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Throw the Book at Steven Rattner

Does crime pay on Wall Street? When those implicated in ‘pay to play’ schemes on Wall Street are not dealt with in truly appropriate fashion, everybody loses. Why? We end up with a loss of confidence not only in the markets, but even moreso a loss of confidence in our judicial system. I am not so naive as to think that our fields of justice are level, but that doesn’t mean we should not pursue that goal and highlight inequities when and where we see them.

Those engaged in financial crimes or schemes including ‘pay to play’ should never be able to buy their own justice by writing a check. That system of justice will never truly dissuade those engaged in or attracted to ‘pay to play.’ I see a strong sign of just such a potential inequity this morning. It smells.

The Wall Street Journal highlights that former Obama car czar, Steven Rattner, is in the midst of settlement talks with New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo over his role in a ‘pay to play’ scheme.

The WSJ writes, Rattner in Talks to Settle a Probe:

Wall Street financier and former auto czar Steven Rattner is in settlement talks to resolve his role in the “pay to play” investigation at the New York state pension fund, according to people familiar with the matter.

A guilty plea on Wednesday by David Loglisci, the former chief investment officer of the $129 billion fund, turned a spotlight on Mr. Rattner, a well-known Wall Street player who last year spearheaded the Obama administration’s auto overhaul.

On a call with reporters, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said the 57-year-old Mr. Rattner remained under investigation but declined to provide more details.

A spokesman for Mr. Rattner declined to comment.

[ratner]

For months, Mr. Rattner’s lawyers have been engaged in protracted settlement discussions with both the New York attorney general and the Securities and Exchange Commission over his conduct in the case, said the people familiar with the matter. Defense lawyers Jamie Gorelick and William McLucas of Wilmer Hale in Washington are representing him in the talks, these people added.

Mr. Cuomo’s investigation of Mr. Rattner focuses on his activities at Quadrangle Group, the private-equity firm he co-founded a decade ago. The New York-based firm obtained a $100 million investment from the New York pension fund three weeks after a DVD company owned by Quadrangle agreed to distribute “Chooch,” a low-budget movie co-produced by Mr. Loglisci and his brother, according to court papers.

Quadrangle also paid a $1.1 million finder’s fee to Hank Morris in exchange for securing the investment from the New York fund. Mr. Loglisici said Wednesday he had “effectively ceded” his authority over the fund’s private-equity investment decisions to Mr. Morris, a former top New York political adviser.

How tough is Steve Rattner? By reputation, Rattner is viewed as one of the meanest SOBs to run between Wall Street and Washington. In fact, Rattner is believed to be the individual implicated in directly threatening Chrysler creditors in the midst of the Chrysler bailout a year ago. (Read my piece, “Is Barack Obama Going Tony Soprano?”)

White collar crime of this nature needs to be adjudicated in terms of hard time — not by writing a check.

Rattner is obviously entitled to due process, but if, in fact, Rattner is implicated in this ‘pay to play’ scheme (the fact that he is in protracted settlement talks seems fairly incriminating), then the courts should throw the book at him and everybody else involved.

Rattner may not be all that tough sitting in the can being eyeballed by his new ‘friends.’

Unless and until that happens, this cesspool of activity and those swimming in it will continue to smell and pollute all of us.

What do you think?

LD

  • donjo

    Gee, maybe they can find some instance of him horse-playing around with his male friends and begin to spread rumors of sexual harassment.  Or maybe he swears a lot.  That should be enough to bring him down.

  • AC

    Yesterday Washington Post also reported David Loglisci’s guilty plea.  All these “tough” guys change their tune when the specter of clanging cell doors appears imminent.

  • carol haka

    Let me see if I understand this:

    Cuomo is Obama’s choice for Governor.

    Rattner is Obama’s choice for car czar.

    Obama wants to take over Chrysler.

    Obama sends Rattner to break “unbreakable” contracts with Chrysler.

    Pension Plans and etc. are now worth pennies on the dollar.

    Coumo gets to determine Rattner’s penalty.

    Rattner gets to go on with his life of crime.

    Coumo gets the Governorship.

    Gibbs stands in front of the “Press Corpse” :-D (sorry, I just had to laugh) and repeats “Nothin’ to see here, Nothin’ to see here, Nothin’ to see here.”  He then clicks his heels 3 times and immediately, the Press starts revealing another “insider” sex scandal.

    Okay, now I’m up to speed.

    :-D

  • candymarl

    Or maybe he could run a male prostitution ring out of his house and deny all knowledge of any of it. Then he could be like that Congressman Barney something.

    Oh wait -nothing happened to Barney what’s-his-name. Nevermind.

  • carol haka

    Isn’t that a real coincidence?

    I know a guy that actually help destroy the entire world economy named Barney.

