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Daschle Friend Walked Away From Global Crossing With Millions

At the center of the issues that have complicated Tom Daschle's nomination to run the Department of Health and Human Services is his relationship with Leo Hindery, the politically connected founder of the private equity firm InterMedia.

Taxes aside, we still don't know much about what Hindery got for the $1 million-a-year consulting fee he paid Daschle. Hindery and his colleagues at InterMedia aren't speaking, and the New York Times reports only that, according to a Daschle spokeswoman, "[i]n addition to lending the prestige of his name, Mr. Daschle traveled to help raise money from investors for Mr. Hindery's new venture".

But whatever Daschle did for his very healthy pay check, his association with Hindery should raise some eyebrows.

Hindery, a media entrepreneur who in 2001 founded the YES Network as the TV home of the New York Yankees, was briefly the CEO of Global Crossing, the upstart fiber-optic carrier whose collapse in late 2001, amid claims that executives had made fraudulent claims about the state of the company's finances, rocked the financial world.

To be clear, Hindery had left by the time of the meltdown, and most accounts place the largest share of the blame for the company's crackup on its founder Gary Winick. But when Hindery left, in October 2000 -- not long after predicting, inaccurately, that the company would be cash-flow positive by early 2002 -- he was definitely in the money. He had negotiated the sale of one of the company's divisions to Exodus Communications, in a deal which netted Hindery himself nearly $250 million.

How? BusinessWeek explained at the time:

Based on his contract with Global Crossing, he'll own 5.5% of the company if there's a change of control -- something that Hindery himself manufactured over the past two months by brokering the deal to Exodus. With a strike price of $54.37 a share, Hindery's stake stands to make him nearly $250 million when Exodus completes its "definitive" deal to buy GlobalCenter.

Not bad work if you can get it. Though when, just over a year later, Global Crossing filed for the seventh-largest bankruptcy in American history, its investors and employees -- who in 2004 received a $325 million settlement stemming from the loss of their pensions and 401ks -- might have been less impressed.

But Hindery wasn't done there. In October 2002, he went to court to force Global Crossing to fork over another $708,000 in back pay and more than $100,000 in rent for an apartment at the Waldorf-Astoria Towers on Park Avenue. Hindery had had the foresight to write into his original Global Crossing contract the stipulation that the firm would keep footing the bill for the rent on his Park Avenue pad through Oct. 3, 2002, and would keep paying him a $1-million-a-year consulting fee through September of that year. A lawyer for Global Crossing's many creditors called the effort "laughable", telling the Wall Street Journal Hindery "can line up with all the other general unsecured creditors."

Change we can believe in!


12 Comments

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Hey and Obama used to pal around with Bill Ayers, asshole

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And your point, Garbage Mouth, is what exactly?

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Bullcrap character assassination by association is bullcrap and is beneath the usually fine operation here at TPM. We all decried it when the McCarthyites and neo-McCarthyites did it and I call BS on this crap from Zachary Roth.

Smearing Daschle by smearing Hindry is garbage. Not to mention that the entire insinuation against Hindry is that he made money in a company that later lost a lot of money.

The only logic behind this article is that if you have an association with someone who did something that some little Zachary finds unsavory means that you are somehow tainted. Never mind that the insinuation against Hindry is that he apparently made a shrewd play and made lots of money just before the market tanked.

I mean Hindry has a relationship with Obama and had a close one with Edwards before that. He is close to lots of democrats. I guess they are all infected.

The world is going to hell and you dipsy doodles are playing trivial pursuit. That stupidity I can believe in.

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"But whatever Daschle did for his very healthy pay check, his association with Hindery should raise some eyebrows."

******Daschle needs to do the right thing,step-down.But moreover for Obama to insist that Daschle still be appointed to head HHS is very troubling.Obama is showing scant regard for the folks who voted for him & who were sick of the "friends helping friends" routine that was so prevalent during the Clinton Admin.Seems like that corrupt practice is back in play.Very disheartening & shameful.I seem to remember that GWBush thought that his friends wrong doings were beyond reproach too.

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Will someone please get on here and talk us down? Daschle certainly has expertise on health care issues. He is definitely not the ONLY person well-qualified for this position; at Universities and think tanks and elsewhere in this giant country we are going to be able to find someone with great creds who can do this without baggage.

Why is Daschle worth defending? Did I miss his impressive run as Minority Leader? He seemed to embody the spineless Dem approach to Senate governing that has gotten the party a bad rap from those of us who support it.

I'm very willing to support him if he's got the bona fides, but I don't hear anyone saying anything other than that he's got a lot of healthcare expertise. It's complex, but it ain't nuclear physics.

