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Ex-Gallup FBI agent guilty of fraud
Royer convicted of insider trading
By Zsombor Peter
Staff Writer
GALLUP A former Gallup FBI agent was convicted of
passing on lucrative and confidential government information to inside
traders in a New York courtroom Monday.
According to the federal indictment, Jeffrey Royer received private deposits
and a pickup truck for providing dirt on targeted companies to a team
of financial analysts.
Royer was convicted of racketeering, securities fraud, obstruction of
justice and witness tampering for leaking details of FBI investigations
and executives' criminal histories to San Diego stock picker Anthony Elgindy.
Elgindy was convicted of racketeering, securities fraud and extortion
for his role in the scheme. He dropped his face into his hands and sobbed
uncontrollably as the jury foreman read the verdict; U.S. marshals led
him weeping from the courtroom.
The charges carry a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.
Royer, according to the indictment, was first contacted by Elgindy with
tips about other companies engaged in securities fraud during his assignment
in Oklahoma City; however, it didn't take long for information to begin
flowing the other way.
Elgindy and a partner, Derrick Cleveland, eventually enticed Royer to
provide them with private government information on small, publicly traded
companies, some of them under investigation by the federal Securities
and Exchange Commission, information they'd use to smear those companies'
reputations and drive down the value of their stocks.
In a practice known as selling short, Elgindy would sell a given company's
stock, wait for the price to fall, and buy the stock back, pocketing the
difference. Prosecutors said Elgindy also extorted companies by offering
to withhold information in exchange for cash.
After arriving in Gallup Nov. 6, 2000, Royer began mining a pair of FBI
databases for dirt on the companies Elgindy and Cleveland wished to target.
Royer would search the Bureau's National Crime Information Center database,
filled with individuals' criminal histories, and its Automated Case Support
database, which keeps track of ongoing criminal investigations.
In return, between Nov. 28, 2000, and May 31, 2001, Cleveland wired Royer
$30,425 that went unreported to the Bureau.
Cleveland, who pleaded guilty to the charges and cooperated with prosecutors,
testified during the trial that Royer used the Gallup FBI office's fax
machine to send him a photocopy of the title to a pickup truck he was
being paid off with.
Prosecutors said Royer also thought Elgindy and his associates would help
him pay off tens of thousands of dollars in personal debt and planned
to leave the FBI to go work as a private investigator for them.
Defense attorneys contended that Royer fed FBI data to Elgindy as part
of a freelance effort to sniff out corporate fraud. They argued that Royer
believed Elgindy needed the information as a starting point for finding
out more about companies that he and Royer could investigate together.
Bill Elwell, the FBI's Albuquerque-office spokesman, believes Royer's
criminal activities, whatever damage they've done, never jeopardized any
federal investigations.
Elwell said he occasionally ran into Royer during official business, but
did not know him personally, and that his transfer from Oklahoma City
to Gallup was a routine affair.
Elwell said he did not know how it was that Royer was eventually caught.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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Tuesday
January 25, 2005
Selected Stories:
Ex-Gallup FBI agent guilty
of fraud: Royer convicted of insider trading
Shirley envisions new casino: President
discusses sovereignty in State of Navajo Nation address
Community Food Pantry is Business of the
Year
Historic building receives facelift:
Open house set for Thursday
Dallago dies: Ex-McKinley County commissioner,
Gallup businessman was 73 years old
Deaths
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