Dеfendant Joseph Falcone appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Platt, J.) convicting him after a jury trial of thirteen counts of securities fraud, in violation of section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b) (“section 10(b)”), and one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, based on the “misappropriation theory” of insider trading. The charges arose from a scheme involving the misappropriation of pre-re-lease confidential copies of a magazine сolumn that discussed securities for the purpose of trading in the securities of the featured companies. In challenging the district court’s finding that this case is governed by this Court’s decision in
United States v. Libera,
BACKGROUND
Defendant’s conviction arose from his participation in a scheme in which an employee of Hudson News, a magazine wholesaler, faxed a stockbroker acquaintance of defendant’s, Larry Smath, pre-release confidential copies of a column in Business Week magazine — “Inside Wall Street”— that discussed companies and their stocks. Business Week is a weekly financial publication owned by McGraw-Hill, Inc. Smath himself used the information to trade securities and also passed the information along to defendant, who likewise traded in the sеcurities discussed in the column.
Evidence was introduced at trial indicating that the value of stocks discussed favorably in the column tended to increase after the magazine was released to the public and that, because of this impact, Business Week imposed a strict confidentiality policy prior to that release on all those involved in the magazine’s production and distribution. This policy applied to Hudson News and was implemented through a broader company policy, applicable to all the magazines Hudson News distributed, prohibiting employees from taking copies of the magazines or portions *228 thereof out of the company’s delivery department.
After the jury returned a guilty verdict, the district court denied defendant’s motion to set the verdict aside. Although expressing concern about the “boundless expansion of the misappropriation theory,” the district court reluctantly declared that it was bound by this court’s imposition of liability on virtually identical facts in
United States v. Libera,
Here, employees of entities further down the chain of distribution were the misappropriators. According to the evidence at trial, after being printed,
Business Week
magazine is sent to a national distributor of magazines, Curtis Circulation Company (“Curtis”).
See United States v. Falcone,
On appeal, defendant argues that under the misappropriation theory as defined in O’Hagan, it is not sufficient for the purposes of section 10(b) liability that a misappropriation ultimately results in securities trading. Instead, hе argues, the misappropriation in breach of a duty must itself have a certain nexus with securities trading that is lacking in the scenario at issue in Libera and the instant case. Defendant further argues that even assuming Libera applies here, there was insufficient evidence to convict him of securities fraud or conspiracy to commit securities fraud. Although the first contention merits some discussion, we ultimately reject both arguments.
DISCUSSION
I. The Law of Insider Trading
A. Relevant Statutory Authority
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 is violated when: (1) “any manipulative or deceptive device” is used, (2) “in connection with the purсhase or sale of any security.” 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b). Pursuant to this section, the Securities and Exchange Commission has adopted Rule 10b-5, which provides in relevant part that:
It shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by the use of any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, or of the mails or of any facility of any national securities exchange,
(b) To employ any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud, [or]
(c) To engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any person, in connection *229 with the purchase or sale of any security.
17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5.
B. The Traditional Theory
Under traditional insider trading theory, section 10(b) is violated when a corporate insider, such as an officer of the corporation, “trades in the securities of his corporation on the basis of material, non-public information.”
O’Hagan,
In
Dirks v. SEC,
[A] tippee assumes a fiduсiary duty to the shareholders of a corporation not to trade on material nonpublic information only when the insider has breached his fiduciary duty to the shareholders by disclosing the information to the tippee and the tippee knows or should know that there has been a breach.
Id.
at 660,
The second issue for the Court in
Dirks
was to determine when an insider’s duty was breached where the insider had not himself or herself traded based on material non-public information but had simply given outsiders such information. In
Dirks,
the corporate insider had given the defendant, an officer of a securities broker-dеaler, information that a massive fraud was occurring at the corporation, in an attempt to expose that fraud.
Id.
at 667,
To constitute a violation of section 10(b), according to
Dirks,
“the test is whether the insider personally will benefit, directly or indirectly, from his disclosure. Absent some personal gain, there has been no breach of duty to stockholders. And absent a breach by the insider, there is no derivative breach.”
Id.
at 662,
C. The Misappropriation Theory
1. The Theory In The Second Circuit
The Second Circuit wаs the first to recognize a different theory of insider trading: the misappropriation theory.
See generally United States v. Chestman,
a person violates Rule 10b-5 when he misappropriates material nonpublic information in breach of a fiduciary duty or similar relationship of trust and confidence and uses that information in a securities transaction. In contrast to [the traditional theory], the misappropriation theory does not require that the buyer or seller оf securities be defrauded. Focusing on the language “fraud or deceit upon any person” (emphasis added), we have held that the predicate act of fraud may be perpetrated on the source of the nonpublic information, even though the source may be unaffiliated with the buyer or seller of securities.
