New York AG Andrew Cuomo added a new name to the growing list of indictments in the New York Pension Fund scandal: Saul Meyer, the (youthful-looking) 38-year-old founder of the private equity fund Aldus Equity. Meyer won't be the last, Cuomo assured reporters at a press conference announcing the charges today:
"I believe we are disclosing a national network of actors who often acted in concert and did this all across the country," Mr. Cuomo said. "They collaborated, they often partnered and victimized states and taxpayers across the country. It's also an ongoing scam."We said as much yesterday, when we showed you how a key figure in the pension scandals in New Mexico and New York was a direct descendant-in-law of a key figure in a California pension scam of the nineties. And we told you about Aldus, a key name linking the New York fraud to a suspected scheme to scam the teachers' retirement fund in New Mexico and possibly other public pension funds, last week.
Aldus's usual business was advising state pension funds on private equity investments. But it went a step further in New York, using its access to the pension's billions to arrange a $375 million investment to create its own private equity fund. The idea was hatched by Hank Morris, the top adviser to former state comptroller Alan Hevesi who is charged with defrauding the pension fund in a scheme to collect phony "finder's fees." According to the indictment, Aldus paid Morris about $320,000 to secure itself a $375 million investment from the pension fund. Not bad for a private equity firm that, according to this Dallas Business Journal puff profile that ran (all of) two months ago: "started in 2003 with no clients."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)It's clear New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's probe into the taxpayer-supported Bank of America-Merrill Lynch merger has widened considerably since he began digging into Merrill's accelerated payout of $3.6 billion in bonuses before the disclosure of a devastating fourth quarter loss. But where is it all headed?
Yesterday Cuomo wrote a letter to Congress, the SEC and TARP Oversight chair Elizabeth Warren disclosing a few findings "that raise questions about the transparency of the TARP program, as well as about corporate governance and disclosure practices at Bank of America." But as former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson once said about such disclosures, the carefully-worded, heavily redacted documents "create more questions than they answer." The most headline-grabbing detail was Paulson's threat to fire Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis if he backed out of the bank's agreement to buy Merrill Lynch at the agreed upon $10 a share; the second was the revelation that the Fed and Treasury had left the SEC "in the dark" throughout the entire process.
The immediate question at hand is whether Lewis broke securities laws or violated his fiduciary duty to protect his shareholders when he went along with Paulson. Certainly many Bank of America shareholders believe so; the news was met with a statement from CtW, the shareholder group campaigning to oust Lewis in a proxy battle declaring that Lewis "violated their legal duties to shareholders in order to protect their own employment interests" when he decided not to invoke the deal's Material Adverse Change clause, which allows companies to get out of merger agreements under some circumstances. Bank of America shares have lost about two-thirds their value since the Lewis announced it was buying the investment bank.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (7) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has just released documents from his investigation into Bank of America, its receipt of government money, and those billions in bonuses that went to Merrill Lynch executives.
Here's one quick nugget we found: It looks like then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson didn't keep the SEC -- whose role, of course, is to protect investors -- informed on the government's intense December 2008 discussions with B of A about Merrill's losses, and possible government assistance for B of A.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS (4) | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)The high-profile proprietor of a second feeder fund has been charged in connection with Bernie Madoff's multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme.
A civil fraud lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo charges Ezra Merkin, the former chairman of GMAC, and a prominent Madoff associate and New York philanthropist, with "betraying hundreds of investors" by placing billions with Madoff without their knowledge, reports the Wall Street Journal.
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