Author Topic: Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy  (Read 356 times)

Offline gofaster

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« on: September 23, 2003, 09:48:05 AM »
Last week's news, but somehow I missed it.  Three high-level Merrill Lynch executives are charged with conspiring with Enron to perpetuate a fraud against investors.  So, by my count, that's 3 Enron execs, 2 Arthur Andersen accountants, and now 3 Merrill Lynch guys, all working to make Enron look better than it was.

===From Yahoo News=====

Ex-Merrill Lynch Execs Plead Innocent
Thu Sep 18, 9:03 AM ET  
 

By KRISTEN HAYS, AP Business Writer

HOUSTON - Three former Merrill Lynch executives were charged with conspiracy Wednesday for allegedly helping Enron Corp. inflate earnings with a loan disguised as a sale of Nigerian barges. I wonder if they're also behind the Nigeran email scam claiming to have millions of dollars hidden in an account.


Daniel Bayly, Robert Furst and James Brown became the first Wall Street bankers to be hit with criminal charges in the scandal that brought down the energy company. The three pleaded innocent to the charges.


The criminal charges do not involve Merrill Lynch, which reached a side agreement that would allow the brokerage to avoid any corporate culpability if it implements "a series of sweeping reforms" to improve the integrity of its transactions with clients and third parties.  WTF is this?  A slap on the wrist? :mad:


The three men were charged with conspiracy to commit fraud and falsifying books and records. Brown also was charged with obstruction and lying to a grand jury investigating the scandal.


All three pleaded innocent during a court appearance Wednesday afternoon and each was freed on $100,000 bond each and ordered to surrender his passport. A tentative Nov. 10 trial date was set.


Prosecutors allege that in 1999, Enron, with Merrill's knowledge, booked a short-term $7 million investment from the brokerage as a $12 million profit from the sale of Nigerian barges. The profit was used to make Enron appear to have met earnings targets.


Then-Enron treasurer Jeff McMahon approached Merrill with the sham deal
, prosecutors said.


The barge transaction is among the many schemes former Enron finance chief Andrew Fastow, named in the indictment Wednesday as a co-conspirator, is alleged to have masterminded. Fastow is awaiting trial in April on charges of fraud, money laundering and insider trading.


Bayly, former global head and chairman of investment banking, retired from Merrill last year. Furst, former managing director in investment banking, quit in 2001. Brown, former senior finance chief, retired earlier this year.  The sleezy heels took the money and ran! :mad:


In Washington, meanwhile, the Justice Department announced Merrill Lynch accepted responsibility for its employees' conduct and plans to implement reforms. An independent auditor and outside monitor will oversee Merrill Lynch's compliance with these changes, officials said.


"The American public is entitled to a full accounting of the circumstances behind Enron's collapse, and the department is committed to prosecuting those who lie or mislead in order to obstruct our investigation," said Assistant Attorney General Christopher Wray, head of the Justice Department's criminal division.


Wray said the government has entered into similar agreements in the past with companies seeking for avoid criminal charges.


Wray told reporters that Merrill Lynch can avoid any corporate culpability if it lives up to the agreement over the next 18 months. Wray said the deal could be a model for future prosecutions of corporate wrongdoing.


"There's a right way and a wrong way to respond when the government comes knocking at your door. Merrill Lynch responded the right way," Wray said. "I do think that what happened here to Merrill should be instructive to other companies who find themselves in a criminal investigation."


Merrill Lynch spokesman Mark Herr said the New York-based company had no comment on the indictments, but said the new internal policies "will help ensure that these kinds of transactions do not occur in the future."


"We have cooperated fully with this investigation and will continue to do so," Herr said.


Merrill Lynch in March settled a civil complaint with the Securities and Exchange Commission partially over the same Nigerian barge deal and agreed to pay $80 million into a fund to benefit Enron fraud victims.


The three defendants indicted Wednesday face a maximum sentence of five years in prison on the conspiracy charge. Brown also faces maximum sentences of five years on the perjury count and 10 years for obstruction.

"We're going to defend these charges in court," Ira Lee Sorkin, Furst's attorney, said. "There is nothing Rob Furst did in any way that was not abetted and approved by senior officials at Merrill Lynch."  This is an interesting wrinkle.  If Furst was authorized to engage in criminal activities by the company, then Merrill's deal with the Justice Department goes down the toilet, right?

Bayly's lawyers, Richard Schaeffer and Andrew Lawler, released a statement saying the evidence would back his innocent plea. "He has been wrongly and unfairly indicted for crimes he did not commit," they said.

Brown's lawyer, Lawrence Zweifach, declined comment.
:eek:

Offline Bodhi

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« Reply #1 on: September 23, 2003, 10:11:42 AM »
I bet those are gonna have sore bums in a short while....

Serves em right.
I regret doing business with TD Computer Systems.

Offline Ripsnort

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« Reply #2 on: September 23, 2003, 10:12:48 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Bodhi
I bet those are gonna have sore bums in a short while....

Serves em right.


Unfortunately, they'll probably end up in a low or light security jail house.

Offline Modas

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« Reply #3 on: September 23, 2003, 10:13:07 AM »
sweeping reforms????  WTF???? :mad: :mad:


I got your sweeping reforms right here.  Give all those bastards that are stealing from hard working people the chair.   Strap 'em down and let them fry....

Do that to a couple exec's and this crap will stop right quick.  This whole business is a bunch of BS.  What ever happened to all those enron/accounting types that went to trial?


Its probably a good thing I'm not in law-enforcement. :D

Offline Frogm4n

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« Reply #4 on: September 23, 2003, 10:22:19 AM »
I know what will solve this problem! Deregulate everything, and tax cuts!

Offline gofaster

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Merrill Lynch execs charged with fraud, conspiracy
« Reply #5 on: September 23, 2003, 11:09:33 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Modas
sweeping reforms????  WTF???? :mad: :mad:


I got your sweeping reforms right here.  Give all those bastards that are stealing from hard working people the chair.   Strap 'em down and let them fry....

Do that to a couple exec's and this crap will stop right quick.  This whole business is a bunch of BS.  What ever happened to all those enron/accounting types that went to trial?


Fastow, the big fish in the fryer, won't go to trial until April.  I predict either (a) he'll go down or (b) he'll commit suicide.  I also suspect that if he goes down, he'll try to cop a plea so the Feds can get the drop on Ken Lay.  Otherwise, Bubba is going to love him in the slammer.

"Sweeping reforms" are a bunch of hooey unless there's something to back them up, like enforceable laws.  In the corporate world, today's policy is just a decision away from being changed.  "We are pleased to announce..." emails come out every week.

Whatever happened to Michael Milliken?