Lest you think that Siemens is having all the fun on the German business scene... Things at Volkswagen have been similarly interesting (and illicit) of late. BusinessWeek has the skinny on the sex and bribery scandal at V-Dub, including a recent 48 count indictment against one of the car-maker's former supervisory board members.
Texas billionaire Sam Wyly is concerned that the cozy relationship between Milberg founder Melvyn Weiss and Computer Associates board of director member (and former highly embarrassing U.S. Senator, Alfonse D'Amato), might have undercut the compensation obtained for aggrieved investors in CA.
The reasonable deal that followed included an end to all pending actions against CA, immunity for past and present CA executives and board members as well as less that a penny to the dollar reimbursment of lost funds - a result which the Wyly team has labeled "one of the most egregious cases of [legal] malpractice I've seen in 23 years.". Get the full-on details of the Wyly / Milberg suit at Newsday.
And for a little more background on Mr. Wyly, including proxy fights at CA and a particularly spectacular hedge fund flame-out, see this BusinessWeek article.
If you need a little background on how these three gents fit into the massive Enron fraud puzzle, click on to the tags below to find our past coverage. If all you want is the latest news on the NatWest Three, just click on through to this AFP article. I tell you what, being stuck for 17 months in Texas would make me want to plead guilty to almost anything just get get out of there. *
-- MDT
* We Louisianians are honor-bound to take shots at Texas. Relax, Sam Houston.
The Guardian is reporting that Swiss prosecutors have agreed to hand over to U.S. authorities financial records linking the Saudi royal family to the BAE arms trading scandal. The U.S. government is seeking a million plus pages of documents relating from multiple sources touched by the probe. Thusfar Britain's Serious Fraud Office has denied U.S. requests for documents, something that goes back six months. This makes the Swiss disclosures all the more interesting.
This Fortune article gets a bit technical for the corporate balance sheet novice, but it provides an interesting look at what the big banks are sharing (and not sharing) with their investors.
Michael Mendelson entered an unexpected guilty plea at what was supposed to be a preliminary hearing relating to allegations of fraud at his now collapsed Toronto-based hedge fund, Portus Alternative Asset Management.
Apparently he is, as the judge in the case believes, a changed man and accepted a two year sentence as well as responsibility for his actions.
Mendelson will also be testifying against his former (and quite literal) partner in crime, Boaz Mason. But Mason, perhaps a less transformed individual, won't be showing up any time soon. He fled Canada for Israel to avoid prosecution.
The disintegration of Portus left about 26,000 wondering what had become of the $750 million they had placed in the care of Mendelson and Mason.
You can find background on the Cornerstone case right here. As for what's happening in the new and now, former Cornerstone Capital Management executive, Joseph Profit the second (and how could you go wrong with a hedge fund manager of that name?) was in the news, having received a permanent injunction preventing he and his firm from profiting further from their fraudulent activities. They'll also face civil penalties and be forced to pa restitution to wronged parties - amounts as yet uncertain.
Earlier this month Israeli authorities arrested two private investigators, Rafi Pridan and Aviv Mor, who they claim has been using illegal wiretaps to gain information about Israel Strategic Affairs Minister Avigdor Lieberman and businessman Michael Chernoy. Another individual, Avigdor Eskin was also arrested. Eskin is belived to have served as the intermediary between the investigators and their employer.
And here's where it gets interesting... The Israeli police believe the man running the show is Russian billionaire, Oleg Deripaska. Deripaska, who has a history of engaging in corporate espionage as well as a few other concurrent legal entanglements is apparently dead-set on beating out former Russian President Vladimir Putin as the person most likely to be mistaken for a James Bond villain. Lots more on the investigation, included Derpiaska's potential motives, right here.
Bayou Hedge Fund co-founder, James Marquez saw his sentencing hearing was moved to today, November 20th due to "disputed issues of fact." As of this evening nothing notable has come across the wire. But we'll keep an eye out.
If you'd like to recap, here's Marquez's guilty plea from late last year. Bayou, of course, was one of the more notable hedge fund flameouts of the past few years and the one that started putting these stories on the front page, not just the front page of the business section.
Paul Eustace is headed to court. A two count indictment has been filed relating to his conduct at PAAM. UBS and The Man Group have also been implicated. You know what they say - all's fair in love and The Caymans.
Corporate email and computer surveillance is one thing, but tailing employees around town and accessing personal email accounts? Given the recent HP fiasco, it sounds like PR, if not legal, nightmare waiting to happen. Very interesting piece on Boeing's tactics from the Seattle Post Intelligencer. Highly recommended.
Or so sobriquets the New York Times. Novitzky is the I.R.S. agent that brought down Barry Bonds, a bust five years in the making, along with a host of others. Not without his critics though. Some (defense counsel leading the charge) say that Novitsky is just as much of a cheater as the athletes and doctors he has helped prosecute.
The Siemens black accounts / bribery scandal would be the biggest FCPA case of all time and the U.S. has a history of showing up foreign governments when it comes to penalties. Conventinal wisdom says that the fines imposed here will be the biggest yet. More on the U.S. Siemens investigation from BusinessWeek.
