Report Alleges Bush Administration DOJ Shielded BP and Executives from Criminal Prosecution over Alaska Spill

As the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf of Mexico turns two months old, an article in Digital Journal details how the government considered bringing criminal charges against British Petroleum and its executives during the Bush Administration. The article quotes Scott West, a former Special Agent in Charge for the Environmental Protection Agency. West was in charge of investigating the rupture of a pipeline at Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, which occurred in March 2006. The rupture went undetected for nearly a week due to malfunctions in monitoring equipment, and spilled more than a quarter of a million gallons of crude oil. The rupture was reportedly the size of a pencil eraser and was caused by corrosion. BP shut down five oil processing centers for nearly two weeks, causing a rise in gas prices.

EPA's criminal division, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice spent thousands of hours investigating the rupture, and supposedly was considering criminal charges against BP and certain of its executives for ignoring warnings from employees about the condition of pipeline and the monitoring equipment.

However, the article claims that the DOJ allegedly "killed" the investigation in August of 2007. BP pled guilty to a misdemeanor violation of the Clean Water Act and paid a $20 million fine. BP also entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the government in relation to an explosion at a refinery in Texas City which resulted in 15 deaths.  

Florida Ponzi Con Man Scott Rothstein Gets 50 Years

Florida attorney and mastermind of a $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme, Scott Rothstein, was sentenced to 50 years yesterday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The scam involved investments in non-existent settlements, and resulted in the loss of about $400 million to 400 victims. Rothstein wrote a letter to the court stating that he had entered into the scheme in order to help his law firm, Rothstein, Rosenfeldt & Adler, meet its costs of expansion. Rothstein used the income and his client's funds to live a lavish lifestyle, and to associate with the powerful and famous, including Florida Governor Charlie Crist and California Governor Arnold Schwartzenegger. When the scheme unraveled last October, Rothstein fled to Morocco, but returned after "praying" for several days.

The government had sought a sentence of 40 years, and Rothstein's counsel had argued for a reduced sentence based upon Rothstein's cooperation with authorities following his arrest, however the court imposed a longer sentence, citing Rothstein's "greed and arrogance." Rothstein reportedly has assisted authorities in helping to set up a reputed organized crime figure.

Only one of the many victims, a client whom Rothstein had represented in a municipal proceeding, spoke at the sentencing. Another victim, auto magnate Ed Morse, has claimed $57 million alone in losses from Rothstein's conduct.

The chief operating officer of Rothstein's firm, Debra Villegas, is expected to plead guilty on Friday to charges of conspiring with Rothstein in the scheme. Villegas is the only other individual from Rothstein Rosenfeldt & Adler to face criminal charges. A bankruptcy proceeding continues to attempt to recover assets, and investors have sued numerous defendants, including Toronto Dominion (TD) Bank, which Rothstein moved his monies through.

SEC Goes After Goldman Sachs in Financial Crisis Fallout

The story of the week is the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing a complaint against international investment firm Goldman Sachs ("Goldman") on April 15 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleging that Goldman and a Goldman employee, Fabrice Tourre, a former Vice President of Goldman in New York and current Executive Director of Goldman Sachs International in London, allegedly made materially false statements to investors regarding a synthetic collateralized debt obligation, or CDO, which Goldman marketed to investors. A CDO is an asset-backed security which derives its value from underlying assets. The CDO in question was called Abacus 2007-CD1 ("Abacus 2007" or "CDO"), was backed by subprime residential home mortgages. Goldman issued a press release following the filing of the complaint stating that "The SEC’s charges are completely unfounded in law and fact and we will vigorously contest them and defend the firm and its reputation."

The SEC complaint alleges that Goldman used marketing materials for Abacus 2007 which falsely represented that the portfolio of mortgage-backed securities which formed the CDO were selected by ACA Management LLC ("ACA"), a firm with experience in analyzing mortgage-backed securities. However, the complaint contends that Paulson & Co., Inc. ("Paulson"), allegedly participated in the selection of the portfolio in the Spring of 2007 without any mention in Goldman's marketing materials and without the knowledge of Goldman's investors. Paulson also allegedly entered into "credit default swap" ("CDS") agreements with Goldman. Under a CDS agreement, in its basic form, an entity or person purchases "protection" against a potential default or "credit event" involving a credit instrument such as a bond or loan. The purchaser of the protection makes quarterly or premium payments to the seller of the protection. In the event that the instrument goes into default,  the seller pays the purchaser the par value of the bond or other fixed amount. CDS agreements may be used for speculative purposes, such as betting on a default in credit or loan obligations. The SEC alleges that Paulson, in selecting the securities which made up Abacus 2007, had a financial incentive to select securities which would experience credit events.

Paulson allegedly was under the belief since 2006 that certain "Triple B" rated subprime mortgage loans would experience "credit events," a/k/a significant losses. Paulson then allegedly approached Goldman and asked it to create a CDO composed of the mortgage-backed securities it believed would experience credit events. Paulson and Goldman would then allegedly "short" the CDO by entering into a CDS agreement.

