MEMORANDUM ORDER
In imposing sentence on defendant Rajat Gupta on October 24, 2012,
The restitution Goldman Sachs seeks is the $6,909,137.32 in legal fees that it paid to Sullivan & Cromwell LLP in connection with this case and related matters.
It is now settled in the Second Circuit that the “necessary ... other expenses” contemplated by § 3663A(b)(4) may include attorneys’ fees, United States v. Amato,
In support of its request for restitution, Goldman Sachs submitted 542 pages of billing records from its counsel, Sullivan & Cromwell. The billing records include time billed for “legal services and advice relating to Gupta’s conduct,” which
Gupta resists an order of restitution in the amount Goldman Sachs is requesting on several grounds. Chief among them is Gupta’s argument that, under the MVRA, “Goldman is entitled to restitution of only those fees it can demonstrate were necessarily incurred in connection with specific requests by the government ... or were otherwise required to be done ... in the investigation or prosecution of the Gupta case.” Def. Rajat K. Gupta’s Mem. in Opp’n to the Req. for Restitution (“Gupta Mem.”) at 3 (citing United States v. Papagno,
As the D.C. Circuit expressly recognized in the Papagno case, the Second Circuit has taken a very broad view of what, under the MVRA, may compose a “necessary” link between the offense and the victims’ expenses. See Papagno,
Two broad categories of Goldman Sachs’s expenses merit special attention: Goldman Sachs’s fees incurred during its participation in the parallel SEC cases against Gupta and its fees incurred in connection with this case during the pendency of the criminal prosecution of Raj Rajaratnam.
Moreover, the Court reconfirms that finding with respect to any connection relevant to restitutionary recovery. The parties do not dispute that both cases involve overlapping allegations of insider trading, and that the SEC’s civil case against Gupta rests on essentially the same conduct that resulted in his criminal conviction by a jury on June 15, 2012. Given that the relevant enquiry under the MVRA is whether the expenses are “related to participation in the investigation ... of the offense,” 18 U.S.C. § 3663A(b)(4), “[a]ny other conclusion would create an artificial and unrealistic distinction between SEC civil investigations and criminal prosecutions of securities fraud Particularly in this district, the cases are legion where parallel civil investigations and criminal prosecutions of securities fraud target the same wrongdoers.” Skowron,
Turning to Gupta’s opposition to making restitution for Goldman Sachs’s legal fees incurred in connection with the Rajaratnam case, Gupta argues, again drawing from the D.C. Circuit’s analysis in Papagno, that the MVRA permits recovery only for the “singular” offense of conviction. Gupta Mem. at 13 (quoting Papagno,
But here again, Goldman Sachs is not bound by the Government’s assertions. And, in any event, Gupta’s argument ignores the glaring fact that in the instant case Gupta was convicted of conspiring with Rajaratnam to commit securities fraud, thus confirming the relevance of the Rajaratnam investigation, at all its stages, to the instant ease. Furthermore, the notion that Goldman Sachs may only recover expenses related to the “high gear” phase of the United States Attorney’s investigation and prosecution of Gupta finds no basis in the MVRA: whether the investigation was in high or low “gear,” Goldman Sachs is entitled to restitution so long as the expenses were necessary and related to its participation.
Gupta’s last substantial challenge to an award of restitution is that Goldman Sachs has not met its “burden” to properly document its fees and, relatedly, that the vagueness and volume of the billing records have made the determination of restitution so “unduly complicated” as to make the award of restitution no longer mandatory under § 3663A(c)(3)(B). Gupta Mem. at 5-7, 18-19. Gupta relies principally on one non-binding case from the Eastern District of New York for the proposition Goldman Sachs is not entitled to restitution for its expenses under the statute until it “supplement^]” its bills with “affidavits from outside counsel that would allow the Court to differentiate between reimbursable and non-reimbursable expenses....” Id. at 5; see also Letter of Dec. 27, 2012 at 2 (“Goldman’s failure to submit any sworn declarations separating out those fees associated with assisting the government ... from those fees which are no compensable requires that its restitution application be denied.”) (citing United States v. Battista,
The Court finds that neither assertion is supported by the record. First, Goldman Sachs has provided a voluminous disclosure of its legal fees, and Gupta has raised no colorable challenge to the veracity of the records. Notwithstanding the assertions in Gupta’s briefing, Battista directs no contrary result, as that case both reaffirmed the holdings of Amato on which this Court relies and unremarkably found no error in a district court’s finding that “attorneys’ fees associated with counseling the [victim] on its public response” were not recoverable as an “investigation cost.” Battista,
Finally, Gupta’s counsel argues, in one sentence of Gupta’s brief, that since Goldman Sachs’s board of directors terminated approximately $1,000,000 worth of his Restricted Stock Units (“RSUs”) and options following his conviction, the board has “forfeited to itself’ his compensation. This amount, Gupta argues, “should be a credit against any restitution the Court may order.” Gupta Mem. at 20-21. The Court declines to award Gupta a setoff for the value of the terminated RSUs and options. Though the Court need not reach the issue, RSUs and options could have been subject to restitution in this proceeding had the Goldman Sachs board not decided to revoke them and to voluntarily withdraw its claim for restitution of salary. See United States v. Bahel,
Accordingly, having carefully considered the parties’ arguments and the record developed by Goldman Sachs in support of its request for restitution, the Court hereby orders that Raj at Gupta pay restitution in the amount of $6,218,223.59 to Goldman Sachs. The Court will forthwith issue an amended judgment of conviction reflecting this determination.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Goldman Sachs has withdrawn its request for restitution of a portion of Gupta’s salary and its request for legal fees related to a "Section 16(b)" proceeding against Gupta.
. Goldman Sachs has represented to the Court that the expenses it seeks “relate only to its investigation of Gupta’s conduct, not to that of other Firm employees.” Goldman Mem. at 10 n. 2. This request for restitution is therefore different from cases on which Gupta relies for a number of his objections, such as United States v. Donaghy,
. The Court also rejects Gupta’s terse but related argument, offered without citation to any legal authority, that Goldman Sachs's decisión not to seek restitution from Rajaratnam ”preclude[s] it from seeking restitution now____” Gupta Mem. at 13. The statute
