Goel
Guilty in GS Trial for Insider
Trading Got 36 Months US Says ICE
Should Keep Passport
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Substack
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
March 7 – Former Goldman Sachs
investment banker Brijesh Goel
was arraigned on insider
trading charges on the morning
of July 28, 2022. Inner City
Press there - although the
arraignment had not be listed
in the docket, nor announced
by prosecutors.
Goel's case
was assigned to U.S. District
Court for the Southern
District of New York Judge P.
Kevin Castel, who held the
arraignment.
Goel is
accused of feeding inside
information to his graduate
school friend and squash
partner Akshay Niranjan, at
Barclays.
On June 12, 2023,
after jury selection, the
trial began with opening
arguments. Inner City Press
was there and live tweeted,
thread
here:
All rise! Judge
Castel: And now, the
government opening. Assistant
US Attorney: Six times, Goel
took inside information from
Goldman Sachs. For example, in
Calgon Carbon Corporation....
AUSA: Goel did
this through his friend Akshay
Niranjan. But then Niranjan
moved to London. Goel wanted
his money - and $85,000 was
wired to him. The FBI showed
up. Goel admitted he had
shared confidential memos from
Goldman Sachs. But he also
lied...
AUSA: So
Goel wanted to reach out to
Niranjan. But he didn't call
directly. He went to the gym
in his luxury building &
had an attendant call for him,
to try to leave no record of
the call.... They met in a
stairwell and whispered. Goel
said, Don't reveal anything
AUSA: They met
again in the stairwell and
went through Niranjan's phone.
But by then his friend
Niranjan had agreed to help
with the FBI. He had already
saved the messages on his
phone. He recorded Goel
AUSA: In this
trial, you will hear the
defendant whispering. You will
hear from Niranjan
himself. As all of these
proof comes in, pay close
attention. Follow Judge
Castel's instructions. If you
do so, you will find Goel
guilty
Judge Castel:
Alright, defense opening.
Goel's lawyer: Niranjan has
fabricated his story, this
trial will show, in exchange
for him not to be deported,
which was his biggest fear.
Goel's lawyer:
They are going to ask you
convict Mr. Goel on the
testimony of just one
man. We're going to
march through this and get to
the truth. As I understand,
Mr. Niranjan is going to say,
I didn't want to receive
inside information! I didn't
know!
Goel's lawyer:
Mr. Niranjan would have you
believe he was tricked by Mr.
Goel into an insider trading
scheme. We submit that this
story does not make sense. The
US cites a secret account -
and yes, Mr. Goel didn't know
about it.
Goel's
lawyer: Niranjan has been
practicing his script with the
government. Wait until we have
a chance to cross examine him.
Other than him, there is
practically no evidence -
despite them calling it a five
year inside trading conspiracy
Goel's
lawyer: They'll emphasize the
2 men played squash together.
So, sure, they texted each
other. Nothing nefarious about
that. On the obstruction of
justice charge, the evidence
is actually going to show
there was no obstruction.
Brijesh did say, let's delete
Goel's
lawyer: But Brijesh went to so
say, DON'T delete. It was
Niranjan who deleted, while
trying to get his non
prosecution agreement. Let me
tell you about Brijesh. He
grew up in a modest home in
India, and went to the Harvard
of India. Then U Cal Berkeley
2013
Goel's
lawyer: He worked at Goldman
Sachs until 2021, and now at
Apollo. He's on leave - to
their credit, they are taking
a wait and see approach --
AUSA: Objection! Judge Castel:
Let me see you at sidebar
They're back.
Goel's lawyer: Brijesh got
married in 2014, to a doctor.
She unfortunately is not
present --
AUSA: Objection!
Judge Castel: Let
me see Mr. Ford at the
sidebar.
After a
long sidebar, Ford is back.
Ford: Let's talk
about Niranjan. They met at
Berkeley. Notwithstanding
their friendship, Niranjan was
jealous of Mr. Goel's
success... Now let's talk
about the 6 supposed tips.
There was six trades, only two
of which made money
Ford: We will
admit that Goel for three
months violated Goldman Sachs'
policy against trading in
individual stocks. It was
brief. But Goel sent Niranjan
$12,000. Why would he do that
if Niranjan owed him money?
Nirajan started doing a lot of
illicit drugs
Ford: We'll show
that Niranjan suffered from
cannabis use disorder, which
may have impacted his
memory... I'll close with
this. As with the Canadian
forest fire smoke, all this
can seem murky. But as with
the smoke, in a week we'll
clear it up. Thank you.
