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FBI dismantles decade-long insider trading ring, charges 30 in scheme spanning multiple countries

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Federal authorities just pulled the curtain back on one of the most elaborate insider trading operations in recent memory. On May 7, the DOJ, FBI, and SEC unsealed criminal charges against 30 individuals accused of running a scheme that allegedly generated tens of millions of dollars in illegal profits over the course of roughly a decade.

Nineteen defendants were arrested in the US. Two others, located in Russia and Israel, are considered fugitives.

How the scheme worked

At the center of the operation sit two attorneys: Nicolo Nourafchan, based in California, and Robert Yadgarov, based in New York. The pair allegedly exploited their access to prestigious law firm networks to get their hands on confidential merger and acquisition documents before deals went public.

Those friends, according to prosecutors, were a sprawling network of traders spread across multiple states and countries. The group allegedly front-ran approximately 30 major M&A deals, buying up shares before announcements sent prices higher, then cashing out.

Defendants allegedly used encrypted messaging apps, coded language, shell companies, and foreign accounts to obscure their activities. Payments between conspirators were reportedly disguised as loans, adding another layer of obfuscation that took investigators years to untangle.

Nourafchan also faces obstruction charges, suggesting prosecutors believe he actively tried to interfere with the investigation once it was underway.

The scale and the stakes

The SEC separately charged 21 of the 30 defendants in civil proceedings, which typically seek disgorgement of profits, fines, and industry bans. On the criminal side, securities fraud carries penalties of up to 25 years in prison per count.

The involvement of two fugitives located in Russia and Israel adds an international dimension that complicates enforcement. Extradition from Russia is, to put it diplomatically, unlikely under current geopolitical conditions. Israel has extradition treaties with the US but the process is rarely swift.

What this means for markets and crypto

This case is squarely about traditional securities fraud. Stocks, not tokens. Law firms, not DeFi protocols. There is no direct connection to crypto assets in the charges unsealed so far.

Federal agencies spent years unraveling encrypted communications, shell company structures, and cross-border fund flows. Prosecutors didn’t treat encryption as an obstacle. They treated it as evidence of intent to conceal. Courts have repeatedly accepted the use of encrypted communications as circumstantial evidence of consciousness of guilt.

The DOJ and SEC have charged more than 100 individuals in related insider trading schemes since 2016. Cases of this complexity, spanning 30 defendants, multiple jurisdictions, and a decade of activity, reflect an enforcement infrastructure that continues to mature and is being deployed against traditional finance and crypto alike.

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