The wire fraud act 18 USC 1343 was called "our stradivarius" by Jed Rakoff, reflecting on his years as a federal prosecutor. It reaches "[w]hoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud..." obtains money by false pretenses, etc. A corporation is a "whoever". Innocent investors and stockholders may suffer greatly from an ill conceived prosecution under such a broad criminal statute.
The indictment describes an enterprise with a corrupt culture, led by a principal shareholder who sought and obtained portfolio managers and research analysts with "an edge" over competitors, instructed to find "high conviction" investment opportunities.
A jury will have to decide whether these structures and incidents so characterize the enterprise - SAC Capital Advisors, etc. that the entity is guilty beyond reasonable doubt. The fact that a criminal enterprise is a large one is an aggravating not a mitigating factor. In this case, reportedly, little remains of stockholders beyond Steven A. Cohen himself. If the allegations are true those defrauded by SAC are legion.
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