Judge Castel:
Jurors, we'll see you
tomorrow. [Jury leaves] Judge
Castel: Tomorrow I'll give
them the standard legal
instruction. We are adjourned.
On June 13, more
stage-setting witnesses
leading up to Niranjan on June
14. The last was a Hindi
translator who resisted taking
a position on what the word
"delete" meant, or didn't
mean. Thread:
All rise! Judge
Castel: I will start with some
instructions, on what is not
evidence. [Gives an example
about the Yankees and Derek
Jeter, not the new "all rise,"
Aaron Judge] Jurors, no
texting or tweeting. Judge
Castel: The government is not
on trial. [Some may question
the deal they gave to
cooperator Niranjan].
Defendant's
counsel may choose to cross
examine. Government,
call your first witness. They
are starting with a credit
risk officer at Goldman Sachs.
Now
prosecutor reading a
stipulation, about Goel being
on the Goldman Sachs email
list about prospective
mergers. Defense: No
objection. Evidence continues
slogging in until, now, Judge
Castel declares a break. AUSA
makes a record about a
subpoena return.
Finally, a new
witness in US v. Goel. But it
is still not the cooperator
Akshay Niranjan, but rather a
reviewer of Niranjan's phone
messages - hired by Niranjan.
Cross: Goel's counsel: Mr.
Niranjan gave you his phone on
June 2, 2022, correct?
Witness: Yes.
Goel's
counsel: And he's paying you,
yes? Witness: I don't know.
Goel's counsel: Let me show
you the engagement
letter... Now after
another break, a FINRA
witness, and now, a Hindi
interpreter
Things get testy
with the Hindi interpreter on
cross; Judge Castel tells the
jurors to not take their
notebooks home. Cooperator
Niranjan is slated to testify
tomorrow. Government says they
anticipate disputes about the
scope of cross.
On June 14,
finally, Niranjan took to the
stand, but not yet on cross.
Thread here:
Judge Castel:
Jurors, yesterday I told you
about what happened in the
Revolutionary War right near
here. In 1777, our early flag
was adopted. [Judge Castel to
his credit has posters about
history on his walls. He also
issued this
AUSA: The US
calls FBI Special Agent Mark
Troiano. He works on
securities and commodities
fraud. He says, "We serve
subpoenas and investigate."
AUSA: What did you do before?
Troiano: NSA and CIA. AUSA:
Did you work on this case?
Troiano: I wired up sources
AUSA: Did you
interview Mr. Goel? Troiana:
Yes. At his apartment in the
luxury building at 8 Spruce
Street in the Financial
District, not five minutes
from the courthouse. AUSA:
Show Gov Exhibit 108, the
transaction description...
AUSA: Did you
take photos in 8 Spruce?
Troiana: Yes. That is the
front entrance. 31 is a photo
of Niranjan's apartment on the
46th floor. 25 is stairwell on
the 46th floor, the door. On
the 7th floor there is a pool
and a gym. And a lounge where
they met
AUSA: We have a
stipulation about the security
video. Troiano: That's
Mr. Goel. Here in Exhibit 38,
it's Niranjan. I wired him up
on June 10. And here are the
WhatsApp messages. AUSA: Were
these messages also available
on the iCloud?
Troiano: No.
AUSA: What did Mr. Goel say,
in this text message, to Mr.
Niranjan? Troiano: He said,
Let's play squash after work.
Niranjan replied, I have
drinks to go to. AUSA: So
Goldman Sachs memo on the 12,
messages on the 13th, and
trades on the 14th? Troiano:
Yes.
Now cross
examination of FBI agent
Troiano Goel's lawyer: The
June 5 recording by Mr.
Niranjan, did the FBI help
with with it? Troiano: No, we
did not ask him to do that.
Goel's lawyer: But you've
listened to it, right?
Troiano: Yes. Portions of it.
OK - at
last, cooperator Niranjan on
the witness stand. Judge
Castel is reviewing an
objection. Will cross
examination begin today? AUSA:
Mr. Niranjan, what is this?
Niranjan: A trade summary of
trade I made in my brother's
account. I bought options in
Patheon
AUSA: Let's read
the message. What did you
understand the defendant to
mean by "today"? Niranjan:
That it was time sensitive. We
met outside the restaurant.
AUSA: Who brought up Patheon?
Niranjan: Brijesh. I had not
heard of the company. I looked
it up on my phone
Niranjan: I
told him, do not write coded
messages. I told him, in
person, that I had bought the
Patheon options. AUSA: How
much did you put in? Niranjan:
$3000. I made about $30,000.
