Feb. 28, 2026
Tom & Sue Hardin On Wired On Wall Street

What’s the difference between a mistake… and a bad decision? My guest knows this only too well. Tom Hardin has been on the show several times before. As Tipper X, he wore a wire for the FBI and helped build the largest insider trading investigation in US history.
Since then, he has spent nearly a decade speaking to organisations around the world about slippery slopes, rationalisation, and how good people drift into serious trouble. In this episode, he returns to discuss his new book, Wired on Wall Street.
The book goes beyond the insider trading case many listeners already know. It explores the ambition, insecurity and desire for status that shaped his early career, and the patterns he only recognised years later when writing it down.
For the first time on a podcast, Tom is also joined by his wife, Sue. She played no role in the trades that changed his life, but her life was dramatically altered by them. She reflects on discovering the truth, keeping a secret that wasn’t hers, facing sentencing uncertainty, and what it means to rebuild together. This conversation isn’t really about insider trading; it’s about character.
Key Themes
AI-Generated Timestamped Summary
00:00 – More than insider trading
Why this conversation is about character — guilt vs shame, mistakes vs bad decisions, and the cost of ethical drift.
02:30 – The story in brief
Tom recaps becoming “Tipper X” and helping build the largest insider trading investigation in US history.
03:15 – Why write the book now?
After a decade of speaking, Tom explains what finally pushed him to put the full story — childhood, ambition, insecurity — on paper.
08:00 – The deeper pattern
From Georgia to the Ivy League to hedge funds: the outsider mindset, status anxiety, and the slippery slope.
16:00 – Small decisions, big consequences
Early corner-cutting, rationalisation, and the fraud triangle in action.
26:00 – Resume virtues vs eulogy virtues
How Tom’s definition of success changed — and the difference between shame and guilt.
31:00 – A simple test for integrity
One question that could replace most Codes of Conduct:
Are you willing to be held accountable for this decision?
Sue’s Perspective
40:30 – The night she found out
Shock, disbelief, and the future collapsing in an instant.
44:00 – Keeping a secret that wasn’t hers
White lies, reputational fear, and the strain of silence.
49:00 – Sentencing day
Why she insisted on being there — no matter the outcome.
52:30 – Reinvention and resilience
Stay-at-home dad years, ultramarathons, and rebuilding a life together.
Links
Wired on Wall Street: www.tipperx.com/book
Tipper X Website: www.tipperx.com
Tom's previous appearances on the show:
Tom's experience as FBI Informant Tipper X - https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/tom-hardin-on-his-experience/
Turning Crime Into A Calling - https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/tom-hardin-on-turning-a-crime-into-a-calling/
Tom's Substack: https://substack.com/@tipperx
Tom on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tipperx/
Since then, he has spent nearly a decade speaking to organisations around the world about slippery slopes, rationalisation, and how good people drift into serious trouble. In this episode, he returns to discuss his new book, Wired on Wall Street.
The book goes beyond the insider trading case many listeners already know. It explores the ambition, insecurity and desire for status that shaped his early career, and the patterns he only recognised years later when writing it down.
For the first time on a podcast, Tom is also joined by his wife, Sue. She played no role in the trades that changed his life, but her life was dramatically altered by them. She reflects on discovering the truth, keeping a secret that wasn’t hers, facing sentencing uncertainty, and what it means to rebuild together. This conversation isn’t really about insider trading; it’s about character.
Key Themes
- Why calling something a “mistake” can soften accountability
- The psychology of slippery slopes and rationalisation
- Status anxiety and the need to belong
- Resume virtues vs eulogy virtues
- Shame versus guilt — and why the distinction matters
- The hidden impact of ethical failure on spouses and families
- What writing a book can reveal that telling a story on stage cannot
- The freedom that comes from having nothing left to hide
AI-Generated Timestamped Summary
00:00 – More than insider trading
Why this conversation is about character — guilt vs shame, mistakes vs bad decisions, and the cost of ethical drift.
02:30 – The story in brief
Tom recaps becoming “Tipper X” and helping build the largest insider trading investigation in US history.
03:15 – Why write the book now?
After a decade of speaking, Tom explains what finally pushed him to put the full story — childhood, ambition, insecurity — on paper.
08:00 – The deeper pattern
From Georgia to the Ivy League to hedge funds: the outsider mindset, status anxiety, and the slippery slope.
16:00 – Small decisions, big consequences
Early corner-cutting, rationalisation, and the fraud triangle in action.
26:00 – Resume virtues vs eulogy virtues
How Tom’s definition of success changed — and the difference between shame and guilt.
31:00 – A simple test for integrity
One question that could replace most Codes of Conduct:
Are you willing to be held accountable for this decision?
Sue’s Perspective
40:30 – The night she found out
Shock, disbelief, and the future collapsing in an instant.
44:00 – Keeping a secret that wasn’t hers
White lies, reputational fear, and the strain of silence.
49:00 – Sentencing day
Why she insisted on being there — no matter the outcome.
52:30 – Reinvention and resilience
Stay-at-home dad years, ultramarathons, and rebuilding a life together.
Links
Wired on Wall Street: www.tipperx.com/book
Tipper X Website: www.tipperx.com
Tom's previous appearances on the show:
Tom's experience as FBI Informant Tipper X - https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/tom-hardin-on-his-experience/
Turning Crime Into A Calling - https://www.humanriskpodcast.com/tom-hardin-on-turning-a-crime-into-a-calling/
Tom's Substack: https://substack.com/@tipperx
Tom on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tipperx/



















