DOJ Responds to USA Today's Prosecutorial Misconduct Allegations

The Blog commented back in October about the investigative report by USA Today on the alleged prevalence of governmental misconduct in Federal criminal cases. Well, the Department of Justice has responded to the allegations through DOJ spokesperson Tracy Schmaler, who released a statement on Friday, published in USA Today, calling the paper's story a "selective review" of a "handful" of cases over the past 18 years. Ms. Schmaler claimed that DOJ  has conducted an internal review of the 90,000 cases brought annually and found prosecutorial misconduct in only a small fraction of them. Ms. Schmaler claimed that the Department corrects any mistakes as quickly as possible, and emphasized its priority to prevent mistakes before they occur. She cited the fact that Attorney General Eric Holder has instituted a comprehensive training curriculum for all Federal prosecutors, and has made discovery training for all prosecutors mandatory. Ms. Schmaler also stated that the DOJ Office of Professional Responsibility has recently caught up on a four year backlog of cases.

The Main Justice blog reports that Attorney General Holder made statements on Friday following a meeting with European officials that the “overwhelming majority” of DOJ attorneys act appropriately.

 

Director of BOEMRE Announces Investigations and Review Unit and More Agressive Tactics to Investigate Companies Engaged in Offshore Drilling

In response to the massive oil spill (over 19,000 square miles in area--or larger than the state of Maryland) in the Gulf of Mexico, on June 18, 2010, U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar issued an order renaming the Minerals Management Service (MMS) the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE). MMS/BOEMRE manages the nation's natural gas, oil and other mineral resources on the outer continental shelf. On June 15, President Barack Obama appointed Michael Bromwich to head the reorganized MMS and overhaul regulations governing offshore oil drilling.

The appointment of Bromwich--a former prosecutor--as Director of BOEMRE reflects the no-nonsense response of the Administration to the environmental disaster and growing public dissatisfaction. Bromwich was an Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Justice. Prior to that, he was an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. Bromwich was an Associate Counsel for the Office of the Independent Counsel for Iran-Contra, and headed an Investigation into the Federal Bureau of Investigation Laboratory. He has been appointed as an independent monitor to investigate the Metropolitan Police Department for the District of Columbia, and the crime lab for the Houston Police Department. Prior to his appointment as head of BOEMRE, Bromwich was a partner with Fried Frank in New York and Washington. Bromwich has developed a reputation for helping to turn around troubled federal agencies.

Director Bromwich has written a column today in Newsweek which confirms the Adminstration's tough approach. In the column, Bromwich discusses his acceptance of the appointment by President Obama and Secretary Salazar. He emphasizes that his career has been defined by law enforcement, and that his experience in monitoring agencies will guide his reform of BOEMRE. Bromwich cites the alleged "coziness" of MMS with oil companies. On the subject of the Deepwater Horizon oil leak, he comments that the evidence suggests that British Petroleum (BP) and other companies "cut corners or made grave errors that led to the explosion."

Bromwich cites a need for "aggressive" investigators and states that BOEMRE has announced an "Investigations and Review Unit" (IRU), composed of prosecutors, investigators, scientists and other experts, to investigate allegations of misconduct by companies regulated by BOEMRE. The column states that companies that fail to cooperate may have their drilling permits suspended. "Serious wrongdoing" will be referred to the Department of Justice for prosecution.

Bromwich further states that BOEMRE and the IRU will investigate potential conflicts of interest, will conduct more thorough reviews of applications for drilling permits and more thorough environmental analyses, and will increase research of spill control. Bromwich concludes with the caveat that his efforts "while potentially aggressive, will not be hasty."

Bromwich's statements are certainly not comforting to BP, TransOcean or the other companies with ties to the Deepwater Horizon disaster. However, only time will tell if Bromwich's and BOEMRE's efforts are successful in bringing about any reform to the offshore drilling industry, especially in the face of a risk of increased energy prices. On June 30, 2010, Secretary Salazar issued a press release announcing that the Department of the Interior is postponing public scope meetings on the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the 2012–2017 Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Oil and Gas Leasing Program until later this year. The release states that, while the Department is committed to "strong" reforms in the oil and gas industry, "[o]ffshore oil and gas production will remain an important component of our nation’s energy portfolio as we transition to a clean energy economy." With a "clean energy economy" being a distant dream at this point, it is uncertain how much increased regulation the Adminstration is willing to heap upon the industry.

