Sunday, 7 April 2013

Ex-Thomson Reuters employee sues over survey distribution


A former Thomson Reuters Corp employee has filed a lawsuit saying he was fired for telling the Federal Bureau of Investigation that he believed the company violated insider-trading laws in releasing a consumer sentiment survey early to some subscribers.
In the lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in Manhattan federal court, Mark Rosenblum said he was terminated after telling US authorities that the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers was released at different times to different subscribers.

"We believe the accusations from the complainant against Thomson Reuters to be unsubstantiated and without merit, and we will defend against them vigorously," a company spokesman said in a statement.

Rosenblum said in his court papers that Thomson Reuters releases the monthly survey to so-called "ultra low-latency" subscribers at two seconds before 9:55am ET, to "desktop" subscribers at 9:55am, and to the general public at 10am.

In the financial services industry, low latency is a reference to higher speed services often used by high-frequency traders.

Rosenblum said in the court papers that last June 29, he told an unnamed FBI agent that he believed this "tiered release" violated federal securities laws, and that on the same day he told company executives that he had contacted federal investigators about the matter.

In the lawsuit, Rosenblum said he was fired on Aug 3 from his job as a redistribution specialist, without severance, for engaging in protected whistle blowing activity under the 2010 Dodd-Frank law. He is seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

Jesse Rose, a lawyer for Rosenblum, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

FBI spokesman Jim Margolin declined to comment.

Related Posts:

  • 60-hour Shibir strike on Sporadic picketing and processions marked the start of the Islami Chhatra Shibir-sponsored 60-hour strike that began from Monday in Rajshahi and Chapainawabganj.   The Shibir is demanding the whe… Read More
  • German state fines Google for Street View data breach 1 / 1 A German privacy regulator has fined Google for illegally recording signals from Wifi networks while it was taking photographs for its Street View service. Google's roving St… Read More
  • Abdul Hamid elected President uncontested Abdul Hamid was elected uncontested as the 20th President of Bangladesh on Monday, Chief Election Commissioner Kazi Rakibuddin Ahmad said. Abdul Hamid turned out to be the only one to have filed his n… Read More
  • HC convicts colleague of RU Prof murder Ahmed taught geology and mining at the university.The High Court has upheld death sentence for Dr Miah Mohiuddin and another after finding them guilty of murdering Rajshahi University Professor Dr S Taher Ahmed. Justic… Read More
  • The plan is to minus me: Hasina 1 / 1 Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina sees 'dubious intentions' behind the proposals put forward for conducting the next parliamentary elections. “These formulas are being prescribed to c… Read More

0 comments:

Post a Comment