Nicolo Nourafchan Pleads Not Guilty in $10 Million-Plus Insider Trading Case
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg Law · Jun 2
Nicolo Nourafchan Pleads Not Guilty in $10 Million-Plus Insider Trading Case
3 articles · Updated · Bloomberg Law · Jun 2
Monday’s not-guilty plea puts Nicolo Nourafchan at the center of a U.S. case alleging he led a ring that generated tens of millions of dollars from stolen M&A information.
SEC filings say Nourafchan used law-firm document systems to search deal keywords and read files in preview or read-only mode, trying to avoid an electronic trail while accessing matters he did not work on.
Prosecutors say the scheme touched seven law firms and has produced securities fraud, money laundering and other charges against 30 people; attorney Gabriel Gershowitz has already pleaded guilty and is cooperating.
Legal and cybersecurity experts say the case exposes a broad Big Law weakness: document platforms are built for easy collaboration, while access limits and anomaly monitoring often remain too loose.
If lawyers can browse secret M&A deals like a library, is any client's information truly safe?
As AI agents gain access to sensitive files, are law firms prepared for the next wave of insider threats?
Thirty Charged in $10 Million Decade-Long Insider Trading Scheme: The Nourafchan Case and Its Impact on Law and Finance
Overview
The insider trading case centered on Nicolo Nourafchan and Robert Yadgarov has reached a critical stage, with thirty people charged for a decade-long scheme that allegedly generated tens of millions of dollars. Nourafchan, formerly at Goodwin Procter, is accused of accessing confidential deal information—even while on leave—and passing it to a network of co-conspirators. The case highlights how attorneys exploited their positions to orchestrate illicit trades, leading to severe legal challenges and industry-wide scrutiny. As the legal process unfolds, the scandal exposes major vulnerabilities in law firm information controls and signals significant reforms ahead.