Image from The Canadian

Department of Justice Targets Gulf Oil Spill Disaster and British Petroleum

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder informed the media yesterday that the federal government has opened criminal and civil investigations into the 44 day-old oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, as reported in the L.A. Daily News and elsewhere. Last month, U.S. President Barack Obama appointed an independent commission to investigate the causes of the disaster and to recommend measures to prevent a recurrence in the future. The commission is co-chaired by former Florida Governor Bob Graham and former head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, William K. Reilly.

The lack of procedures to handle the possibility of a deep undersea spill and the seeming lack of haste in staunching the spill by United Kingdom-based British Petroleum, which leases the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, and Switzerland-based Transocean, Ltd., which owns the rig, have justly opened the companies to public criticism and condemnation, civil suits and likely civil penalties and fines. The disaster is the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history, and is on its way to becoming the largest spill in world history as the leak continues (the largest was the willful discharge of oil by the Iraqi military from the Sea Island Terminal in Iraq in January of 1991 during the Gulf War, which discharged 462 million gallons of oil into the Persian Gulf).

Some challenges facing any potential criminal investigation or prosecution include the fact that the spill is allegedly accidental, and that its source was some 52 miles southeast of Louisiana--outside U.S. territorial waters. However, some theories of prosecution may be available. For instance, Title 33 United States Code Section 1321, entitled "Oil and hazardous substance liability," applies to discharges from "offshore facilities." The statute provides, in part, that:

(3) The discharge of oil or hazardous substances (i) into or upon the navigable waters of the United States, adjoining shorelines, or into or upon the waters of the contiguous zone, or (ii) in connection with activities under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act [43 U.S.C.A. § 1331 et seq.] or the Deepwater Port Act of 1974 [33 U.S.C.A. § 1501 et seq.], or which may affect natural resources belonging to, appertaining to, or under the exclusive management authority of the United States (including resources under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act [16 U.S.C.A. § 1801 et seq.] ), in such quantities as may be harmful as determined by the President under paragraph (4) of this subsection, is prohibited...

33 U.S.C. 1321(b)(3). Persons in charge of a vessel or offshore facility and having knowledge of a discharge of oil must immediately notify the appropriate U.S. agency. Failure to do so can result in a fine and up to 5 years' imprisonment. The statute also provides for administrative and civil penalties for owners, operators or persons in charge of vessels or facilities from which there is a discharge, or who fail or refuse to comply with relevant regulations issued by the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection agency, as well as any recovery costs by the government.

Undoubtedly, grounds for charges might be found in the U.S.' extensive environmental laws and regulations. One thing is certain--now that the Department of Justice has been mobilized to respond to the disaster, the corporate actors in relation to the spill will almost certainly not emerge without paying a steep criminal and civil settlement.

 

 

Elena Kagan on Criminal Law

President Obama is expected to announce today his nomination of Solicitor General Elena Kagan to succeed Justice John Paul Stevens. Solicitor General Kagan has been one of the presumptive leading choices to replace Justice Stevens ever since the Justice announced that he was stepping down. Ms. Kagan has drawn criticism from both the right and the left of the political spectrum, and the Senate confirmation process is expected to involve some controversy--as it invariably does.

Ms. Kagan's distinguished background is well known. She graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1986, clerked for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, worked at the Washington, D.C., law firm of Williams & Connolly, was a professor at the University of Chicago, worked as Associate Counsel and Deputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy during the Clinton Administration before returning to Harvard as Dean of the Law School in 2001. In March 2009, President Obama named Ms. Kagan as Solicitor General for the United States.

Less well known is Solicitor General Kagan's views on criminal law. As Professor Douglas Berman of Ohio State University School of Law observes on his blog, Ms. Kagan lacks much of a record on criminal law issues which routinely come before the court.