In a month. It was announced
they would be acquired.
Niranjan:
It was good to make money. But
I was concerned he was
breaking the rules. He told me
he wasn't. AUSA: Did you
believe him? Niranjan: I
wanted to believe him.
Niranjan: Next we
traded in Calgon Carbon.
Brijesh met me on 49th Street
and 7th Avenue, across from
the Kitchen restaurant.
AUSA: Why did you just not do
it by message? Niranjan: He
had said, Let's not leave a
paper trial.
Niranjan: Into
the Calgon trade, I put
$15,000 - and made over
$200,000. AUSA: Were you
tell your now wife, to whom
you were engaged at the time?
Niranjan: No. I thought she
would react negatively to me
doing this in a shady manner.
On June 15, finally Niranjan
under cross - including on
whether he overheard
(eavesdropped on) Goel's call
with others at Goldman Sachs
about a deal, while driving
north to a skiing trip in
upstate New York. Here's some
of it, thread:
Jury entering!
AUSA: Mr.
Niranjan, when did you and Mr.
Goel meet after May 2023?
Niranjan: In the stairwell of
8 Spruce, 45th floor. On June
5, 2022, 11 am. AUSA: How was
it arranged? Niranjan:
The receptionist called me on
the intercom, for Goel, about
squash
Niranjan: I was
recording him on my phone,
when it went off. I tried to
push the side buttons so Goel
wouldn't hear it. AUSA: What
language were you speaking?
Niranjan: A mixture of English
and Hindi.
AUSA: Let's
listen to it [Jurors turn to
7-T in binders]
Niranjan: Goel
told me to use a code,
in our group chat with other
UC Berkeley grads. He told me,
mention Tesla - and it means
the person will stay on the
7th floor of 8 Spruce Street,
to meet. AUSA: Let's talk
about your non-prosecution
agreement
Niranjan: I have
to forfeit $280,000 and
cooperate, testifying. Then I
don't get prosecuted for
insider trading
Now at last, the
cross examination of Niranjan.
Goel's lawyer: Do
you have not seen all of your
brother's trading records,
right?
Niranjan:
Some months I have not seen.
Goel's lawyer:
What months? Niranjan: Some
months in 2018. Goel's lawyer:
Which?
Goel's
lawyer: Isn't it a fact that
you were in a car with Mr.
Goel & you overheard him
having multiple conversations
with people at Goldman Sachs
about Sprint?
Niranjan: I don't
remember. Goel's lawyer: You
had WhatsApp with Mr. Goel
about a trip skiing upstate
Niranjan: I
remember we went skiing. I
drove one part of the way.
Goel's lawyer:
And Mr. Goel had to make phone
calls?
Niranjan: Yes, I
think he was working. But I
was focused on the road. And
talking with Natasha. And
listening to music.
On June 16,
Niranjan finished, cross and
re-direct (and was spotted by
the courthouse cafeteria on 8,
talking about going to the
prosecutors' office on the 5th
floor), thread here
Goel's lawyer: Do
these call records refresh
your recollection that your
fiancee was working when you
got back from Toronto?
Niranjan: No. I
had my own apartment at that
time
Goel's lawyer:
Did you meet with Mr. Goel on
Calgon before he went to the
US Open? A:
Goel's
lawyer: And you chatted often
with Mr. Goel on WhatsApp?
Niranjan: Is that a question?
Goel's lawyer: Yes. Niranjan:
Yes.
Q: Your fiancee
had moved to 320 West 38th St,
and you live in the West
Village but visited her and
Goel on 38th St? Niranjan:
Yes.
Goel's lawyer:
And Mr. Goel would visit you
in your apartment? Niranjan:
No. He did not like my
apartment, it was a walk-up. I
got complaints when I played
music there.
Goel's lawyer:
You would access Mr. Goel's
phone through the AirPlay app
to play music on TV?
Niranjan: I
had his wi-fi information, he
gave it to me, so I could
connect my phone to his music
system. Goel's lawyer:
You understand that Goel's
password for the wi-fi was
also his password for his
iPhone? Niranjan: No.
Goel's
lawyer: Did you use Mr Goel's
phone on the trip, texting
from it? Niranjan: Maybe you
can refresh my recollection.
Goel's lawyer: Please read
from page 22.
Niranjan: OK, I
did, because my phone was
dead. But he never shared his
password for his computer
Niranjan: OK,
during pandemic I used
Natasha's computer, her
Surface laptop. I had the code
but I don't remember it
anymore.
