FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CRM
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2008 (202) 514-2007
WWW.USDOJ.GOV TDD (202) 514-1888
MALAYSIA RESIDENT SENTENCED TO TWO YEARS IN PRISON FOR ROLE IN INTERNATIONAL ONLINE BROKERAGE SCHEME
WASHINGTON – A resident of Malaysia was sentenced today to two years in prison on a conspiracy charge that arose from an international fraud scheme to “hack” into online brokerage accounts in the United States and use those accounts to manipulate stock prices, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division Matthew Friedrich and U.S. Attorney for the District of Nebraska Joe W. Stecher. Thirugnanam Ramanathan, 35,
a native of Chennai, India, and legal resident of Malaysia, was also
sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Laurie Smith Camp to pay a fine
of $362,247 and serve three years of supervised release. Ramanathan
previously pleaded guilty on June 2, 2008, to one count of conspiracy
to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, computer fraud and aggravated
identity theft before Judge Smith Camp in Omaha, Neb. Following
his arrest in Hong Kong, Ramanathan was extradited on May 25, 2007, to
the United States. Thirugnanam Ramanathan admitted
in his guilty plea that he joined a conspiracy operating out of Thailand
and India from February 2006 through December 2006 in which the prices
of certain securities were fraudulently inflated by intruding or “hacking” into
accounts of customers at brokerage firms in the United States and by
illegally using the accounts to make large unauthorized purchases of
securities in the name of the unsuspecting customers. After the
price of the securities had been artificially increased or “pumped
up” through the bogus trading, Thirugnanam Ramanathan admitted
that he and his co-conspirators sold, or “dumped,” their
own holdings of the securities at a profit. At least 60 customers
and nine brokerage firms in the United States have been identified as
victims. According to information presented during the sentencing
hearing, brokerage firms sustained more than $300,000 in losses during
Thirugnanam Ramanathan’s participation in the scheme. This
case is one of the first federal prosecutions in the United States of
an online “hack, pump and dump” scheme.
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