The admission in Brooklyn federal court marked the first time a company has pleaded guilty in the United States to charges of providing material support to a terrorist organization.
Nikhil Wahi said in a virtual court hearing before U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska that he made trades based on confidential Coinbase information.
The Hyderabad Special Court probing the Satyam Computer Services accounting fraud today sentenced the company‘s founder B Ramalinga Raju to a seven-year jail term while holding him guilty of cheating, forgery and criminal breach of trust.
The stock hit a near 4-year low after a news report said the US FDA may have issued a form 483 to its Mohali facility. The company has already pleaded guilty to felony charges related to manufacturing practises at its Dewas and Paonta Sahib plants.
Ranbaxy shares have plunged more than 22 percent since it pleaded guilty to felony charges in the US last month. Further the Supreme Court in India has agreed to hear a petition against the company, which has got investors worried.
Jaypee Group Chairman Manoj Gaur, his wife Urvashi Gaur and brother Sameer Gaur are not guilty but the company‘s two Whole Time Directors and Company Secretary are.
A special court on Friday sentenced former Gujarat minister Maya Kodnani to 18 years in prison for her role in one of India's worst religious riots, television channels said.
India today made it clear to Pakistan that bringing those guilty in the 2008 Mumbai attacks to justice is the biggest confidence building measure that Islamabad could do.
Eighteen people have been sentenced to life and five other convicts given seven years in prison in the Ode massacre case in which 23 people were burnt alive by a mob during the Gujarat riots of 2002. The sentence was pronounced by special court judge PB Singh, who had convicted the 23 in the massacre case on Monday while acquitting 23 others.
Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif were found guilty on Tuesday of taking bribes to fix part of a test match against England in a case that prosecutors said revealed rampant corruption at the heart of international cricket.
As a court official read the verdict aloud in a Manhattan federal courtroom, hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam's lead lawyer John Dowd began ticking off the "guilty" counts on his verdict sheet.