Goel's lawyer:
How about passwords for apps
like TripCase?
Niranjan: What is
TripCase? Goel's lawyer:
Please look at this... Did he
give you his TripCase
password?
Niranjan: Yes.
Goel's lawyer: So on this
date, you spoke with Mister
Niranjan? Niranjan: I am Mr.
Niranjan.
Update: Now
during US v. Goel trial lunch
break, seen on the 8th floor
of the courthouse (by the
cafeteria)- a certain
cooperating witness, saying to
his lawyer, We could go down
to 5. The 5th floor,
where the US Attorney's Office
has space next to the Mag
court
Now re-direct of
Niranjan: AUSA: When you
watered Brijesh Niranjan's
plants did you ever see any
Goldman Sachs deal memos lying
around? Niranjan: No.
Niranjan is done;
now US puts on the stand
Goldman Sachs' head of
investment banking legal
compliance. His name is Omar
Beer.
Then -
SURPRISE -
defendant Brijesh Goel has
just taken the stand. Goel's
lawyer: When did you know
there was a problem with Mr.
Goel?
Goel: By mid
2021, Mr. Niranthan had
separated from his wife. He
was going through issues. I
was there for him.
Goel's
lawyer: After you played
squash in late February [2022]
what did you learn? Goel:
Niranjan said his life was
coming to an end, he was
planning to go to India. I
said I could help him get a
job.
Goel's lawyer:
Did you meet at Quality Meats?
Goel: Yes. I was working at
Apollo. He wanted to come by.
I said, I'm going to London.
He came to my work event
anyway, to Quality Meats
Goel: He said he
was having problems, with his
wife and at work. He showed me
an article on his phone, it
was on airplane mode. He
asked, Do you know this
company? I said no. He said,
Goldman Sach was involved in
the deal
Goel: At
Berkeley we were not really
good friends. But we became so
in New York. When he
separated for the second time
we became very close-
AUSA: Objection!
Judge: Sustained. Goel: Should
I continue? Judge: No
Goel: The
FBI came to my home. I thought
it was a scam. We chatted for
35 or 40 minutes at my kitchen
table. They asked about
various friends of mine, one
at a proprietary trading firm
in London. Then they
asked about Mr. Niranjan.
Goel: At the end
of the meeting they gave me a
subpoena. I was shivering. I
told them, I am concerned
about my reputation.
They said, It's a confidential
investigation but word tends
to get out.
Goel's lawyer: On
May 23, did you speak with
Niranjan? Goel: Yes
Goel: I
went to the club room, asked
the assistant to call Mr.
Niranjan and ask him to bring
my swimming cap down.
Then my wife went up; He came
down & grabbed me- Judge:
Let's call it a week.
On June 20, after
a three day weekend complete
with disputes about drugs and
cheating, the evidence ended,
and two summations. Inner City
Press was there, thread here:
OK - now Goldman
Sachs insider trading trial of
Goel set to re-start,
defendant on the stand. But
Judge Castel says Juror 3 has
COVID, tests being brought up
for other jurors. Jury
entering! Judge Castel: Juror
number three is done. She
began to feel ill on Friday,
then tested positive for
COVID. My deputy Flo has rapid
tests, available for you to
take at your convenience. Does
anyone want to take it now?
No? Ok, we'll begin
[Trial resumes-
no juror asked for immediate
COVID test] Judge Castel: Mr.
Goel you are still under oath.
Goel's counsel
Ford: So when we left off, you
were in the 7th floor
stairwell of 8 Spruce. Why did
you want to meet him?
Goel: FBI had
come to my apartment
Goel: I
asked Mr. Niranjan about
something he had shown when we
met at Quality Meats
[expensive 58th Street
steakhouse - INequality Meats]
Goel: I told him
I was going to hire a lawyer,
I suggested he do the same.
Goel's lawyer: Did you meet
him in City Hall Park? Goel: I
was talking my dog. Mr.
Niranjan tapped me on the
shoulder. Next I called his
wife on Signal --
Goel's lawyer:
Why did you call his wife and
not him? Goel: I wanted to
avoid any contact with him. It
had been 2 weeks since the FBI
told me he made $300,000
Goel: I
came to his apartment on June
5. He said it was a bad idea
to talk. I told him, Be
honest, tell them what you
have done. Goel's lawyer: Did
you ask him about 2018-18
chats? Goel: Yes. He told me
about some algorithm he had to
track call options
Goel's lawyer:
What did Mr. Niranjan ask you
about the messages? Goel: He
asked if I had deleted them. I
told him, No. Goel's lawyer:
Did you ever do work for
Goldman Sachs when you were
out of the office? Goel: Yes.
