Gary J. Aguirre

Gary J. Aguirre
NationalityAmerican
EducationB.S., LL.B, M.F.A., LL.M
Alma materUniversity of California, Berkeley
UC Berkeley, School of Law
UC Los Angeles
Georgetown University Law Center
OccupationLawyer
Years active1967–present
EmployerThe Aguirre Law Firm
Websiteaguirrelawapc.com

Gary J. Aguirre is an American lawyer, former investigator with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and whistleblower.

After working in a law firm briefly, he became a public defender, then worked as a trial lawyer in California. Having reached his professional and financial goals, he took an extended break in 1995. In 2000, he decided to go into public service and went back to law school, focusing on international and securities law.

After earning his second law degree, he applied for a job with the SEC, where he became the lead investigator on an insider trading case involving Pequot Capital Management. Suspecting the leaked information came from John J. Mack, a Wall Street titan and major contributor to the 2004 campaign of President George W. Bush, Aguirre wanted to subpoena Mack, but supervisors told him Mack had too much "political clout" and would not be pursued. Aguirre complained to a superior about the preferential treatment being given Mack and was fired without warning. A Senate investigation later found his termination to have been an illegal reprisal.[1]

In May 2010, Pequot Capital settled its insider trading charges with the SEC for $28 million[2] and a month later, the SEC settled the wrongful termination suit filed by Aguirre for $755,000.[3] Aguirre returned to private practice in San Diego in 2008, specializing in securities law. He has emerged as a major critic of the SEC, calling it an agency that was set up to protect the public from Wall Street, but now protects Wall Street from the public.[4][5] He represents Darcy Flynn, also an SEC whistleblower, who in summer 2011 was interviewed by staff from three congressional committees. He said that the SEC had destroyed thousands of records of preliminary investigations and that SEC investigators trying to pursue a case against Deutsche Bank were thwarted by Richard H. Walker, then SEC director of enforcement, who shortly thereafter, took a job at Deutsche Bank as general counsel.[6] He also represents Rodolfo Michelon, a whistleblower, a former comptroller at Sempra Global, who claims Sempra paid kickbacks to Mexican government officials and has filed a suit against the SEC alleging the SEC "outsourced" its investigation of Sempra to a law firm with ties to Sempra, in effect subverting the law.[7]

  1. ^ "The Firing of an SEC Attorney and the Investigation of Pequot Capital Management." Report by the United States Senate Committees on Finance and Judiciary. (August 3, 2007) Retrieved February 20, 2011
  2. ^ "Conn. couple gets $1 mln SEC award for Pequot" Reuters (July 23, 2010). Retrieved February 18, 2011
  3. ^ Courtney Comstock, "Former SEC Whistleblower Gary Aguirre Gets Vindication For His Pursuit Of John Mack" Business Insider (June 30, 2010). Retrieved February 18, 2011
  4. ^ Don Bauder, "Gary Aguirre Major Source in Taibbi Blockbuster" San Diego Reader blog post (February 17, 2011). Retrieved February 19, 2011
  5. ^ Liz Moyer, "Watchdog Alleges Insider Trading At SEC" Forbes (May 15, 2009). Retrieved March 1, 2011
  6. ^ Matt Taibbi, "Is the SEC Covering Up Wall Street Crimes?" Archived 2017-08-22 at the Wayback Machine Rolling Stone (August 17, 2011). Retrieved August 19, 2011
  7. ^ Matt Reynolds, "SEC Kowtows to Fortune 500 on Corruption 'Investigations,' Whistleblower Says" Courthouse News Service (April 27, 2012). Retrieved May 3, 2012

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