United States v. Steven Metro

882 F.3d 431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 2018
Docket16-3813
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 882 F.3d 431 (United States v. Steven Metro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Steven Metro, 882 F.3d 431 (3d Cir. 2018).

Opinion

JORDAN, Circuit Judge.

Steven Metro appeals from the 46-month sentence of imprisonment imposed by the District Court as a consequence of his guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to violate federal securities laws and one count of insider trading. He contends that the Court wrongly attributed to him illicit financial gains actually attributable to someone with whom he was not acting in concert and to whom he did not provide inside information. Because the District Court's factual findings are insufficient to support the sentence, we will vacate and remand for resentencing.

I. Background 1

A. The Insider Trading Scheme

Metro, a former managing clerk at a prominent New York City law firm, engaged in a five-year insider trading scheme in which he abused his position at the firm by disclosing material nonpublic information to his close friend Frank Tamayo. The pattern of Metro's criminal activity remained fairly constant throughout the multi-year scheme. Between February 2009 and January 2013, he used his position at the law firm to obtain material nonpublic information concerning thirteen distinct corporate transactions. In each instance, after obtaining the inside information, he would meet with Tamayo and tell him which stocks to purchase and when. Tamayo would then write down the stock symbols of the companies whose stock he was about to acquire.

After Tamayo left those meetings with Metro, he would call his personal stockbroker, Vladimir Eydelman, and arrange to meet him, typically at Grand Central Station. Tamayo would show Eydelman the stock symbols he had written down and Eydelman would commit them to memory. Tamayo would then tell Eydelman when to make the trades.

Eydelman made such trades not only for Tamayo but also on behalf of himself, his family, his friends, and other brokerage clients. Metro, by and large, did not hold the involved stocks himself and did not collect proceeds from the trades. Rather, he relied on Tamayo to reinvest the proceeds from their unlawful trades in future insider trading. When all was said and done, the insider trading by Eydelman, Tamayo, and Metro, based on Metro's tips, resulted in illicit gains of $5,673,682. The District Court attributed that entire sum to Metro in determining the length of his sentence.

Metro denies being aware of Eydelman's existence until one year after he relayed his last tip to Tamayo, and he contends that he never intended any of the tips he provided to Tamayo to be passed to a broker or any other third party.

B. Tamayo Cooperates with the Government

The trading activity based on Metro's inside information did not go unnoticed by the government. Eventually, an investigation was launched and government agents executed a search warrant at Tamayo's home in or around December 2013. Tamayo promptly admitted his role in the scheme and began cooperating with the government. That cooperation included recording a January 28, 2014, meeting with Metro in which Metro expressed his desire to liquidate some of the gains that had accrued since 2009, so he could fund a real estate transaction. Tamayo responded that he had asked his stockbroker-who was unnamed in the conversation-to help liquidate some of the assets held in Tamayo's retirement account. A portion of that conversation follows, as set forth in a transcript created by the government and provided to the District Court.

TAMAYO: [M]y stock broker ... I also asked him to see if he can get me, like, 30K for you. Um, because I know you, um, so that might help.
[METRO] : That would help, yeah. Yeah, that would help.
TAMAYO: But, you know, because I know that he [the stock broker], obviously, has to, you know, in order to, uh, you know, to make everything look kosher, he passed it [the Inside Information] to a couple of his clients, you know.
[METRO] : Okay.
TAMAYO: So I said to him [the stock broker], um, I said, listen, is there any way you can give me like 30K, 'cause I can't take it out of my, you know, because all that money is tied up in my retirement.
[METRO] : Right, sure, sure, right.
TAMAYO: So he [the stock broker] said, he's thinking about it. I'm actually going to meet with him again, um, you know like Monday or Tuesday of next week. And then he's gonna, he's gonna see if he can get me cash.
[METRO] : Alright.
TAMAYO: So that should be good.
[METRO] : That works. Yeah, that totally works.
...
TAMAYO: If I get my broker to give you, you know, at least 30K, you know, we'll take it off the ...
[METRO] : Right, right.
TAMAYO: ... the, uh, the 168 [ Metro's] accrued share of the insider trading profits], there, so. Um, alright, so, let's see ...
[METRO] : Yeah, because we're all cashed out at this point, right?
TAMAYO: Yeah.
[METRO] : We're not holding anything.
TAMAYO: No, do you, um ...
[METRO] : But I'm going to ... if I can't use the money, I'm not going to leave that money there, doing nothing.
TAMAYO: Uh hum. Yeah, ... um ...
[METRO] : You know what I mean? That doesn't make sense to me ...
TAMAYO: Yeah, I mean, it's been a while, right?
[METRO] : For us, it's been a long time. But, I'm just saying even if ...
TAMAYO: No, no, as far as the last one we did [the last insider trading].
[METRO] : Yeah, yeah. Like a year, or kind of a little bit ... but I'm not even saying that, I'm saying a legit thing. Because why not, I mean, that money should be making me money, rather than just sitting in a cash value.
TAMAYO: Absolutely. Um, he actually, the broker actually asked me about it-he's like, anything new? I was like, no, you know, so.
[METRO] : But those tips, they really don't pay off. I mean they pay off for us, but, what good is giving him [the stock broker] a tip?
TAMAYO: I know.
[METRO] : It's not making me any money.
TAMAYO: Yeah, but you know the thing is that, it's good because, it actually, you know, covers up a little bit, that's all.
[METRO] : Yeah, no, it's true. But you think he [the stock broker] would kick you something for the [tips].
TAMAYO: I know, absolutely.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
882 F.3d 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-steven-metro-ca3-2018.