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Trump pardons former US congressman convicted of securities fraud

June 5, 2026 9:57 PM EDT

Former U.S. Congressman Stephen Buyer arrives for his insider trading trial at the United States Courthouse in the Manhattan borough of New York City, U.S., March 8, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

WASHINGTON, June 5 (Reuters) - President ‌Donald Trump has ​pardoned ​former U.S. Representative Stephen Buyer, an Indiana Republican, who was convicted of securities fraud for engaging in insider trading in 2018 ‌as a T-Mobile US consultant ahead of a $23 billion merger with ⁠Sprint.

The proclamation, issued on Thursday and announced by the White House on Friday, gave ‌no specific rationale for the ‌pardon other than to assert that Buyer's service as a U.S. Army judge advocate general and member of Congress "was distinguished and highly productive."

It also ​said that Trump, in granting Buyer a "full, complete and unconditional pardon," was acting on the "advice and recommendation" of 52 current and former members ⁠of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives listed in the proclamation.

Buyer served in the House as ​a Republican from Indiana between 1993 and 2011 before working as a corporate consultant. He was found guilty in March ​of 2023 on four counts of securities ‌fraud, and was sentenced in September of that year to 22 months in prison.

Prosecutors said at trial that Buyer bought ⁠Sprint stock after learning from a T-Mobile executive that the telecommunications companies were in merger talks in 2018 and made illegal trades again the following year.

According to ⁠prosecutors, Buyer made more than $100,000 from the Sprint trades and more than $200,000 from buying stock ​in Navigant Consulting Inc. before it was acquired by Guidehouse in 2019.

Buyer, who had served as one of the House managers in the 1999 impeachment trial of then-President ‌Bill Clinton, took the stand at his own trial and denied trading on inside information.

Prosecutors sought three years in ‌prison for Buyer in court filings, saying that he had abused his clients' ⁠trust and lied on the stand.

The ‌U.S. Supreme Court refused ​in May of this year to hear Buyer's appeal of his conviction.

(Reporting by Steve Gorman and Christian Martinez; Editing by ‌Kim Coghill)



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