18 June,2012 08:54 AM IST | | Agencies
Ironically, Gupta's fall from grace was brought about by another Indian American, Preet Bharara, nicknamed the âSheriff of Wall Street', for leading a wave of insider trading probes over the last two-and-a-half years.
"Having fallen from respected insider to convicted inside trader, Gupta has now exchanged the lofty board room for the prospect of a lowly jail cell," as Bharara succinctly summed it up after a federal court jury convicted Gupta on three counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy.
Born in Maniktala, Kolkata December 2, 1948 to a freedom fighter journalist Ashwini Kumar Gupta, Rajat became an orphan at the age of 18 as his parents died one after the other within two years.
His upward journey began after he received a BE in Mechanical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, in 1971 and chose to go to Harvard Business School, where he was named a Baker Scholar.
Gupta joined McKinsey & Company in 1973 as one of the earliest Indian-Americans at the consultancy. Starting his career in New York, he moved to Scandinavia to become the head of McKinsey offices there in 1981.
In 1994, he was elected the firm's first managing director born outside of the US.u00a0