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    SEC warns on congressional insider trading ban

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An explicit ban on insider trading by federal lawmakers could narrow existing law covering the conduct, a top Securities and Exchange Commission official warned on Tuesday.

    Any changes need to be "carefully calibrated" so that they do not hurt insider trading prosecutions outside of Congress, enforcement director Robert Khuzami told a House panel.

    The House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday considered legislation that would prohibit members of Congress and their staff from trading in securities or commodities based on non-public information gleaned through their jobs.

    The bill has languished in Congress for the past five years, but saw renewed interest after a recent television report on "60 Minutes" that found some lawmakers profited from inside information.

    The chairman of the House committee, Spencer Bachus, was one of the lawmakers singled out by the report for trading stock options after a Treasury briefing about the economic collapse in 2008. At Tuesday's hearing, he said he would schedule a markup of the legislation.

    "In practice, we have never seen these rules applied to Congress," said Representative Louise Slaughter, a Democrat from New York who introduced the bill. "We want to remove any current ambiguity."

    "We are trying to set the bar higher for members of Congress," said Representative Timothy Walz, a Democrat from Minnesota who co-sponsored the bill.

    While the SEC prosecutes insider trading under general anti-fraud provisions, the agency has never used the laws to go after members of Congress.

    The bill could narrow some existing laws, Khuzami said.

    The proposed legislation targets information related to pending legislation, for example, and might exempt information obtained through a regulatory briefing, he said.

    Khuzami suggested lawmakers instead create an explicit fiduciary duty between members of Congress to keep information gained on the job confidential and not use it for private gain. The agency would be able to use that general duty to go after insider trading in Congress, he said.

    "Highlighting a duty by members of Congress ... is the simplest way to go," he said.

    The existing proposal had support in the single digits before the 60 Minutes report, but won 171 co-sponsors in recent weeks, Slaughter said.

    A Senate panel considered similar legislation last week.

    (Reporting by Aruna Viswanatha; editing by Matthew Lewis)

     

    80 comments

    • Athena  •  2 mths ago
      We should return to a model where average citizens are drafted to serve in public office, compensated at whatever level they were making in the private sector and returned there after one term with a prohibition on profiting and making themselves millionaires by helping cronies, insider trading, accepting huge campaign contributions, etc. etc.
    • Synical1  •  2 mths ago
      "While the SEC prosecutes insider trading under general anti-fraud provisions, the agency has never used the laws to go after members of Congress."
      Perhaps it is about time for the SEC to start start using these laws to go after members of congress.
    • Toothpick  •  Kingfisher, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Congress should not be above the law or exempted from it.
    • Harry  •  Charlotte, United States  •  2 mths ago
      The laws we have to abide by do not apply to congress. They should be held to the same standard as the average american. We also need drug testing for our elected officials.
    • William  •  Dover, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Stop protecting these criminals arrest and prosecute them just like anyone else. These
      double standards have to stop.
    • atexascattleman  •  2 mths ago
      Congress should be held to a higher standard. Even the appearance of inpropriety should be punished. I'm tired of do as I say not as I do.
    • howard h  •  Phoenix, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Why are you revising the current laws? This is like the illegal aliens issue

      ENFORCE THE INSIDER TRADING LAWS NOW!
    • William  •  Cleveland, United States  •  2 mths ago
      The House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday considered legislation that would prohibit members of Congress and their staff from trading in securities or commodities based on non-public information gleaned through their jobs..
      The bill has languished in Congress for the past five years

      They are going to consider it! Great

      "We are trying to set the bar higher for members of Congress," said Representative Timothy Walz
      By setting the bar higher you mean live under the same set of laws every other American has to?
    • Billy Jack  •  Des Moines, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Congress never passes a Law that affect Congress. They are above the Law in every aspect of the Judiciary System. Congress is just a Front for CORRUPTION.
    • Billy Jack  •  Des Moines, United States  •  2 mths ago
      All our Elected officials who used this information for Insider Trading should be bought up on charges and prosecuted to the full extent of the Law. Director of the SEC Robert Khuzami should Resign Immediately. How does 60 Minutes find out about all this Corruption in America and our very own Elected Government Officials don't have a clue whats going on in our Government and it is their Job to Know? Every time there is a problem with our Elected Government Officials, they appoint an Oversight Committee which does nothing but cover up the problem. Our Elected Officials should be held at a higher standard than the average person. If an average person had made such huge profit from Insider Trading, they would have put him in jail and thrown away the Keys. But instead, these people have made Millions, they came to washington for one reason and one reason only. To get Rich Quick without working for it. Boner, Nancy Pelosi and the other Corrupted Officials. They are at the very Bottom of the Barrel. What a bunch of Losers. They all should be Fired.
    • Bo Loney  •  Sarasota, United States  •  2 mths ago
      I thought that there were already laws against insider trading.
    • Toothpick  •  2 mths ago
      Congress should not be above the law or exempted from it.
    • Michael  •  2 mths ago
      Congress should be focused on their jobs. Maybe if they weren't so busy looking for an angle to profiit from legistlation, they might actually have time to read the bills. Congress never seems to have a problem throwing roadblocks in the way of ordinary citizens making a living. If they are trading on insider information, they should go to jail. But I expect the SEC will look at violations by members of congress the same way the IRS does. We need to end the special treatment extended to government employees and restore equality under the law.
    • legalswashbuckler  •  Colusa, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Simple solution: Pattern the prohibitions and penalties on Congress after the prohibitions and penalties on the rest of us.
    • jatkins47  •  Murfreesboro, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Did 60 Minutes expose the names of the lawmakers who profited from insider information?
    • Degรผello  •  Fort Worth, United States  •  2 mths ago
      WHAT ?? Its okay for these thieving politicians to steal but no one else.
    • michael h  •  Portage, United States  •  2 mths ago
      I hope they vote on it before our attention is diverted elsewhere.
    • Terry  •  Mansfield, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Gee i have a novel idea how about making them follow the same rules of law as the rest of us.
    • Micheal  •  2 mths ago
      This is the same sec who appointed madoff's nephew-in-law as his overseer. Bet they don't want to see this legislation.
    • SHOCKKA  •  Santa Ana, United States  •  2 mths ago
      You dirty double standard crooks. I am sick of congress and all of their crooked ways. Time to clean house.
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