, 2014, Belanger's biometrics group learned that the 305th participant in the NAPOLI-1 trial had died. Belanger Tr. 21:1-5 [# 248]. Belanger testified that the occurrence of this event triggered the conclusion of the study and meant that his biometrics team would soon receive the complete dataset for analysis. Id. at 20:21-22.

The government documented a $6,800 transfer from Chan's personal bank account to the Scottrade account that took place on February 24, 2014. Ex. 250. The government further documented a $6,000 cash withdrawal from Wang's personal bank account on February 25 and another $7,000 cash withdrawal from another of Wang's personal bank accounts on February 26. Id. The government further documented a February 27 $19,800 cash deposit into Chan's personal bank account. Id. That same day, a transfer of $13,000 was made from Chan's personal bank account to his Scottrade account took place. Id.

On February 27, 2014, Merrimack held an earnings call with the investing public. Laivins played a speaking role. The PowerPoint slides from the call were admitted as Trial Exhibit 18. This presentation described the three-armed nature of the NAPOLI-1 study. Laivins Tr. 16:13-20 [# 280]. Slide Twenty-One described what investors should look for in the NAPOLI-1 trial results. If either one of the NAPOLI-1 experimental arms were successful, Merrimack planned to file a New Drug Application with the Food and Drug Administration ("FDA"). Id. at 16:13-20. Even if the NAPOLI-1 results did not show that MM-398 led to statistically significant longer lifespans, but nonetheless showed it had possible benefits for patients with pancreatic cancer, Merrimack planned to consider continued development of the drug. Id. at 16:21-17:1. If NAPOLI-1 showed no meaningful difference between the experimental arms and the control arm, by contrast, this would not bode well for the drug's continued development. Id. at 17:2-5. Under all scenarios, Merrimack announced that it planned to issue a press release regarding top-line data in the second quarter of 2014, followed by a journal publication and potential presentation of the results at a medical conference. Ex. 18 at 21. On February 28, Chan placed an order from the Scottrade account to purchase $19,592.34 of Merrimack stock. Ex. 255.

Belanger testified that he received a primary complete dataset for the NAPOLI-1 trial from the outside vendor that handled operational aspects of the study on March 5, 2014. Belanger Tr. 22:10-12, 23:8-24:3 [# 248]. This dataset was disseminated to the biometrics team for analysis. Id. at 24:5-6. Belanger further testified that Wang's role on the biometrics team required him to work with this dataset. Id. at 24:12-17. Further, Belanger testified that those in biometrics could look at the data and draw preliminary conclusions. Id. at 27:4-8.

Between March 6 and March 24, Chan and Linda Wang purchased $515,999.11 of Merrimack stock from accounts other than Chan's Scottrade account. Ex. 255. Chan placed an order to purchase $49,809.99 shares of Merrimack stock on April 4, then placed another order to purchase $52,734.99 shares that same day. Id. On April 10, Chan placed an order to purchase $8,113.95 shares of Merrimack stock. Id.

On April 14, at 3:50 p.m., Chan placed an order to purchase $16,471.49 of Merrimack stock. Id. At 4:50 p.m. on April 14, Chan called Wang. Ex. 268. At 9:42 a.m. on April 15, Chan placed an order to sell $145,666.79 of Alexion Pharmaceuticals *65stock. Ex. 268. Two hours later, at 11:42 a.m., Wang called Chan. Id. At 3:21 p.m., Chan placed an order to purchase 33,400 Merrimack shares - more than any of his previous Merrimack orders. Id. That order expired. Id. The next morning, Chan placed an order to purchase 34,610 Merrimack shares. Id. That order was cancelled. Id. On April 17, Chan entered an order to purchase 32,522 Merrimack shares. Id. That order expired. Id.

On Saturday, April 19, between 11:30 a.m. and 12:00 p.m., Belanger and Wang received an email providing them with access to the final dataset from the NAPOLI-1 study. Ex. 50; Ex. 51. After the biometrics team received this email, its members input the data into the statistical program that Wang had designed. Belanger Tr. 32:1-4 [# 248]. According to Belanger, the team took roughly an hour to complete its final analysis of the NAPOLI-1 data. Id. at 31:23-25.

On Monday, April 21, at 7:54 a.m., Merrimack CEO Robert Mulroy emailed all Merrimack employees and announced, "[a]s you are aware, we expect to receive data for our MM-398 trial this quarter. While the results are a great source of excitement internally, they are also a great source of anticipation externally, especially from the investing community." Ex. 12. Mulroy further stated that a company-wide blackout was beginning as of April 21. Id. The email instructed recipients that they should not discuss that they are subject to this blackout, as "[t]he fact that a blackout is in place is itself material nonpublic information." Id.

On April 21, at 10:30 a.m., Chan placed an order to purchase 32,522 Merrimack shares. Ex. 268. The order was executed on April 21 for $145,708.55. Id. This was Chan's largest single executed order to purchase Merrimack stock.

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Bluebook (online)
352 F. Supp. 3d 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-chan-dcd-2018.