Chestman,
Under this theory, this Court (prior to Chestman) upheld the securities fraud convictions of a newspaper reporter, a former newspaper clerk, and a stockbroker who traded securities based on misappropriated information similar to the type of information at issue in this case: “the timing and content of the
Wall Street Journal’s
confidential schedule of columns of acknowledged influence in the securities market.”
United States v. Carpenter,
the use of the misappropriated information for the financial benefit of the defendants and to the financial detriment of those invеstors with whom appellants traded supports the conclusion that appellants’ fraud was “in connection with” the purchase or sale of securities under section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. We can deduce reasonably that those who purchased or sold securities without the misappropriated information would not have purchased or sold, at least at the transaction prices, had they had the benefit of that information. Certainly the protection of investors is the major purpose of section 10(b) and Rule 10b 5. Further, investors are endangered equally by fraud by non-inside misap-propriators as by fraud by insiders.
Id.
at 1032 (internal citations omitted). Rejecting the argument made by the
Carpenter
dissent that the “in connection with” requirement was not met because no
*231
“seeurities-related” information had been misappropriated, we added that the deception was “in connection with” securities transactions because “the misappropriated information regarding the timing and content of certain
Journal
columns had ‘no value whatsoever [to appellants] except “in connection with” their subsequent purchase[s] [and sales] of securities.’ ”
Id.
at 1033 (quoting
SEC v. Materia,
We found ourselves applying the theory in the context of information obtained from a publication again in 1993 in
United States v. Libera,
The main issue in
Libera
was whether, in order to find the tippees liable under Section 10(b) pursuant to the misappropriation theory, “the tipper must have known that his breach of a fiduciary obligation would lead to the tippee’s trading on the misappropriated information.”
Id.
at 597. Under the traditional theory of insider trading, tippee liability was in fact premised on the intent of the tipper to provide the tippee with information that the tippee could use to make money in securities trading.
See Dirks,
[t]he tipper’s knowledge that he or she was breaching a duty to the owner of confidential information suffices to establish the tipper’s expectation that the breach will lead to some kind of a misuse of the information. This is so because it may be presumed that the tip-pee’s interest in the information is, in contemporary jargon, not for nothing. To allow a tippee to escape liability solely because thе government cannot prove *232 to a jury’s satisfaction that the tipper knew exactly what misuse would result from the tipper’s wrongdoing would not fulfill the purpose of the misappropriation theory, which is to protect property rights in information.
Libera,
Thus, Libera held that the only required elements for tippee liability were: “(i) a breach by the tipper of a duty owed to the owner of the nonpublic information; and (ii) the tippee’s knowledge that the tipper had breached the duty.” Id, at 600. Other than in its recitation of the standard set forth in Rule 10b-5, Libera made no mention of the “in connection with” requirement.
2. The Supreme Court’s Decision In O’Hagan
In
O’Hagan,
the Supreme Court resolved an inter-circuit conflict regarding the validity of the misappropriation theory and held that a lawyer who traded in the shares of the target company of a proposed acquisition based on information misappropriated from his law firm and its client, the company seeking to acquire the target, violated section 10(b).
O’Hagan,
As defined by the Supreme Court in
O’Hagan,
the misappropriation theory holds that a section 10(b) violation occurs when an individual “misappropriates confidential information for securities trading purposes, in breach of a duty owed to the source of the information.”
Id.
at 652,
The Court held that section 10(b)’s requirement that the deception be “in connection with the purchase or sale of any security” was satisfied because “the fiduciary’s fraud is consummated, not when the fiduciary gains the confidential information, but when, without disclosure to his principal, he uses the information to purchase or sell securities. The securities transaction and the breach of duty thus
*233
coincide.”
Id.
at 656,
The Court distinguished, as not satisfying the “in connection with” requirement, a scenario in which an employee embezzles money from his or her employer for the purpose of buying securities. The Court did so on the ground that “money can buy, if not anything, then at least many things; its misappropriation may thus be viewed as sufficiently detached from a subsequent securities transaction that § 10(b)’s ‘in connection with’ requirement would not be met.”