There are indeed very few reported criminal cases which Ms. Kagan has been involved with during her career. Interestingly, many of the cases that do exist have gone against Ms. Kagan or against the government. While at Williams & Connolly, Ms. Kagan represented the defendant-appellant in the appeal of  U.S. v. Chuang, 897 F.2d 646 (2d Cir. 1990) before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in which the Court held that the defendant, who was both a bank officer and attorney, possessed no reasonable expectation of privacy in bank documents which were not found in his office, since banking is a closely-regulated business and the documents were subject to routine inspection by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Much later, in Kucana v. Holder,130 S.Ct. 827 (2010), the Supreme Court held, contrary to the position of the Solicitor General, that motions to reopen immigration proceedings before the Board of Immigration Appeals were subject to judicial review. Next, in Johnson v. U.S., 130 S.Ct. 1265 (2010), the Court reversed the petitioner's conviction for possession of ammunition by a convicted felon under 18 United States Code Section 922(g)(1), holding that the petitioner's conviction for simple battery under Florida was not a "violent felony" which could be used to enhance the petitioner's sentence under the Armed Career Criminal Act in 18 United States Code Section 924. In addition, as we have noted, the Court also ruled against the Administration in Bloate v. U.S., 130 S.Ct. 1345 (2010) in holding that time spent preparing pretrial motions is not automatically excludable from the Speedy Trial Act, 18 United States Code Section 3161 et seq. And most recently, in U.S. v. Stevens, --- S.Ct. ----, 2010 WL 1540082 (April 20, 2010), the Court found against Solicitor General Kagan in holding that 18 United States Code Section 4, which criminalized  the commercial creation, sale, or possession of certain depictions of animal cruelty, was substantially overbroad in violation of the First Amendment.

The lack of an extensive background in criminal issues is certainly no barrier to a potential distinguished and exceptional service as a Supreme Court justice. Indeed, it is hoped that the contrary results and setbacks which Solicitor General Kagan has experienced in her few forays into the field have encouraged a more nuanced and open minded view on criminal issues, or at least one that is not a mere rubber stamp of law enforcement and government actions.

The SEC's Case Against Sir Robert Allen Stanford -- A Case Study in Investigative and Enforcement Failure

Since last year, we've followed the government's investigation and prosecution of Texan and Antiguan financier Sir Robert Allen Stanford for allegedly defrauding investors of billions in a Ponzi scheme. Well, as set forth in a 150 page Report of Investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Office of the Inspector General (OIG), the SEC has been following Stanford and his companies for much, much longer. OIG made the Report public yesterday. The Report reveals a stunning pattern of lack of diligence in SEC enforcement.

Stanford's investment advisor registered with the SEC in 1995. By 1997, the SEC's Fort Worth Office Examination Group had conducted an examination and concluded that the CDs Stanford and his companies were marketing were most likely a Ponzi scheme and that Stanford was allegedly engaging in fraud. However, despite the fact that the 1997 examination concluded that Stanford was likely engaging in a Ponzi scheme and referred the matter to the Fort Worth Office Enforcement Office, Enforcement staff did not open an investigation, or "matter under inquiry" (MUI), until May 1998. Enforcement sent Stanford Group Company (SGC) a voluntary request for documents. SGC refused to provide many of the requested documents, and the MUI was closed in August 1998.

The Examination Group conducted another examination of Stanford in 1998, and again concluded that the investments being offered by Stanford were highly suspicious. However, Enforcement staff did not listen to the Examination Group or review its report in deciding to close the investigation of Stanford and his companies.

A third examination of SGC was conducted in 2002 and once again concluded that the consistent above-market returns claimed by SGC were highly unlikely to be legitimate investments. The SEC again did not follow up on the examination, despite receiving conflicting representations from SGC regarding its due diligence and a growing number of complaints from outside entities confirming their suspicions.

In October of 2003, the SEC received a letter from the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) stating that Stanford's companies were engaged in an alleged massive Ponzi scheme. The Examination Group was asked to conduct a fourth investigation, which it did in October 2004. The investigation concluded that the CDs were part of "a very large Ponzi scheme." However, in March of 2005, senior Enforcement officials in Fort Worth learned of the Examination Group's fourth examination of Stanford and told them that "[Stanford] was not something they were interested in.”

Shortly thereafter, the head of Enforcement for the Fort Worth Office stepped down. The former head later sought to represent Stanford himself in proceedings by the SEC, despite the fact that he was involved in quashing the investigation of Stanford and his companies.

