Three weeks ago we told you about accusations that the New Mexico State Investment Council had been under political pressure to invest teachers' retirement funds in risky investments like a $90 million "toxic waste" CDO backed by subprime mortgages -- and wondered if any of the other intensifying corruption investigations across the country might involve some of the same pay-for-players.
Sure enough, a few names emerged last week to link the New Mexico pension fund scandal to the alleged conspiracy to defraud the New York general pension fund under investigation by the state attorney general's office. One was Obama car czar Steve Rattner, who paid alleged ringleader Hank Morris more than a million dollars for securing investments in both states' pension funds. Morris was indicted in March for collecting $30 million in fraudulent "finder's fees" as a top adviser to the former state comptroller Alan Hevesi, in collusion with the pension fund's manager David Loglisci. But the indictment didn't address Morris's "placement" services in other states; his name turned up on a list of placement agents released by the New Mexico State Investment Council as the broker of a $20 million investment in Rattner's private equity firm Quadrangle.
The other thread running through both the New York and New Mexico pension funds was the advisory firm Aldus Equity, whose founder Saul Meyer was charged yesterday with participating in the New York conspiracy and which also until this week advised similar investments in New Mexico.
The further we looked, the wider and farther-back the suspicions of public pension fund pay-to-play seemed to extend, as Cuomo noted himself at yesterday's press conference:
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