NEW: Bank RI Board Member Charged with Insider Trading

GoLocalProv News Team

NEW: Bank RI Board Member Charged with Insider Trading

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Anthony Andrade, a former member of the Board Of Directors of Bancorp Rhode Island, Inc., and three of his associates for providing insider information regarding the purchase of Bankcorp RI by Brookline Bancorp, Inc. 

According to the SEC's complaint, Bancorp Rhode Island and Brookline Bancorp, Inc., publicly announced on April 20, 2011, that Brookline Bancorp would acquire Bancorp Rhode Island. According to the complaint, this acquisition announcement was preceded by weeks of confidential negotiations soliciting the sale of Bancorp Rhode Island, which were led by Bancorp Rhode Island's management and its board of directors, including Andrade.

The complaint alleges Andrade, of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, illegally tipped insider information about the Bancorp Rhode Island's potential acquisition to his friends and business associates: Robert Kielbasa of Portsmouth, RI, Fred Goldwyn of Wilmington, DE, and Kenneth Rampino of Seekonk, MA. 

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The complaint also alleges that each of the three traded on the inside information Andrade supplied to them, and profited when Bancorp Rhode Island's stock price significantly increased after the April 20, 2011, acquisition announcement.

On the day of the acquisition announcement, Bancorp Rhode Island's stock closed at $44 per share, an increase of $13.29 per share, or forty three percent, from the prior day's closing price.

Goldwyn and Kielbasa agreed to settle the SEC's charges, without admitting or denying the allegations, by consenting to the entry of judgments permanently enjoining them from violating Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. 

Robert Kielbasa has agreed to pay $39,645 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $5,335 and a civil penalty of $39,645, for a total of $84,625.
 
Fred Goldwyn has agreed to pay $23,565 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $3,171 and a civil penalty of $23,565, for a total of $50,301.


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