I worked 16 to 17 hours a day
Goel's
lawyer: Did you bring Goldman
Sachs documents to your home?
Goel: Yes. Goel's
lawyer: Why did you text Mr.
Niranjan that you had booked
the squash court? Goel: I
think I wanted to play.
OK- now
insider trader defendant Goel
is being crossed Assistant US
Attorney: Mr. Goel, you told
Mr Niranjan about things you
wouldn't want your employer to
know, right? Goel: Like what?
AUSA: For example, using
drugs.
Goel: Niranjan
told me about pot in chocolate
Goel: Mr Niranjan had carried
pot, in chocolate... AUSA: The
car ride to the ski trip, when
was it?
Goel: March 31,
and back the next day. AUSA:
How long was the ride? Goel:
Two to three hours. AUSA: You
told Mr. Ford no one played
music Goel: I was on calls
AUSA: Which
transactions? Goel: One was
about Sprint. About its
capital structure. I was
considered an expert in that.
AUSA: You were talking about
non-public information about
Sprint, in a car with others?
Goel: No sir.
AUSA: You
claim you panicked and said
Delete on June 9? Goel: I did.
AUSA: You've been working on
that line for some time?
Goel's lawyer:
Objection!
Judge Castel:
Overruled. AUSA: You worked on
it over the weekend? Or with
Mr Niranthan on June 10 -
let's see 10-T
AUSA: Mr.
Goel, do you ever watch
detective shows on TV?
Goel's lawyer:
Objection!
Judge Castel:
Substained. AUSA: Look at this
exhibit - you were in here
when your lawyers questioned
Agent Troiano, right? Goel:
Yes.
AUSA: How
many times did you meet with
Mr. Niranjan in the stairwell
of 8 Spruce? Goel: We used to
work out, run up and down the
stairs.
Judge Castel:
Jurors, we'll take our lunch
break.... The witness
sequestration rules apply.
Threat will continue
Now
Assistant US Attorney closing
argument against Brijesh Goel:
AUSA: The defense was trying
to distract you with
theatrics. They didn't want
you to focus on the pattern of
insider trading. They say
there were 8 trades. It's just
not true. This is a straw man
AUSA: What
matters are the six stocks you
actually heard testimony
about. The defense has no
burden but they're concocted a
series of stories, as if this
guy has the worst luck in the
world - they break into his
phone, he's overheard. It's
distraction
AUSA: There's no
other source for the inside
information - it's Goel. A
conspiracy is just an
agreement between two [or
more] people to commit a
crime.
Judge
Castel: Now we'll hear the
defense summation. We may go a
little bit over today.
Goel's
lawyer Reed Brodsky: Jurors, I
saw that you were listening,
that you saw Mr. Niranjan
unravel on the witness stand.
Brijesh Goel is not guilty.
What happened here is a
classic story of Mr. Niranjan
stealing info, then betraying
him
Goel's
lawyer: Niranjan lied to the
government, and he lied on
that witness stand. What
Niranjan said is illogical. It
didn't happen that way.
(Shouting) - Mr. Goel said, 'I
should not delete' ! That
right there is reasonable
doubt!
Goel's lawyer:
It's like the case of
Hurricane Carter -- AUSA:
Objection! Judge Castel: Keep
it to this case. Goel's
lawyer: Snippets is not a
case. Mr. Niranjan stole and
lied. Brijesh Goel is
not guilty on every count.
On June 21, the
rebuttal, legal instructions,
deliberations and verdict:
Guilty. Thread here:
OK - now US
rebuttal, then legal charge,
then deliberation - and
verdict today? Jury entering!
Assistant US
Attorney Sam Rothschild:
Ladies and gentlemen, the
simplest explanation is the
best one. Why did Mr Niranjan
trade on these six deals?
Because his friend Mr. Goel,
who got the information at
Goldman Sachs, tipped him.
AUSA: The
defendant was searching for a
cover story. Innocent people
don't huddle in stairwells,
deleting messages. If Mr
Niranjan stole the info, why
wasn't Goel asked about it by
his lawyers? They don't want
you to hear the answers. It's
like a bad game of Clue
AUSA: We take our
witnesses as we find them.
