Andrew Left faces trial for alleged market manipulation in Los Angeles

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Andrew Left, the outspoken short seller behind Citron Research, is headed to a criminal trial in Los Angeles on charges that he used social media to manipulate stock prices and pocket more than $16 million in illicit profits. Jury selection is set to begin May 11, 2026.

The charges and the alleged scheme

Federal prosecutors allege that Left ran a scheme from 2018 to 2023 in which he published misleading stock recommendations on social media, then traded against his own publicly stated positions to generate quick profits. The Department of Justice indicted Left on July 25, 2024, on multiple counts of securities fraud and making false statements. If convicted on all counts, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

The alleged playbook was straightforward but effective. Left would publish bold, attention-grabbing takes on popular stocks, including names like Nvidia, Tesla, and GameStop, companies with enormous retail followings and volatile price action. Prosecutors say Left then rapidly reversed his trading positions to capture the resulting price swings.

Federal prosecutors claim Left also tipped off hedge funds before publishing his social media commentary, giving them a head start on trades. He allegedly received compensation for these advance alerts through fake invoices, adding a layer of deliberate concealment to the scheme.

The SEC filed a parallel civil suit, claiming Left’s gains from the alleged manipulation totaled $20 million, a figure slightly higher than the DOJ’s $16 million estimate.

Left’s defense and Citron’s history

Left has maintained that the charges are baseless. His position is that his public commentary represented good faith analysis, the kind of opinionated market research that short sellers have published for decades.

Citron’s early short position on Valeant Pharmaceuticals, which later became Bausch Health, was widely credited as one of the catalysts that brought the company’s aggressive pricing practices into public view. Left’s January 2021 short call on GameStop collided head-on with the retail trading frenzy that sent the stock into the stratosphere.

The DOJ’s investigation into short-selling practices has been underway since 2019, well before the GameStop saga.

What this means for markets and investors

The core legal question is deceptively simple: when does aggressive public stock analysis cross the line into market manipulation?

If, on the other hand, the prosecution successfully proves that Left was deliberately lying about his positions, front-running his own recommendations with hedge fund clients, and fabricating invoices to hide payments, that’s a much narrower case.

Investors should watch closely how the court handles the timeline of Left’s trades relative to his public statements. The prosecution’s ability to prove that Left systematically reversed positions immediately after publishing bullish or bearish calls will likely determine the outcome. Pattern evidence, showing this wasn’t a one-time occurrence but a repeated strategy over five years, will be the government’s strongest weapon.

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