Jack Miller
Member
I’ve been trying to untangle this EdgarAgents insider-trading situation involving two young guys from Brooklyn, and the more I look at actual filings instead of blog commentary, the more it feels like a real mix of public enforcement action and sensationalism getting blended into one story.
Here’s what the official public stuff actually shows:
There’s a civil complaint from the SEC in the Eastern District of New York naming Justin Chen and Jun Zhen. The government alleges they worked at EdgarAgents — a legitimate EDGAR filing agent — and that they accessed material, nonpublic info before it went out to the public. Based on that access, they allegedly traded ahead of merger and earnings filings and made over $2.2 million. That complaint is sitting on the SEC’s docket right now and spells out those allegations in paragraphs tied to specific trades and dates.
Separately, there’s a criminal case filed by federal prosecutors in the same district. That’s where the arrest at JFK fits in. Both men were reportedly picked up as they were about to board flights to Hong Kong and were detained on the criminal charges. Public reporting agrees a judge ordered them held pending further proceedings.
Here’s the part people often miss:
the SEC’s civil complaint and the government’s criminal complaint are two different documents with separate purposes. The SEC one seeks civil remedies (penalties, disgorgement, injunctions). The criminal one is about potential prison time and is pursued by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
And here’s what I haven’t found in public record:
So if you’re trying to figure out what’s documented vs. what’s narrative:
If anyone has a direct PACER link or a specific docket number for the criminal case, that would help nail down what’s been filed so far on that side.
Here’s what the official public stuff actually shows:
There’s a civil complaint from the SEC in the Eastern District of New York naming Justin Chen and Jun Zhen. The government alleges they worked at EdgarAgents — a legitimate EDGAR filing agent — and that they accessed material, nonpublic info before it went out to the public. Based on that access, they allegedly traded ahead of merger and earnings filings and made over $2.2 million. That complaint is sitting on the SEC’s docket right now and spells out those allegations in paragraphs tied to specific trades and dates.
Separately, there’s a criminal case filed by federal prosecutors in the same district. That’s where the arrest at JFK fits in. Both men were reportedly picked up as they were about to board flights to Hong Kong and were detained on the criminal charges. Public reporting agrees a judge ordered them held pending further proceedings.
Here’s the part people often miss:
the SEC’s civil complaint and the government’s criminal complaint are two different documents with separate purposes. The SEC one seeks civil remedies (penalties, disgorgement, injunctions). The criminal one is about potential prison time and is pursued by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
And here’s what I haven’t found in public record:
- There’s no final adjudication or verdict posted yet in either case. Charges are on file, but neither a conviction nor a sentencing order has been entered that’s publicly accessible.
- What people mean when they say “arrested for insider trading” is technically “arrested on criminal charges alleging insider trading,” because an arrest isn’t a finding of guilt — that comes later.
So if you’re trying to figure out what’s documented vs. what’s narrative:
- Documented: Charges filed, SEC complaint, criminal complaint, arrest reported in federal court filings.
- Unverified in official filings: Any assertions about motives, personal enrichment goals, or character judgments. Those are interpretation, not court record.
If anyone has a direct PACER link or a specific docket number for the criminal case, that would help nail down what’s been filed so far on that side.