Naked short selling speciality law firm found gulity of racketeering, graft, mail fraud now involved in Madoff case.
That smell you can smell is very likely the cloaked involvement of a major New York mafia crime family (Genovese) in this whole affair.
http://www.milberg.com/newsevents/public...&pubid=975
MILBERG LLP AND SEEGER WEISS LLP EXPAND INVESTOR REPRESENTATION GLOBALLY IN MADOFF FRAUD CASE
12/16/08
New York, NY, – As banks, hedge funds, institutional and individual investors throughout the world examine their portfolios for investments made through Madoff Investment Securities, Milberg LLP and Seeger Weiss LLP are helping hundreds explore their legal options. The firms, with offices in New York, Tampa, Los Angeles, Detroit, Newark, Tulsa and Philadelphia, are now representing clients from locations including Hong Kong, Spain and throughout the United States.
“The global impact of the alleged fraud perpetrated by Bernard Madoff and his firm is just beginning to become clear,” said Brad Friedman, a partner at Milberg LLP. “Given that our firm has a great deal of experience managing class action lawsuits that affect individual and institutional investors both domestically and abroad, we are able to make recommendations appropriate to each situation.”
“In Spain alone the number of investors seeking recoveries is growing dramatically each day,” added Stephen Weiss, a partner at Seeger Weiss LLP. “As a result, we’re counseling several Spanish law firms representing hundreds of millions of dollars in lost investments on the legal options available to them.”
About Milberg
Milberg LLP has been representing individual and institutional investors for nearly 40 years and serves as lead counsel in federal and state courts throughout the United States. Please visit the Milberg website (
http://www.milberg.com) for more information about the firm.
About Seeger Weiss LLP
Seeger Weiss LLP is recognized as one of the nation's preeminent law firms handling complex individual, mass, and class action litigation on behalf of consumers, investors, and injured persons nationwide. Please visit the Seeger Weiss website (
http://www.seegerweiss.com) for more information about the firm.
Investor contact:
Matthew Gluck
mgluck@milberg.com
Brad N. Friedman
bfriedman@milberg.com
Sanford P. Dumain
sdumain@milberg.com
Milberg LLP
One Pennsylvania Plaza, 49th Fl.
New York, NY 10119-0165
Phone number: (212) 594-5300 or (877) 692-1965
Stephen A. Weiss
sweiss@seegerweiss.com
Seeger Weiss LLP
One William Street
New York, NY 10004
Phone number: (212) 584-0700 or (877) 539-4125
Media Contact: Dan Fleshler (646-552-1213) or Barbara Shrager (212-935-0210, ext. 224)
***
Note the RICO charge:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milberg_Weiss
Milberg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Founded in 1965 by attorneys Larry Milberg and Melvyn I. Weiss, Milberg LLP (formerly known Milberg Weiss LLP and Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman LLP) is a U.S. plaintiffs' law firm. Based in New York City, it is widely known for representing investors in securities class actions. Before its split in May 2004 with the firm now known as Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP, it was the largest plaintiff law firm in the United States, with over 200 attorneys and a leader in its field, responsible, at least in part, for over 50 percent of all securities class action cases settled in 2002.[1]
On May 18, 2006,[2][3] the firm and two of its named partners, David J. Bershad and Steven G. Schulman (Schulman resigned in December 2006), were indicted by United States Attorney Debra Wong Yang of the United States District Court for the Central District of California on various counts, including racketeering, mail fraud, and bribery. The charges include claims that Milberg Weiss paid portions of its legal fees to plaintiffs in order to induce them to sue.[4][5] By January 2007, more than half of the firm's partners had left the firm. As of June 2008, the firm's website lists only 53 full-time attorneys (29 partners and 24 associates).
Four longtime Milberg Weiss partners have pled guilty to federal charges, including Steven Schulman, David Bershad, William Lerach, and Melvyn Weiss. On March 20, 2008, Melvyn Weiss announced through his attorney that he would plead guilty in exchange for an 18 to 33 month prison sentence and fines and restitution of $10 million. [6] On Monday February 11, 2008, Lerach was sentenced to two years in federal prison, two years' probation, fined $250,000 and ordered to complete 1,000 hours of community service. Bershad will pay $250,000 in fines and forfeit $7.75 million. Bershad was sentenced to six months of incarceration in October 2008.[7] On June 16, 2008, U.S. prosecutors in Los Angeles agreed to dismiss the indictment against the firm, under a non-prosecution agreement that requires Milberg to pay $75 million to settle the charges.