Yes, Mr. Niranjan committed
insider trading. We're
not asking you to be his
friend. He was the defendant's
friend. Now he's his punching
bag. They trash Niranjan. But
why was Goel whispering in the
stairwell?
AUSA: Last week
the defense told you this was
like the Canadian wild fire
smoke. But now it is clear -
Britesh Goel is guilty. Judge
Castel: Now the legal
instructions [Thread will
continue - including with any
jury notes, and ultimate
verdict - watch this feed]
Legal
charge is ongoing; during a
break: Goel's lawyer: We
object to any English-only
transcripts going back into
the jury room. Judge Castel:
They've been admitted subject
to my instruction. Please
bring the jurors back in.
Instructions continue
Legal
instructions are over; now
logistics from Judge Castel to
the US v Goel jurors: Your
verdict must be unanimous but
do not surrender your
conviction. Once you are in
the jury room, you must select
a foreperson. The verdict
sheet includes each of the 6
counts
Judge
Castel: We will swear in the
deputy Marshal [done] And
we'll give him the thumb drive
and the speaker, for the jury
room. Jury retires to
deliberate (and have lunch).
Thread will continue with jury
notes, and verdict, when it
comes Watch this feed.
OK -
there's been a jury note.
Judge Castel: The note is not
signed, but it asks for a
definition of "tender offer."
I will provide one, directly
from the jury instructions,
and mark it Court Exhibit 8
VERDICT: Brijesh
Goel is found GUILTY -
sentencing set for October 19,
11 am
On October 18,
2023, Goel asked for a non
custodial sentence. He listed
volunteer activities, and said
that "after my expected
deportation... I want to open
an education institute in
India."
On October 25,
the US Attorney's Office asked
for a sentence "at the bottom
of the 41 to 51 month
Guidelines." Goldman Sachs
asked for $393,000...
On November 1,
Goel got 36 months, that is,
three years: "BRIJESH GOEL, a
former investment banker at
Goldman Sachs, was sentenced
to 36 months in prison for
insider trading and
obstruction of justice.
GOEL was previously convicted
after a seven-day trial before
U.S. District Judge P. Kevin
Castel. He was ordered to
forfeit $85,000 and a
restitution in an amount to be
determined at a future date to
Goldman Sachs. GOEL was
also ordered to pay a $75,000
fine."
More on Substack
here
On March 7, 2025
the US Attorney's Office
opposed Goel's motion to get
his passport back to have it
for deportation, saying that
ICE has it and should keep up
until the deportation.
Earlier in
the case, Brodsky said Goel
"could not consent" to
excluding time under the
Speedy Trial Act. But then
after conferring, he did not
oppose. Time was
excluded.
On November 17,
another conference was held,
and Inner City Press was
there. Brodsky said that the
audio in the case is
inaudible. Judge Castel said
this came up before him
recently - yes, in US versus
former Honduras president Juan
Orlando Hernandez, as Inner
City Press reported. Brodsky
said he might make a motion,
unlike JOH's counsel Raymond
Colon.
Brodsky had other
motions, some of which Judge
Castel asked why he had "sat
on" until this conference.
When the time came to set the
trial date, Brodsky asked for
October, but Judge Castel put
it at June 12 with motions due
before that.
On January 4,
2023 Goel filed a motion
against the US Attorney's
Office subpoenas before a
trial date was set, citing US
v. Tuzman, 15-cr-536. It
includes an email from AUSA
Joshua Naftalis, including
that "trial subpoenas issued
before the trial date was
set... all these subpoenas
have been withdrawn."
On March 16,
2023, in turnabout, the US
Attorney's Office moved to
quash Goel's subpoenas to
Akshay Niranjan and Barclays -
except, perhaps, Request 8
which "seemingly attempts to
uncover evidence that Niranjan
learned of the potential
M&A transactions through
his employment at Barclays,
rather than from the
defendant." But the US still
calls that overbroad.
On April 27,
Judge Castel held another
proceeding in the case. Inner
City Press was there. The
defense did not want to
provide its list of witnesses
until closer to their use; the
AUSA said fine, they too would
delay. A resignation letter
will be sought from Barclays.
On May 4, the US
Attorney's Office wrote to
Judge Castel that Barclays
says it does not have such a
letter (it believes Niranjan's
resignation in 2022 was
tendered orally). Counsel to
Akshay Niranjan said the
computer he used during 2017
to 2018 no longer works due to
water damage.
Inner City Press
will continue to cover the
case - watch this site.
The case is
US v. Goel, 22-cr-396
(Castel)
***

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