SEC charges former Apple exec Gene Levoff with insider trading [u]
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Apple's former director of corporate law, Gene Levoff, with insider trading based on his knowledge of corporate performance.

Levoff "traded on material nonpublic information about Apple's earnings three times during 2015 and 2016," the SEC said in a lawsuit filed through the U.S. District Court of New Jersey, reported by CNBC. "For the trading in 2015 and 2016, Levoff profited and avoided losses of approximately $382,000."
The executive is also accused of three additional incidents in 2011 and 2012.
Levoff took advantage of unreleased quarterly earnings data as well as internal updates on iPhone sales, the SEC explained, even violating the company's own "blackout" windows for stock transactions. He allegedly bought shares in time to profit from post-results spikes, or sold in advance if he knew numbers would disappoint investors. An irony is that Levoff was responsible for Apple's compliance with SEC rules.
The executive's history further includes helping to establish Apple Vietnam in 2015. At the time, he was also the director of Apple Operations International.
Update: Levoff's leave of absence was forced by Apple, after the company was told that the attorney was involved in insider trading.
"After being contacted by authorities last summer we conducted a thorough investigation with the help of outside legal experts," Apple told AppleInsider in a statement. "This resulted in termination."
Apple forced Levoff to go on leave in July 2018, and ultimately fired him in September.

Levoff "traded on material nonpublic information about Apple's earnings three times during 2015 and 2016," the SEC said in a lawsuit filed through the U.S. District Court of New Jersey, reported by CNBC. "For the trading in 2015 and 2016, Levoff profited and avoided losses of approximately $382,000."
The executive is also accused of three additional incidents in 2011 and 2012.
Levoff took advantage of unreleased quarterly earnings data as well as internal updates on iPhone sales, the SEC explained, even violating the company's own "blackout" windows for stock transactions. He allegedly bought shares in time to profit from post-results spikes, or sold in advance if he knew numbers would disappoint investors. An irony is that Levoff was responsible for Apple's compliance with SEC rules.
The executive's history further includes helping to establish Apple Vietnam in 2015. At the time, he was also the director of Apple Operations International.
Update: Levoff's leave of absence was forced by Apple, after the company was told that the attorney was involved in insider trading.
"After being contacted by authorities last summer we conducted a thorough investigation with the help of outside legal experts," Apple told AppleInsider in a statement. "This resulted in termination."
Apple forced Levoff to go on leave in July 2018, and ultimately fired him in September.
Comments
Glad Apple did the right thing by giving him the boot.
Keep in mind he was making the trades when the market was predicting FUD on Apple. He knew the number were good, but he could not predict how much FUD the market was going to throw out.
I suspect what matter was he was trading during the blackout period that no exec is allow to do no matter how well or not so well a company is doing. These rules were designed to keep insiders from bailing right before bad news hit the market, not when good news is coming out and the stock is going up, but that is bad now too.
So, yeah, that would be classic insider trading.
More like they just found out and then fired immediately.
He wasn’t charged with cooking the books or doing anything illegal for Apple. He was charged for insider trading - meaning he used knowledge he had of Apple (because of his position) to trade stocks.
I highly doubt Apple knew anything about this for a period of time and kept it secret. That would come back as their worst PR nightmare.
That might not be what happened. But it's what I'd bet on, knowing what we now know.
Education doesn’t prevent stupidity.