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Corambis

I do think a very good case can be made for Daschle, but it is not all that easy when there is a rush-to-judgment mentally out there. I hope to do a blog with a bullet point case for why any progressive should be supporting Daschle.

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Looking forward to reading that post. Agree that there is a rush-to-judgment atmosphere. I think it's important that we keep our eyes on the prize: success in governing responsibly and effectively. Let's hope this isn't a bad choice because Daschle is part of the establishment. I doubt it's true, but marshaling facts would sure help.

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Obama picks his cabinet. That's how it works. It's not about who you want. It's about who he wants.

He obviously picked daschle because everyone agrees that we have been chasing our tail trying to get meaningful health care reform done only to be stymied in Congress for more than half a century. You wanna count the number of people who died, went bankrupt, lived in misery because of the that travesty. Daschle is there is get it done in congress. can you think of a a former legislator with a similar profile who has spent significant time also working on Health care?

Say what you will but guys who get to be majority leader know their way around how to get legislation passed.

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Zachary

You seem to be practicing in a kind of Judge-Jury-and-Executioner lynch-them-up-to-the-nearest-cottonwood journalism advocate my Newt Gingrich. Good job! Who's your hero? John-shoot-first-ask-questions-later-Wayne . Guilt-by-Associate McCarthyism!!! Is that your standard? Is that the standard of TPM? If you have a case against Daschle, put your money where you mouth is. Make your case! What we do not need now is a reincarnation of Manichean politics of the righteousness right.

The change Obama is trying to bring to politics is, in part, a change in the tone of public discourse. It is antithetical to kind of character-assassination you have put on display. I protest!

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Let's get this straight. The author of this piece, Zachary Ross, ends his article mocking Obama's campaign slogan 'change you can believe in' by bringing up an ASSOCIATION with Leo Hindrey, a guy that has not even been prosecuted for any wrongdoing whatsoever, but whose only sin was an ASSOCIATION of briefly being CEO of global crossings, the former dot com darling turned bust fiber optics giant?

That is so definitively weak as to be pathetic.

Zachary Ross, stupidity that you can recognize instantly.

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Actually my typo, that should be Zachary ROTH, stupidity that you can recognize instantly.

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Two points.

Tom Daschle is no different than the Republicans who got kicked out of office in '06. When he was in the Senate, Daschle's wife, Linda, sold face time to anyone who could pay the price.

The fact that Daschle brazenly pimped his wife after 9/11 left me with absolutely no doubt about his integrity or lack thereof.

Decent healthcare doesn't stand a chance with Tom Daschle in charge.

With regard to Global Crossing, the Great Telecom Swindle of the '90s is the biggest ripoff in American history that most Americans don't even know about.

Some people know about George Bush Sr.'s $14 million Global Crossing speech in Japan and Terry McAuliffe's $100k investment in Global Crossing that paid off to the tune of $18 million. (I'd verify that Bush actually gave the speech and McAuliffe actually ponied up the $100k if I could.)

But very few people ever said much publicly about how the fraud was pulled off. I worked at a local telephone company (CLEC) as a temp in early 2001 and I think I know how the scam worked.

Telecoms bill other telecoms for calls that pass through its lines and vice versa. If Verizon was my carrier, for example, and I made a call to someone who used Global Crossing, Global Crossing would charge Verizon for my call.

What I suspect was happening is that bogus long distance carriers like Global Crossing were routing calls back and forth through the CLECs to pad the bills.

Verizon, for example, paid Global Crossing's bill but Global Crossing didn't pay Verizon. Eventually, of course, Global Crossing and the rest of the crooked telecoms had to go out of business.

I think it was the NY Times that carried a story aobut a whistleblower in some place like Minneapolis who charged that his company was re-routing calls to AT&T via Canada.

I looked up the phone number of the guy's lawyer and left a message to the effect that I was pretty sure another company was doing the same thing but the lawyer never returned my call.

I posted about my personal telecom experience (with details) in the NY Times' long defunct Abuzz forum. Someone who claimed to be in the business told me that a telecom could do what I thought was being done but who knows.

If I'm right, Gary Winnick knew what Global Crossing was doing and he knew exactly when the company would have to pull the plug.

Al Gore, iirc, opposed the much anticipated '96 Telecommunications Act which got the ball rolling by giving telecoms carte blanche. "Anticipated" meaning everyone in the telecom industry was salivating at the prospect of getting rich quick.

The rich aren't getting richer because they are smarter than the rest of us. They cheat. Big time.

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