Follow the money
Galleon Group's Titan Fund
Galleon Group's Titan Fund has returned 20% so far this year(2009), outperforming the Nasdaq by 33%. Rajaratnam started his career as an analyst at the investment banking boutique Needham & Co where his focus was on electronics. He was promoted to president 1991 and launched Galleon six years later. Initially invested in technology stocks; he says his best ideas come from frequent visits with companies, conversations with executives who invest in his fund. He is rumored to work 14-hour days. [6]
Raj Rajaratnam recently (September 2009) pledged to donate a million US dollars to help with the rehabilitation of former LTTE combatants.[7]
Who are the LTTE combatants
I'm taking this out of WIKI
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTTE
The Westminster Journal further states:
Intelligence agencies are well aware that the LTTE was involved in the 1990s in training the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) both of which are closely linked to al-Qaeda. In 1995 and 1998, an LTTE combat tactician and an LTTE explosives expert accompanying groups of al-Qaeda Arabs was recorded training members of MILF. In 1999, an LTTE combat tactician accompanying a group of al-Qaeda Arabs was recorded training members of the ASG. At the apparent behest of al-Qaeda, the LTTE is recorded training members of Al Ummah (An Islamic terrorist group formed in India in 1992, believed to be responsible for bombings in southern India in 1998) in Tamil Nadu, India.[126]
Raj Rajaratnam
was listed as 262nd richest American in the 2008 Forbes magazine [5]. As of early 2009, he is the richest Sri Lankan born person in the world.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raj_Rajaratnam
By Grant McCool and Edith Honan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam and five others were charged with engaging in the largest ever hedge fund insider-trading scheme, generating profits of more than $20 million over several years, U.S. prosecutors, the FBI and the SEC said Friday.
Insider trading by hedge funds Galleon and New Castle and Intel's Intel Capital unit took place in shares of Hilton Hotels Corp, Google Inc, IBM, Advanced Micro Devices Inc and other stocks, according to two complaints filed in U.S. District Court in New York.
All six accused have been arrested, a spokeswoman for the federal prosecutor's office in Manhattan said. The case could represent an important development in the government's enforcement of securities laws, she said.
"This is not a garden-variety insider trading case," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara told a news conference. Beyond the scale of the scheme, "It shows that we are targeting white-collar insider trading rings with the same powerful investigative techniques that have worked so successfully against the mob and drug cartels."
He also fired a warning shot for the rest of Wall Street.
"Today, tomorrow, next week, the week after, privileged Wall Street insiders who are considering breaking the law will have to ask themselves one important question: Is law enforcement listening?" he said.
Securities fraud charges carry possible maximum prison sentences of up to 20 years.
SRI LANKA TITAN
One of the criminal complaints accuses Rajaratnam, considered the richest Sri Lankan in the world, of conspiring with Intel employee Rajiv Goel and Anil Kumar, a director of powerful management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. The alleged offenses took place for about three years starting in January 2006.
Galleon had as much as $7 billion under management, the complaint said. Intel Capital is the investment arm of Intel Corp. Officials from Galleon did not return calls seeking comment.
Rajaratnam, born into a family of well-to-do Tamils in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo, is one of the largest investors on the Colombo Stock Exchange.
(Reporting by Grant McCool and Joseph Giannone; Additional reporting by Edith Honan, Walden Siew and Ritsuko Ando in New York, Clare Baldwin in San Francisco, and Bryson Hull in Colombo, Sri Lanka; editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Phil Berlowitz and John Wallace)
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