Money | Wall Street Feds See Massive Insider-Trading Network Three-year investigation is among the biggest ever undertaken By John Johnson Posted Nov 20, 2010 11:22 AM CST Copied The feds are wrapping up a massive investigation into insider trading. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, file) You know that gray line that sometimes separates "expert advice" from the crime of insider trading? It's about to get a lot darker. The feds are wrapping up what the Wall Street Journal describes as a huge three-year investigation expected to bring an unprecedented array of charges against everyone from consultants and analysts to investment bankers and hedge fund managers. Authorities have been unraveling a savvy network that's grown adept (and very rich) in figuring out ways to get non-public information into the hands of traders who can act on it. The practice often occurs under the guise of so-called "expert network" services, and a whole host of companies has sprung up to arrange meetings between managers or ex-managers in a particular field and those information-hungry traders. And as with any good Wall Street investigation, there's a Goldman Sachs component: Bankers allegedly leaked information about health care mergers and other deals to investors, notes the Journal. Read These Next Trump's 'own morality' is his only restraint, per Trump. Gates decries worsening child mortality. Of AI-driven Ukraine drones, 'I think we created the monster.' Ventura calls Trump a 'draft-dodging coward.' Report an error