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by downandout
1904 days ago
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For sure, that is illegal. But the whole crux of this article, including the title, is about him having made trades just before Bloomberg articles were released, and the article states that this was mentioned in detail in the indictment. It makes me wonder why that is at all relevant if that’s not what he is actually being prosecuted for. |
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Because it is rare, it is newsworthy, particularly for the Columbia Journalism Review. Even if you don't care about journalism, the fact that one of the world's great news organizations and news wires has ties to insider trading should concern you and Bloomberg's top editors, because it's dirty. You just don't want your reporters abetting crimes if you can avoid it.
My guess is that Hammond will not last long at Bloomberg. This story is more about the reporter than about the insider trading. And it is less about the law, and more about journalistic ethics. It doesn't matter whether it is illegal for the reporter to tell Peltz that the story will come out soon; it is certainly against his agreement with Bloomberg.