Tibor Klein, a Long Island, N.Y., investment adviser, was sentenced to six months in prison on Monday after pleading guilty to insider trading in connection with Pfizer Inc's $3.6 billion acquisition of King Pharmaceuticals Inc. in 2010.
U.S. District Judge Joan Azrack sentenced Mr. Klein, 44, in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., according to a Reuters report. Last July, Mr. Klein had pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud.
Mr. Klein, the founder of Valley Stream, N.Y.-based Klein Financial Services, also was sentenced to six months of house arrest and 250 hours of community service, according to Reuters, and ordered to forfeit $37,225 and pay a $20,000 fine.
The government said Mr. Klein learned about the deal from Robert Schulman, then a partner at the law firm Hunton & Williams in Washington, who had represented King Pharmaceuticals. Mr. Klein purchased shares in King for himself, Mr. Schulman and clients, and informed a friend, Michael Shechtman, a Florida stockbroker, about the deal. Prosecutors say the insider trading resulted in more than $400,000 of overall illegal profit.
Mr. Schulman, of McLean, Va., was convicted of insider trading last March. Mr. Shechtman, a former broker at Ameriprise, pleaded guilty in Brooklyn in November 2014 to conspiracy and has cooperated with prosecutors. He has not been sentenced.
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Securities and Exchange Commission filed related civil charges against Mr. Klein and Mr. Shechtman in September 2013, but that case was put on hold until the criminal case was resolved.