Id.
at 656-57,
II. Application In This Case
A. Do Libera and Carpenter Still Provide The Governing Rule After O’Hagan?
While, as the district court in the instant case pointed out, the coincidence of a securities transaction and breach of duty-identified in
O’Hagan
as contributing to the satisfaction of the “in connection with” requirement-is not present where, as here, the misappropriator tips the information to an outsider but does not trade or have others trade on his or her behalf,
4
the Supreme Court in
O’Hagan
did not purport to set forth the sole combination of factors necessary to establish the requisite connection in all contexts. Accordingly, this Circuit after
O’Hagan
has applied the misappropriatiоn theory to schemes involving nontrading tippers, albeit without discussion of the “in connection with” requirement.
See United States v. McDermott,
O’Hagan’s requirement that the misappropriated information “ordinarily” be valuable due to “its utility in securities trading,”
O’Hagan,
Libera, therefore, continues to provide the relevant criteria by which to evaluate defendant’s conviction.
B. Breach of Duty and Tippee’s Knowledge Under Libera
To support a conviction of the tip-pee defendant, the government was simply required to prove a breach by Salvage, the tipper, of a duty owed to the owner of the misappropriated information, and defendant’s knowledge that the tipper had breached the duty.
See Libera,
Defendant claims that while the confidentiality of the “Inside Wall Street” column may have been clearly communicated to
Business Week’s
printer under the facts of
Libera,
with corresponding acceptance by the printer of the responsibility to maintain the confidentiality of that information to protect
Business Week’s
interests, such confidentiality was not made sufficiently clear here to those further down the distribution chain-such as Hudson News. Thus, he claims, there was no fiduciary duty to be breached. It is true that this Circuit has held that “a fiduciary duty cannot be imposed unilaterally by entrusting a person with confidential information,”
Chestman,
Sufficient evidence was introduced at trial, however, from which a reasonable jury could find that these elements were present here. The evidence indicated that periodically
Business Week
would ask Curtis, the distributor, to issue “a policy statement to the wholesalers requesting that
Business Week
not be distributed before 5:00 p.m. on Thursday afternoon.” Curtis understood and communicated to Hudson News that this policy was needed becаuse there was highly confidential information in the “Inside Wall Street” column that
“Business Week
had agreed not to make known to the general public before 5 p.m. on Thursday.” A representative from Hudson News testified that Hudson News employees understood that
Business Week
“like[d] to make sure that the information in that magazine is held very closely,” that Hudson had a “unique deal” to carry out that purpose, and that the magazines were “a product entrusted to Hudson News that didn’t belong to us. It belonged to the publisher. They entrusted it to us.” Hudson had a policy prohibiting the theft of copies of the magаzine or the removal of the magazine or articles therein from the premises, and Curtis at one point actually sent representatives to check that this policy was being enforced. Falcone,
Defendant also claims that he did not know the source of the information he received from Smath. However, as the district court noted, Smath testified that in fact he told defendant the details of the scheme. In addition, Smath testified that defendant paid him $200 for each column, substantially in excess of the magazine’s sale price.
See Falcone,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm defendant’s convictions.
Notes
. Defendant also urges this court to "re-evaluate” Libera's consistency with other Second Circuit precedent. However, it is well-sеttled that "one panel of this [CJourt may not overrule the decision of a prior panel” except "where an intervening Supreme Court decision casts doubt on the prior ruling.”
Finkel v. Stratton Corp.,
. On appeal, the Supreme Court-missing one justice-split 4-4 on the question of the validity of the securities fraud convictions, thus affirming the judgment of the court below.
See Carpenter v. United States,
. The Court justified this finding in part by observing that "[ajlthough informational disparity is inevitable in the securities markets, investors likely would hesitate to venture their capital in a market where trading based on misappropriated nonpublic information is unchecked by law.”
Id.
at 658,
. As the
O'Hagan
dissent pointed out, if O’Hagan simply tipped someone else the information, "[t]he mere act of passing the information along [to the tippee] would have violated O’Hagan's fiduciary duty and, if undisclosed, would be an 'embezzlement' of the confidential information, regardless of whether the tippee later traded on the information.”
O’Hagan,
. While the Supreme Court in
O’Hagan,
in the course of reviewing prior decisions in which it had not reached the misappropriation theory question, cited approvingly to a law review article which referred to the misappropriation from a publication in
Carpenter
as constituting an " 'unusual case' " because "the information there misappropriated belonged not to a company preparing to engage in securities transactions,
e.g.,
a bidder in a corporate acquisition, but to the
Wall
Street Journal,”
O’Hagan,
We do observe, however, that while the
O’Hagan
majority's response to Justice Thomas's criticism of the “ordinarily” standard was to note his "evident struggle to invent other uses to which O'Hagan plausibly might have put the nonpublic information,”
O’Hagan,