The passage of H.R. 3013, The Attorney Client Privilege Act of 2007, means we're one step further in the ongoing trench warfare between corporate entities and regulation. For background on the bill, check out this post from October 9, 2007. Strange bedfellows on this particular issue, to say the least.
Gregory Reyes just had a good day. The former Brocade CEO was recently convicted on charges relating to stock option backdating and since then his future had been looking, lets face it, on the bleak side. But that was before he got some reasonably good news from federal Judge Charles R. Breyer.
Breyer elected to delay Reyes' sentencing until after the conclusion of the trial Stephanie Jensen, the former Brocade head of human resources and an alleged co-conspirator. Several charges against Jensen were also dropped. All this is seen as an indication that Reyes expected 10-year plus prison terms might be shrinking.
Well, as much as a semi-autonomous central bank can get personal:
Starting this month, the Fed will publish its economic forecasts four times a year rather than just twice. More important, the forecasts will look three years into the future, instead of the current two, and will include considerable detail about the range of views among policy makers.
Bloomberg anoints Sean Coffey of Bernstein Litowitz as the new class action king. BusinessWeek made a similar proclamation two years ago. Suffice to say these guys (the folks who took down Worldcom, so respect) are probably seeing a few new opportunities come their way given the spectacular Milberg/Lerach indict-o-rama flameout.
Nearly two thirds of the largest U.S. firms dumped one of their outside counsel in the last year and a half. Only a third would even recommend their outside counsel to a colleague. And over half have fired a firm in the last year.
Apparently. The talk is now that the company's off the books payments total almost $2 billion. Already 140 Siemens employees have been fired in the probe and 330 more have received some form of reprimand while keeping their jobs. More from the IHT.
Six inexplicably popular TV ministers will be getting a close look from Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley. Combed-over faith healer Benny Hinn, the impeccably groomed, ironically named Creflo Dollar and rare bird female minister, Joyce Meyer are all on Grassley's list.
Of the inquiry, Grassley stated, "I don't want to conclude that there's a problem, but I have an obligation to donors and the taxpayers to find out more. People who donated should have their money spent as intended and in adherence with the tax code."
I must confess I am a semi-compulsive addict of these programs and will sit for hours just soaking up their manipulative broadcasts. My personal favorite TV charlatan is Robert Tilton of Success-N-Life, who despite having been repeatedly, public discredited still find followers out there amongst the weak and the vulnerable.
UPDATE: More as of this morning from the AP. Details on exactly where this investigation should go, disclosure requirements for these types of non-denominational mega-churches and comments from some who are critical of the Grassley probe.
For the intermittent postings. Blogger is having site-wide problems posting to a variety of FTP servers, mine included it seems. There are several posts and some format changes waiting to get out of purgatory. Including this one, so you may not even see the note until after things have been cleaned up.
Venture capitalist and bon vivantThomas Perkins is one of the long-time stars of Silicon Valley, but he gained a different kind of noteriety last year when he went to war with then Hewlett Packard Chairman of the Board, Patrica Dunn.
Perkins, an HP director, was fingered (incorrectly) by Dunn as the mole in what became known as the Kona II investigation of HP employees and the journalists with which they may have sharing company secrets. Dunn initiated the investigation, with famed Cali counsel Wilson Sonsini at her side, employing several independent private investigators - all in an attempt to shut down the leaks she felt were plaguing the company.
As has been widely reported, the investigation went well beyond what was advisable or legal and led to a major conflagration in the press as well as state and national legislatures over the issue of phone record privacy and the investigative tactic known as pretexting. Dunn herself, along with HP's general counsel, was a casualty of all this attention, losing her chairmanship and eventually resigning from the HP board.
Jabre Capital Partner's newJabCap Mangoustawill be an "an open-ended long-short fund with a bias to mid-cap European companies" according to the Financial Times. The planned launch date is mid-December, with funds approaching three quarters of a billion dollars.
Managing the new Jabre venture will be the well pedigreed Renaud Saleur who Jabre recruited away from their mutual former firm, GLG Partners, one of Europe's largest hedge funds. At GLG Saleur Had managed a fund that shares the name Mangousta. Cheeky, no...?
Philipe Jabre, who was a star trader for GLG Partners, is perhaps most famous for receiving (and challenging) a record fine from the FSA in connection with a questionable 2003 bank bond deal.
It is safe to say, I think, that Jabre has landed on his feet. More on his road back from scandal via the tags below.
Ousted and indicted former Apple General Counsel, Nancy Heinen is readying her defense against stock option backdating charges from the SEC. Apple dismissed Heinen when the SEC came calling on the company regarding questionable grants practices.
While Apple patriarch, Steve Jobs seemed to be at least momentarily in the cross-hairs (and many predicted his sort, swift downfall), it was Heinen along with a few other high level company employees who have ultimately faced repercussions.
In her defense Heinen is seeking financial records from fellow former Apple in-house attorney, Wendy Howell. Howell, also canned in the options mess, was the individual who actually wrote the questionable options grant to Steve Jobs. Howell has indicated she falsified the options grant under pressure from Heinen.
Heinen wants access to the documents to show that Howell was under considerable financial distress at the time, hoping to discredit her testimony. Howell has thusfar resisted the overtures of the Heinen defense team citing privacy concerns.