Enforcement sent Stanford International Bank (SIB) a second voluntary request for documents in August 2005. SIB refused to produce the requested documents. In November of 2005, Enforcement again closed its investigation of Stanford and his companies.

After the exposure of the Ponzi scheme of Bernard Madoff in December 2008, the SEC began to receive complaints regarding the fact that it had allowed Stanford and his companies to continue to engage in a Ponzi scheme. The SEC finally shut down Stanford's companies and froze their assets in February 2009. In October of 2009, Senator David Vitter and Senator Richard Shelby wrote a letter to the SEC asking it to conduct a comprehensive inquiry into its investigation and handling of the Stanford matter.

The OIG Report found that Enforcement staff were reluctant to pursue cases which were novel or complex, preferring to focus on cases which were "quick hits" or "slam dunks." The Report notes that, in the 12 years between the time that the SEC first gained knowledge that Stanford and his companies might be engaging in a Ponzi scheme and the time that the SEC took action to freeze their assets, investments in Stanford's CDs grew from $250 million to $1.5 billion. A survey was taken of investors in Stanford's scheme with 95% responding that knowledge of an inquiry by the SEC would have affected their decision to invest.

 

Comverse Technologies Enters Into $255 Million Settlement Over Backdating of Stock Option Awards; Convicted Former General Counsel Fights On

As reported by Law.com, New York-based Comverse Technology, Inc., the worlds largest manufacturer of voice mail software, has entered into a $225 million settlement in a class action brought against it stemming from a backdating scandal. William Sorin, Comverse's former general counsel, and Comverse's former CEO, Jacob "Kobi" Alexander, were charged by the SEC and Federal prosecutors in 2006 with fraudulenty changing the grant dates of stock option awards from 1998 to 2000. In all, Sorin realized $14 million in profits from stock options, approximately $1 million of which was due to backdating. Sorin pled guilty in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York to conspiracy to commit securities fraud, mail fraud and wire fraud in 2006, and has already served his sentence of a year and a day in prison. Alexander an Israeli citizen, fled to Namibia to avoid prosecution.

Plaintiffs brought a derivative actions against Comverse in New York Federal and State courts based on the backdating. Alexander has agreed to pay $60 million and Sorin has agreed to pay $1 million to fund the settlement. In exchange, Comverse will drop its lawsuit against the former executives, who will also drop their counterclaims against the company.  The company earlier settled claims relating to the improper backdating and other accounting problems with federal regulators.

Sorin had previously entered into a settlement with the SEC, agreeing to pay $3 million in fines. However, his attorneys have asked the Court to vacate the SEC settlement and judgment, claiming that Federal prosecutors violated promises they made as part of his plea deal. Sorin claims that prosectors agreed not to object to his request to avoid jail time when he agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges and pay the SEC $3 million to settle civil charges, however he alleges that the government reneged on its promise and opposed his request at sentencing.

DOJ Issues New Discovery Guidelines for Prosecutors

 

 

As set forth in the official DOJ Blog yesterday, Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden issued three Memorandum to DOJ prosecutors no doubt intended to remedy some of the setbacks the Department suffered last year as a result of discovery violations. The subject of one of the Memos is “Guidance for Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery.” The second Memo reference is “Issuance of Guidance and Summary of Actions Taken in Response to the Report of the Department of Justice Criminal Discovery and Case Management Working Group.” Finally, a separate Memo is address to all DOJ litigating components and all U.S. Attorneys.

Taking the "Memo to the U.S. Attorneys and DOJ Components" first, Odgen summarizes that he had convened a working group to address DOJ policies and practices regarding criminal discovery issues. Odgen references that he is sending to all DOJ trial attorneys and AUSAs a memo containing Guidance For Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery that prosecutors should follow to ensure that discovery obligations are met in all future cases. Interestingly, Odgen directs that each U.S. Attorney’s Office develop a discovery policy consistent with the law and local rules and practices. That policy must be in place by March 31, 2010.

The “Guidance For Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery” Memo sets out detailed steps prosecutors are to follow regarding discovery. The six page Memo first advises that the prosecutors must determine who is a member of the “Prosecution Team” for the purpose of determining what documents must be reviewed for disclosure.

