The Collar

Ex-NYMEX Board Member Gets Five Months

By Luke Mullins

Posted: April 9, 2008

Steven Karvellas, a former board member of the New York Mercantile Exchange, will spend five months in prison after pleading guilty yesterday to charges involving fraud and tampering with evidence, Reuters reports.

From Reuters:

Between September 2002 and May 2003, while he was serving as chairman of the exchange's Adjudication and Compliance Review Committee, Karvellas delayed the allocation of customer orders and "if the market went up, he would take that order for himself," said Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, likening Karvellas to "a fox in the chicken house."

By either not filling the orders or filling them at less favorable prices, Karvellas "was able to engage in risk-free investing and deprived the customer of the profits it deserved," according to the plea agreement he signed.

Full article here.

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The Collar

Luke Mullins is an associate editor at U.S. News, covering banking, real estate, and white-collar crime. He came to the magazine from the American Banker, a financial services daily newspaper, after a stint in the Peace Corps in West Africa and 18 months coaching baseball in the Dominican Republic. Mullins earned a master's degree in journalism from Syracuse University in 2005 and now lives in Washington, D.C., where he grew up. He has written about white-collar criminals for the American magazine, and his work was included in 20 Something Essays by 20 Something Writers: The Best New Voices of 2006, a Random House anthology that appeared on the Boston Globe's bestseller list.

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