The complaint alleges that Tourre designed the Abacus 2007 transaction, prepared the marketing materials and communicated with investors. At the time they were structuring the transaction, Goldman, Paulson and Tourre knew that the market for mortgage-backed CDOs was declining. Tourre allegedly sent an e-mail to a friend in January of 2007 in which he stated ""More and more leverage in the system, The whole building is about to collapse anytime now...Only potential survivor, the fabulous Fab[rice Tourre] ... standing in the middle of all these complex, highly leveraged, exotic trades he created without necessarily understanding all of the implications of those monstruosities!!!" The following month, Tourre allegedly received an e-mail from the head of Goldman's structured product correlation trading desk stating that "the cdo biz is dead we don't have a lot of time left."

The complaint also alleges that Goldman, Paulson and Tourre chose ACA Management as the portfolio selection agent because they knew they could not attract investors if the investors knew that Paulson had selected the CDO in order to short it. Paulson then allegedly identified over 100 Triple B bonds which it expected to experience credit events, including mortgage-backed securities with a high concentration of subprime adjustable rate mortgages and buyers with low FICO scores.

Tourre and representatives of Goldman, Paulson and ACA met in January and February of 2007 to select the portfolio for Abacus 2007. ACA allegedly had no knowledge that Paulson intended to short the CDO and the complaint alleges that Goldman allegedly mislead ACA into believing that Paulson was investing in the equity of the CDO and had a "long position" in the CDO's success, as opposed to taking a short position adverse to the interests of Goldman investors. ACA allegedly only permitted Paulson to participate in the portfolio selection process because it was led to believe that Paulson was a large equity investor. Tourre allegedly sent an email to a co-worker during these meetings stating "I am at this aca paulson meeting. this is surreal."

By the end of January, 2009, 99% the Abacus 2007 portfolio had been downgraded and investors in the CDO had lost $1 billion. Conversely, Paulson allegedly received $1 billion in profit. Investors in Abacus 2007 included IKB, a commercial bank in Germany, which lost almost all of the $150 million which it invested; and ACA's parent company, ACA Capital Holdings, the largest investor which invested some $951 million.

The SEC alleges that Goldman and Tourre violated Section 17(a) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. s 77q(a) and Section 10(b) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. s 78j(b). It seeks civil penalties and fines against the defendants.

Goldman, by all appearances, intends to fight back against the allegations. In a second press release, it contends that the accusations are unfounded in law and fact. Goldman maintains that it would not structure a portfolio that was designed to lose money, that it retained substantial risk in the transaction, and points out that it lost more than $90 million itself. It contends that its large investors were provided with extensive information relating to the underlying mortgage securities and the risks, and provided input on the underlying mortgage securities. Furthermore, Goldman points out that ACA was the largest investor and had every incentive to select securities which would not experience credit events. Goldman also claims that it never represented to ACA that Paulson would be a long investor, and that the industry practice is not to disclose the identities of buyers to sellers.

The complaint against Goldman is the largest action thus far to emerge out of the financial collapse which began in 2007, and which has angered the public and has lawmakers, law enforcement and the SEC itself feeling the heat. Former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin were acquitted on fraud charges last November relating to a failed hedge fund.

 

 

Daimler AG Agrees to Pay $184 Million to Settle SEC and DOJ Allegations; Alleged Conduct Includes Sales of Vehicles and Parts to Iraq Under U.N. Oil for Food Program

The Federal government has massively ramped up enforcement against domestic and foreign corporations for violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), essentially an anti-bribery or kickback statute applicable to overseas transactions. The latest target to fall to FCPA allegations, according to an SEC press release, is German automotive giant Daimler AG. The Securities and Exchange Commission had alleged that Daimler allegedly paid bribes to foreign government officials to secure business in Eastern Europe, Africa and Asia. Last Thursday, the SEC announced that Daimler had entered into a settlement agreement with the SEC in which Daimler agreed to pay $91.4 million in disgorgement. Daimler also agreed to pay $93.6 million in fines to settle alleged criminal charges which were announced by the Department of Justice last week.

The SEC complaint, filed on March 22, charges that Daimler allegedly paid $56 million in improper payments, involving more than 200 transactions in 22 countries, over a period of 10 years. The government contends that Daimler allegedly earned $1.9 billion in revenue and at least $90 million in illegal profits as a result of the payments. Included in the government's allegations are allegations that Daimler paid kickbacks to Iraqi officials in relation to sales of vehicles and spare parts to Iraq under the United Nations Oil for Food Program. The complaint also alleges that Daimler kept ledger accounts of credit balances for the benefit of foreign government officials.

Daimler allegedly made bribes or kickbacks through several methods. Amounts of alleged discounts or rebates on sales contracts were allegedly kicked back to foreign officials. Daimler also alleged used false sales intermediaries, corrupt business partners and cash desks to funnel bribes to officials. The government alleges that Daimler's management sanctioned the practices.

Daimler has issued a press release relating to the settlement. The company notes that it cooperated with SEC and DOJ during their investigations, entering into a consent agreement with the SEC and a deferred prosecution agreement with DOJ. The release also notes that Daimler North East Asia Ltd., also entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with DOJ and Mercedes-Benz Russia SAO and Daimler Export und Trade Finance GmbH pled guilty to charges of violations of the FCPA in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

Daimler also states that it has taken steps to ensure that its future conduct will comply with all applicable laws and Daimler's "Integrity Code." Daimler states that under its deferred prosecution agreements, it must maintain a comprehensive compliance program and not commit any further violations of the FCPA for two years. If Daimler successfully complies with these terms, the charges against the corporation and its subsidiaries will be dismissed.