Wednesday, June 12, 2013
SEBI WILL HAVE ACCESS TO CALL RECORDS
Capital market regulator SEBI will soon get
powers to summon phone call records, emails and SMSes of persons it is
probing for insider trading and other market manipulations. With these
powers, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) aims to
prevent black money coming into the market as well as to keep an eye on
insider trading. SEBI's plea for such powers has been endorsed by the
Finance Ministry which late last month wrote to the Ministry of Home
Affairs for designating the capital market regulator as agency
authorised to receive call data records (CDR). Sources said Economic
Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram late last month wrote to Home Secretary
seeking designating SEBI as agency authorised to be a recipient of CDR
information related to calls, emails and SMSes under the Indian
Telegraph Act, 1885. This followed a meeting Finance Minister P
Chidambaram took on May 15 to discuss how SEBI can be enabled to
requisition and receive CDRs of calls, SMSes and emails available with
telecom/other service providers. Sources said Section 11C of the SEBI
Act empowers the regulator to call for information and records from any
intermediary or person in respect of any transaction in securities which
it is investigating. SEBI, as per this section, is an investigation
agency for offences related to market fraud and insider trading and can
thus summon CDRs. Sources said the ministry asked MHA to operationalise
an arrangement for SEBI being designated as an agency which can
requisition and receive CDR information related to calls, emails and
SMSes under the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885. The market regulator has
been seeking government's help in getting call data records and e-mail
records from the service providers of persons being probed by Sebi in
cases of insider trading and other market manipulations. However, the
regulator is not asking for powers to snoop on telephonic conversations.
CDRs generally list out the number of conversations between two or
more entities and are different from phone-tapping, wherein an agency
can snoop on or record the telephonic conversations of those suspected
to be engaged in some wrongdoings. Regulators in the US and some other
countries have often used tapped phone conversations to prove insider
trading and other charges, including in the famous Rajat Gupta case.
Currently, the phone-tapping powers are restricted to only a few
agencies in India, including the CBI and the tax department. Sources
said the finance ministry is separately considering amendments to the
SEBI Act, SCRA and the Depositories Act to strengthen the regulator's
powers.
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