U.S. District Judge William Martini in Newark, New Jersey, said that while Gene Levoff “was not living excessively, his violations were nonetheless especially egregious” given the lawyer’s former role enforcing Apple’s insider trading policies.
Levoff had been senior director of corporate law at Apple before the iPhone maker fired him in September 2018.
Prosecutors charged him five months later with making stock trades based on advance nonpublic information about Cupertino, California-based Apple’s earnings announcements.
The proposed SEC fine was triple Levoff’s estimated $384,400 profit or avoided losses on six trades.
In court papers, Levoff called the fine unnecessary, saying he had been punished enough and made no effort to hide his stress-induced trading, which he labeled “self-sabotage.”
But the judge said Levoff, a Stanford University law school graduate, knew his trading was wrong, and could handle the fine given his estimated $13 million net worth.
“Regardless of why he was trying to get caught, he acted knowingly and willfully,” Martini wrote.
Kevin Marino, a lawyer for Levoff, said in an email: “We are of course disappointed, but Judge Martini has been fair and even-handed throughout this case and we respect his decision. Mr. Levoff is pleased to put this matter behind him and move on with his life.”
The case is SEC v Levoff, U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey, No. 19-05536.
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Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Richard Chang
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