Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
International

Felt Like I Was Political Prisoner, Had Done Nothing Wrong: Rajat Gupta

Darpan News Desk IANS, 27 Mar, 2019 07:29 PM

    India-born former Goldman Sachs director Rajat Gupta, who served 19 months in US jail for insider trading, has blamed the prosecution led by Indian-American former New York Attorney Preet Bharara for conducting the case in an "disingenuous and untruthful" manner, saying he felt like a "political prisoner".


    Rajat Gupta, 70, also revealed that he was kept in solitary confinement for weeks in an American federal prison which, he termed, was "brutal".


    He was sentenced to two years in prison after being found guilty in 2012 of passing confidential boardroom information about Goldman Sachs to then hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam, who is currently serving 11 years in jail for insider trading.


    They were incarcerated in the federal prison in Ayer, Massachusetts.


    Rajat Gupta served 19 months in prison and was released in 2016.


    The former managing director of McKinsey penned his memoir ''Mind Without Fear'' that released on Monday and tells of his dramatic rise to the top of the corporate and financial world in America and then his fall after being charged in one of the largest insider trading cases in the US.


    Rajat Gupta will be discussing his book and his experiences with a New York audience on Thursday at a book launch event organised by leading arts and cultural organisation the Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC).


    "I felt like I was a political prisoner. I felt like I had done nothing wrong, it''s just my destiny to be here (in prison)," Rajat Gupta told.


    The insider trading case against Gupta was prosecuted by India-born Bharara, the then US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, pitting the two Indian immigrants against each other.


    Rajat Gupta blames the prosecution for "lying" and exaggerating to win the case "at any cost".


    "The issue is not Preet Bharara. The issue is the whole system. This system is misaligned, the way he handled the case. It was very cleverly done," Rajat Gupta said.


    He elaborated that he was charged a week before Rajaratnam's trial.


    "I was tried in absentia at the Rajaratnam trial with no opportunity to defend myself. That''s the first tactic which is unfair and they should not have done it that way," Rajat Gupta said.


    He asserted that the prosecutors "kept lying" and saying that Rajat Gupta was a 15 per cent owner in Galleon International, the hedge fund founded by Rajaratnam and that was the benefit for him to provide confidential information to him.


    "I never owned a single share. I never got any benefit. Even in the appeals memo, they wrote that I was an owner in Galleon. They know that it was not true... because they had gone through all my financial statements, my bank accounts. They didn't find anything, any benefit of any kind. I don't expect the prosecutors to lie but they were lying. That's very unfortunate. The way they conducted the case was disingenuous, untruthful and exaggerated in many ways," Rajat Gupta said.


    He said that the prosecutors had rehearsed then Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein and other witnesses to say exactly what they wanted to say.


    "It was deceitful, it was like win at every cost.


    "Nobody has ever heard of an insider trading case when there is no benefit. Zero benefit. It's not like this is the first time I had insider information in my life. I had been advising boards for 40 years. I had inside information, there was never an issue," Rajat Gupta said.


    He said that he met Rajaratnam in the Ayer prison and "I told him that he''s the reason I was there".


    Rajat Gupta said the two talked about the trial only when they met for the first time in prison.


    "We never talked about the trial after that," he said.


    Rajat Gupta said he would see Rajaratnam often as they had a common dining hall and same place for exercise. He says he sometimes even played cards with Rajaratnam in prison.


    Rajat Gupta said that he was in some ways "very appreciative" of the fact that Rajaratnam didn't take a plea deal when the government had offered him five years off for testifying against Rajat Gupta. But Rajaratnam refused. "He could have made up something. But he said he doesn't want to testify and he has nothing to say as I had done nothing wrong," Rajat Gupta said.


    Rajat Gupta feels that the 11-year sentence for Rajaratnam, who is severely diabetic, was too long for a person with ill health.


    Talking about his time in prison, Rajat Gupta said the biggest stress for him was being away from his family.


    "It was a relatively short sentence. I could see the end of the tunnel," he said, adding that his friends and family used to visit him every week.


    Rajat Gupta said he also drew solace from conversations he had with his late father and decided to make the prison experience a "true learning experience".


    "It's like a monastery. You go into a monastery and you get better in every dimension," he said, adding that he used to exercise, read and write a lot in prison and tried to help other inmates as much as he could.


    "I wanted to become physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually better and I think I succeeded," he said.


    Despite this, he says prison was hard. "Especially solitary confinement. It''s brutal," he said.


    Moving forward, Rajat Gupta said he is working on philanthropic issues and involved with institutions that he created such as the Indian School of Business. He is also focusing on work in maternal, child health, water and sanitation in Gujarat as well as criminal justice reform.


    "But I'm also 70. I want to spend a little more time with my kids and grandkids. I hope I'm going to slow down," he said, adding that it was difficult to write the book but it was quite a cathartic experience and I''m glad I did it".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Navjot Sidhu Can Win Election Even In Pakistan: Imran Khan

    The corridor made headlines in August after the Punjab Cabinet minister and Congress leader visited Pakistan to attend Prime Minister Khan’s swearing-in ceremony.

    Navjot Sidhu Can Win Election Even In Pakistan: Imran Khan

    UK Bus Company Fined For Fatal Crash By Indian-Origin Driver Kailash Chander

    UK Bus Company Fined For Fatal Crash By Indian-Origin Driver Kailash Chander
    A bus company in the UK has been fined 2.3 million pounds for significant health and safety failings in allowing a fatigued Indian-origin driver to carry on driving that led to a crash causing the deaths of two people.

    UK Bus Company Fined For Fatal Crash By Indian-Origin Driver Kailash Chander

    Sikhs In America Hail Indian Govt’S Decision To Build Kartarpur Corridor

    Sikhs In America Hail Indian Govt’S Decision To Build Kartarpur Corridor
    The Sikhs in America have hailed the Indian government’s decision to build a religious corridor linking border district of Gurdaspur with historic Kartarpur Sahib gurudwara in Pakistan—fulfilling a long pending demand of the community.

    Sikhs In America Hail Indian Govt’S Decision To Build Kartarpur Corridor

    Pak Will Never Again Fight 'Imposed Wars' On Its Territory: Imran Khan

    Imran Khan's remarks came days after Trump reiterated that the USD 1.3 billion in aid to Pakistan will remain suspended until the country acts against militant safe heavens inside its territory.

    Pak Will Never Again Fight 'Imposed Wars' On Its Territory: Imran Khan

    Sikh Pilgrims Gather In Pakistan's Gurdwara Panja Sahib

    Sikh Pilgrims Gather In Pakistan's Gurdwara Panja Sahib
    Sikh pilgrims from all over the world on Monday poured into the Gurdwara Punja Sahib in Pakistan's Punjab province to celebrate the 549th birth anniversary of Sikhim's founder, Guru Nanak Dev.

    Sikh Pilgrims Gather In Pakistan's Gurdwara Panja Sahib

    Got Closure After Body Was Identified, Says Mother Of Lion Air Pilot Bhavye Suneja

    The Lion Air flight, with 188 passengers and crew on board, crashed into the sea off Indonesia's island of Java, minutes after taking off from Jakarta Soekarno Hatta International Airport.

    Got Closure After Body Was Identified, Says Mother Of Lion Air Pilot Bhavye Suneja