KEY POINTS
  • Three Twilio engineers had access to details on customer use and shared confidential information with friends and family members.
  • The SEC charged the three employees and four others with insider trading.
  • The group generated over $1 million in profits, the SEC said.
Jeff Lawson, CEO, Twilio

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday charged three software engineers at cloud software vendor Twilio and several of their friends and family members with involvement in an insider trading scheme.

Between March and May 2020, as cloud tools were gaining use due to the surge in remote work, Twilio engineers Lokesh Lagudu, Chotu Pulagam and Hari Sure accessed financial information from the company's databases. Through a private chat group, they shared that information with others, who then executed trades before Twilio announced first-quarter results in May 2020, according to the complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for California's Northern District.