SANTA ANA, California
– A former engineer at Skyworks Solutions, Inc. surrendered to law enforcement
today on a federal criminal complaint alleging he obtained his employer’s
non-public financial results without authorization and then illegally used the
confidential information to purchase large amounts of Skyworks securities prior
to the information being made public.
Yuh-Yue
Chen, 52, of Taiwan, formerly of Irvine, has been charged with one felony count
of insider trading. Chen is scheduled to make his initial court appearance this
afternoon in United States District Court in Santa Ana.
According to
an affidavit filed with the criminal complaint, Chen worked as an electrical
principal engineer from 2003 until his termination in September 2014 at
Skyworks, a publicly traded, Woburn, Massachusetts-based semiconductor company
with a branch office and design center in Irvine. As a Skyworks employee, Chen
received regular warnings from the company against engaging in insider trading,
and as an engineer he was barred from having access to the company’s non-public
earnings reports before they were publicly released.
On July 14,
2014, Chen ignored these warnings and gained unauthorized access to the
Skyworks finance area on four occasions, according to the affidavit. On July
15, using non-public Skyworks financial information, Chen allegedly purchased
1,300 Skyworks $48 call options – which gives a securities buyer the right to
buy certain stock within a specified time frame – at an average price of $1.90.
On July 17, Skyworks, which closed at a price of $46.34 per share, released its
quarterly earnings report after markets closed. On July 18, Skyworks shares
opened at $50.11 per share – a per-share gain of $3.77 – in response to the
earnings announcement. On the same day, Chen sold his Skyworks calls for an
average price of $3.36, resulting in profits of approximately $484,645, the
affidavit states.
Shortly
after 9 p.m. on September 15, 2014, two Skyworks employees – in the parking lot
outside the company’s Irvine office – caught Chen rifling through documents in
the restricted accounting and finance office, the complaint alleges. When one
of the employees entered the building and asked Chen to stop, Chen allegedly
ran out of the office through a side door and escaped, running through nearby
bushes. Chen did not return to Skyworks after this encounter, the affidavit
states.
Five days
later, Chen flew from Los Angeles International Airport to Taipei, Taiwan
without informing anyone at Skyworks, court documents state. Chen was fired on
September 30, 2014 for his actions 15 days earlier and after Skyworks had
conducted an investigation where Chen was deemed to have been evasive. When
Chen returned his work laptop computer by mail to Skyworks, the computer did
not have any files or documents on it, the affidavit states.
Law
enforcement interviewed Chen at LAX on March 29, 2019, where he confessed to
committing insider trading, the complaint states.
If
convicted, Chen faces a statutory maximum sentence of 20 years in federal
prison.
Chen also
faces civil charges in a lawsuit filed last month by the Securities and
Exchange Commission that alleges insider trading.
A complaint
contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is
presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
This matter
was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Jennifer L. Waier of the
Santa Ana Branch Office.
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