NEW YORK, May 26, 2008
                Pargat Singh
              NRI doctor Zachariah P Zachariah, director of cardiology at Fort 
                Lauderdale's Holy Cross Hospital was charged with using inside 
                information to trade stock illegally in deals that allegedly netted 
                $540,000 for the doctor, his brother and a friend. He was close 
                to the Bush family and an influential Indian American Republican 
                who has raised funds for the party.
              The lawyer for Zachariah and his brother Mammen Zachariah, also 
                a cardiologist at Holy Cross, called the charges unfounded. 
              "We plan to fight them all the way," said the Zachariahs' 
                attorney, Jeffrey Gutchess of Hunton & Williams law firm in 
                Miami, according to South Florida Sun-Sentinel report
                
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              U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                May 12, 2008
               The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a civil action 
                today in the United States District Court for the Southern District 
                of Florida against Dr. Zachariah P. Zachariah (Zachariah), Dr. 
                Mammen P. Zachariah (M. Zachariah), and Dr. Sheldon Nassberg, 
                alleging that they engaged in illegal insider trading from which 
                they reaped a total of more than a half-million dollars in profits 
                from their illicit scheme. All three defendants reside and practice 
                medicine in the Ft. Lauderdale, Florida area.
              The SEC's complaint concerns illegal trading in the shares of 
                two unrelated companies. In the first, the complaint alleges that 
                Zachariah breached his fiduciary duty to IVAX and its shareholders 
                only a few months after being appointed to serve as a company 
                director. IVAX's then-chairman and CEO called Zachariah and other 
                IVAX directors on July 6, 2005 after agreeing with the then-CEO 
                of Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd. on preliminary terms for Teva to 
                acquire IVAX. Within minutes of that call, and even though IVAX 
                was in a "blackout" period during which the company 
                forbade officers and directors from trading in IVAX stock, Zachariah 
                placed the first of four separate IVAX stock purchase orders that 
                he made in his online brokerage account that day. Zachariah purchased 
                35,000 shares of IVAX stock at a cost of approximately $730,000.
              The SEC further alleges that Zachariah later unlawfully tipped 
                his brother, M. Zachariah, who purchased 2,000 shares of IVAX 
                stock at a total cost of approximately $46,000 on the last trading 
                day before IVAX announced on July 25, 2005 that Teva would acquire 
                it. 
              According to the SEC's complaint, Zachariah's IVAX stock purchases 
                were not the first time that he engaged in illegal trading while 
                in possession of non-public information. He also misappropriated 
                material, non-public information about Sarasota, Fla.-based Correctional 
                Services Corporation, which operated correctional and detention 
                facilities.
              The SEC's complaint alleges that from May through July 2005, 
                Zachariah bought over $200,000 worth of Correctional shares and 
                his brother and close friend, Nassberg, each made multiple purchases 
                of Correctional stock in the week leading up to a public announcement 
                on July 14, 2005, by The GEO Group, Inc., that it would acquire 
                Correctional. Zachariah, a GEO consultant, obtained material, 
                non-public information about a GEO-Correctional deal either from 
                his consulting relationship or from one or more of the GEO insiders 
                with whom he had a familial or other close, personal relationship. 
                Zachariah supplied the inside information to his brother and Nassberg, 
                who purchased approximately $162,000 worth and $32,000 worth of 
                Correctional stock, respectively.
              The SEC alleges that the defendants violated Section 10(b) of 
                the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. 
                The complaint seeks a judgment against all defendants providing 
                for injunctions, disgorgement of their ill-gotten gains with prejudgment 
                interest, and civil money penalties. The complaint also seeks 
                an order prohibiting Zachariah from serving as an officer or director 
                of a public company.
              The Commission acknowledges the assistance of the Financial Industry 
                Regulatory Authority (FINRA) in this matter.