The Guidance Memo then directs that the discovery review should cover the following: 1) the investigative agency’s files, 2) Confidential Informant/Witness/Source files, 3) Evidence and Information Gathered During the Investigation, 4) Documents or Evidence Gathered by Civil Attorneys and/or Regulatory Agencies in Parallel Civil Investigations, 5) Substantive Case Related Communications, 6) Potential Giglio Information Relating to Law Enforcement Witnesses, 7) Potential Giglio Information Relating to Non-Law Enforcement Witnesses and Fed.R.Evid. 806 Declarants, 8) Information Obtained in Witness Interviews, a) Witness Statement Variations and the Duty to Disclose, b) Trial Preparation Meetings With Witnesses and c) Agent Notes.

The Guidance Memo then directs that although prosecutors may delegate the process of review to others, they “should not delegate the disclosure determination itself.”

The Guidance Memo reminds prosecutors that discovery within DOJ is covered by the U.S. Attorney’s Manual Section 9-5.001, which is broader than what the law requires and that if a prosecutor chooses to follow that broader course, “defense counsel should be reminded that the prosecutor is electing to produce discovery beyond what is required . . .” The Memo then addresses the scope, timing and form of discovery disclosures, but cautions that, “[p]rosecutors should never describe the discovery being provided as ‘open file.’”

Finally, the Guidance Memo counsels that the prosecutor should make a good record regarding the disclosures.

The “Issuance of Guidance and Summary of Actions Taken in Response to the Report of the Department of Justice Criminal Discovery and Case Management Working Group” Memo reminds prosecutors of the words of Justice Sutherland that it is the prosecutor’s duty is “that justice shall be done.” Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935). This Memo informs prosecutors of the establishment of the Guidance Memo set out above and that each U.S. Attorney’s Office shall have a “discovery coordinator.” In addition, DOJ has:
 

• Created an online directory of resources pertaining to discovery issues that will be available to all prosecutors at their desktop;
• Produced a Handbook on Discovery and Case Management similar to the Grand Jury Manual so that prosecutors will have a one-stop resource that addresses various topics relating to discovery obligations;
• Implemented a training curriculum and a mandatory training program for paralegals and law enforcement agents;
• Revitalized the Computer Forensics Working Group to address the problem of properly cataloguing electronically stored information recovered as part of federal investigations;
• Created a pilot case management project to fully explore the available case management software and possible new practices to better catalogue law enforcement investigative files and to ensure that all the information is transmitted in the most useful way to federal prosecutors.
 

No doubt much will be written in coming days and weeks regarding these Memoranda and what I’ve set out here is strictly an overview. Every criminal practitioner in federal court should read, study and be familiar with these Memoranda.

Federal Prosecutions of Corporate, Financial and White-Collar Crimes Fall to Six-Year Low; Congress Increases Funding & DOJ Increases Criminal Probes

Brad Heath points out a disturbing trend in today's USA Today--federal prosecutions of serious corporate, financial and other white-collar crimes have fallen to new lows. In this age of Enron, Madoff and massive failures of financial institutions, this is a serious breach of the public trust. The article contains a chart which shows that, in fiscal year 2009, the Department of Justice opened only 63 new corporate fraud prosecutions. That is barely one case per year per district and represents a 55% decrease since 2003. Securities fraud charges have decreased 17% and bankruptcy fraud cases have decreased 44% over the same period. The article cites Professor Ellen Podgor of Stetson University College of Law and creator of White Collar Crime Prof Blog who attributes the decline was the result of the Bush administration's push of federal prosecutors and the FBI to focus on terrorism and national security.

However, relief appears to be on the way. The article states that lawmakers have put new pressure on DOJ officials, who have launched thousands of new criminal probes into financial crimes. Congress has approved extra money to target financial crime, and Attorney General Eric Holder announced a new task force to target financial fraud last month. As if to herald a change of direction, prosecutors in New York also announced indictments yesterday against Raj Rajaratnam, founder of Galleon, claiming that the case is the largest hedge fund insider trading case ever. The article also states that the FBI currently has more than 2,800 open mortgage fraud cases..