    I heard nothing happened to him either. =-O

    And then, I heard of this other guy named Barney that was using multiple real estate sites meant for poor people for God only knows what.  Nothing happened to him either.

    And then again, I heard of this other guy named Barney that loved to take expensive “free” trips to exotic places from these corporations that got really big breaks fom Barney.  And believe it or not, nothing happened to him either.

    Boy, there are a lot of Barney’s in New York.

    >:o

  • carol haka

    And Larry Doyle, the answer to your question “Does crime pay ……” is “you betcha”!

    :-$

  • Tricia

    Good overview of what will probably trn out to be a big bag of snakes. 

    You are so right in stressing how danaging this is, not just to the financial market but to the confidence of the American people.  It feels like our country is being run by a band of bandits.

    What has always interested me about so-called White Coillar Crime is that except for income tax evasion the rest of us are not even in a position to commit these crimes.  So why are those who are already advantaged by good minds and usually good educations and the where with all to make money legitimately have to to turn to crime? How do they feel about themselves, I wonder. 

  • oowawa

    Maybe we need someone like Elliot Ness or Buford Pusser (Walking Tall) patrolling Wall Street.  Prosecute white collar crime?  But they dress so nice and have such attractive families! Wasn’t Bernie Madoff enough to satisfy your white collar justice-lust?

    STOP THE LOOTING AND START PROSECUTING!

  • carol haka

    … or Dirty Harry.  Okay you cheating cheaters, “Make My Day”!

    >:o

  • AnnieCarmel

    Plenty of Barnies and Charlies to go around.  How I’d love to see all of them in the slammer.

  • AnnieCarmel

    I’ll go for Harry and Buford…and hope they bring an ample supply of baseball bats and 357 magnums. 

  • EllenD

    The New York-based firm obtained a $100 million investment from the New York pension fund three weeks after a DVD company owned by Quadrangle agreed to distribute “Chooch,” a low-budget movie co-produced by Mr. Loglisci and his brother, according to court papers.

    Ah, now you’re in my area. When the show-biz bug bites, all kinds of interesting corporate actions take place. I’ve known insurance companies to invest in movies so the star-struck execs can meet the actors. Is it the best use of corporate money?
    HA!

  • jbjd

    Back in 1985, Frank had engaged the services of a male escort named Stephen Gobie, who had advertised his “hot bottom” in a personal ad. Over the next two years, while Frank was trying to decide whether to come out, he and Gobie carried on a clandestine affair, during which time Frank hired Gobie as a driver despite knowing Gobie was on probation for drug possession and for possession of child pornography. Frank used his House privileges to fix Gobie’s parking tickets. He wrote a memo trying to clear Gobie from probation that was disingenuous at best and an outright deception at worst. Gobie repaid Frank by running a prostitution service out of Frank’s Capitol Hill apartment. When Frank discovered this, he fired Gobie and ended their relationship. Then, in 1989, just two years after Frank’s announcement that he was gay, Gobie told his story to the conservative Washington Times.
    There was an immediate public outcry. Frank confirmed the basic details of his relationship with Gobie and the financial and other favors he’d done, but he angrily denied he’d been aware that Gobie had gone into business for himself in Frank’s apartment. Even so, it was an astonishing act of indiscreet self-indulgence, especially for the stiff-necked ethics scold who’d shown no pity for the various Abscam defendants. Even Frank’s closest Massachusetts friends were shaken. And The Boston Globe called for Frank to resign, so as to spare the voters the pain of having to confront his sex life in the voting booth.
    Instead, Frank admitted what he’d done, denied what he hadn’t, and took his case to the House ethics committee, which recommended a reprimand by the full House, a lesser penalty than the censure that had been requested in a motion by a notorious back-bench bomb thrower named Newt Gingrich. The punishment was handed down in 1990.
    Frank set out to rehabilitate himself. He declined the Globe‘s invitation and ran ferociously for reelection in 1990, winning with 66 percent of the vote. He worked doggedly at legislation. Moreover, he found a kind of power in his unique position. When Republican aides began circulating rumors that then Speaker Thomas Foley was gay, Frank called in the press and said that, if the whispers didn’t stop, he would publicly out any Republican member whom he knew to be gay. The whispers stopped.
    “I honestly don’t know if I’d have done it,” he says, citing a moment in Gore Vidal’s political drama, The Best Man, in which two politicians talk about blackmailing someone who’s gay. Frank recalls one of them saying: ” `I wasn’t telling you to do it, you stupid bastard. I was telling you to threaten to do it.’” http://www.boston.com/news/globe/magazine/articles/2005/10/02/to_be_frank/

  • jbjd
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    For months, Mr. Rattner’s lawyers have been engaged in protracted settlement discussions with both the New York attorney general and the Securities and Exchange Commission over his conduct in the case.

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