Updated

Former star technology banker Frank Quattrone (search) was sentenced Wednesday to 18 months in prison plus two years probation for obstructing federal investigations into some of the most popular stock offerings of the 1990s. He also was fined $90,000.

Quattrone, 48, a banker credited with being among the first to see the coming technology bonanza of the 1990s, was convicted in May of attempting to block grand jury and regulatory investigations by forwarding an e-mail to co-workers reminding them to "clean up" their files.

U.S. District Judge Richard Owen ordered Quattrone to surrender in 50 days, and granted a defense request to recommend that Quattrone be sent to a prison camp in California, where he lives.

The judge enhanced the sentencing guideline range after agreeing with prosecutors that the former Credit Suisse First Boston (search) banker had lied on the witness stand when he testified he did not intend to obstruct justice. Probation officials had recommended five months in prison and five months home confinement.

Before the sentencing, Quattrone told Owen in a steady voice: "I humbly ask that you show mercy and compassion for me and my family, for whom any separation from me would be extremely detrimental."

Quattrone's wife is chronically ill, and Quattrone's lawyers have said his 15-year-old daughter has had psychological problems.

Owen said the impact on the family could be softened by its financial assets; the wife has $50 million and the daughter has $26 million in a trust fund.

The judge noted that it was not unusual that family members would suffer after a father and husband was convicted of a federal crime. "That's one helluva blow to a child," he said.

Outside court after the sentencing, Quattrone looked into television cameras, his voice breaking, and said: "To my family in California, I'm coming home soon. I'm OK, and I love you. I can hold my head high right now because I know I'm innocent."

The sentence makes Quattrone the most prominent Wall Street figure since junk-bond dealer Michael Milken (search) to face time behind bars.

The case turned on a 22-word e-mail that Quattrone forwarded to CSFB bankers on Dec. 5, 2000, encouraging them to "clean up" their files before the holidays.

Quattrone added: "I strongly advise you to follow these procedures."

At trial, Quattrone claimed he was not thinking about ongoing government investigations when he sent the e-mail. He contended it was a simple reminder to follow the company's document-retention policy.

Quattrone was tried on the same three charges — obstructing a grand jury, obstructing federal regulators and witness tampering — last fall, but that trial ended in a hung jury.

CSFB paid $100 million to settle related civil charges. Quattrone left the bank in early 2003.

Quattrone's investment-banking stamp was on some of Silicon Valley's flagship companies in the late 1990s — Amazon.com (AMZN), Netscape Communications Corp., Cisco Systems (CSCO) and Intuit (INTU), among others.

By late 2000, the government was looking into whether some CSFB clients had paid kickbacks in exchange for getting shares of hot IPOs. The IPO investigation closed with no criminal charges filed.

Lawyers for Quattrone have said they plan to take their case to a federal appeals court, arguing Owen inconsistently applied rules about what evidence could be introduced.

Quattrone made as much as $120 million a year at CSFB. He gained fame in the industry by taking technology companies like Amazon and Netscape public for various banks.

Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.