Mel Weiss was sentenced to 30 months of incarceration on Monday June 2, 2008, and is currently incarcerated at the federal minimum security institution known as FCI Morgantown in West Virginia, with a projected release date of November 1, 2010.[8]
***
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/18/us/pol....html?_r=1
Accused Law Firm Continues Giving to Democrats
By MIKE McINTIRE
Published: October 18, 2007
Over the years, as it became Exhibit A for critics of shareholders’ class action lawsuits, the law firm of Milberg Weiss often enjoyed the support of Democrats who called the suits an invaluable weapon in the universal conflict between big business and the little guy.
The Democrats, in turn, enjoyed the support of Milberg Weiss and its partners, who together have contributed more than $7 million to the party’s candidates since the 1980s.
Last year, the firm was indicted on federal charges of fraud and bribery. But the political partnership has not been entirely severed. Since the indictment, 26 Democrats around the country, including four presidential candidates, have accepted $150,000 in campaign contributions from people connected to Milberg Weiss, according to state and federal campaign finance records. And some Democrats have taken public actions that potentially helped the firm or its former partners.
The recent contributors include current and former Milberg partners who had either been indicted or were widely reported to be facing potential criminal problems when they wrote their checks. One, William S. Lerach, was a fund-raiser for John Edwards’s presidential campaign until his guilty plea last month. Melvyn I. Weiss, a founder of the firm, gave the maximum $4,600 to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York in June. Other firm members contributed to the presidential campaigns of Senators Barack Obama of Illinois and Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware.
Milberg Weiss reaped billions of dollars in legal fees over four decades as the acknowledged king of class action lawsuits, which accused executives of misleading investors with erroneous financial statements or some other fraud. According to the indictment, the New York-based firm ran a “racketeering enterprise” that collected a quarter billion dollars in 250 cases in which people were paid secret kickbacks for serving as plaintiffs.
The law firm has denied the charges.
The reluctance of Democrats to shut off the cash spigot, even in the face of scandal, underscores how the pressure to raise money creates marriages of political interests that can be difficult to break up. Fred Wertheimer, a longtime advocate of campaign finance reform, called it the “natural outcome of a system where huge amounts of private contributions are raised and spent, and the political parties turn to groups with interests in government to feed the spending machine.”
In the current campaign, the race for cash has led to several embarrassments for the Democrats, including the indictment of a trial lawyer, Geoffrey Fieger, who was accused of using straw donors to make illegal contributions to Mr. Edwards’s 2004 presidential campaign, and the arrest of Norman Hsu, a businessman accused of fraud who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Mrs. Clinton.
In addition to the kickback charges in the Milberg Weiss case, federal agents have investigated accusations that the firm funneled campaign contributions through plaintiffs and expert witnesses in the 1990s, said two lawyers familiar with the inquiry. The guilty plea entered by Mr. Lerach hinted at that, but it also specified that prosecutors would not pursue campaign finance violations, in exchange for Mr. Lerach’s admission that he had conspired to obstruct justice by concealing the kickbacks.
Beyond campaign contributions, Milberg Weiss became deeply ingrained in the financial firmament of the Democratic Party in other ways. Members of the firm gave $500,000 toward construction of a new Democratic National Committee headquarters, and some became partners in a private investment venture with several prominent Democrats. They included former Senator Robert G. Torricelli of New Jersey, who is a fund-raiser for Mrs. Clinton, and Leonard Barrack, a Philadelphia trial lawyer who was once the national fund-raising chairman for the Democratic Party.
Along the way, as Milberg Weiss’s brass-knuckles legal strategy made it a target for Republicans advocating limits on class action suits, it usually could count on Democrats in Washington to protect its interests. After federal prosecutors indicted the firm in May 2006, four Democratic congressmen issued a joint statement, posted on Milberg Weiss’s Web site, accusing the Bush administration of persecuting lawyers who take on big businesses.
The statement, signed by Representatives Gary L. Ackerman, Carolyn McCarthy and Charles B. Rangel, all of New York, and Robert Wexler of Florida, contained several passages that appear to be lifted directly from a “class action press kit” distributed by a national trial lawyers group. All but Mr. Wexler have received campaign contributions from Milberg Weiss partners.
More recently, Mr. Edwards, a trial lawyer who became wealthy pursing personal injury cases, joined labor unions and consumer groups last May in pressing securities regulators to intervene in a lawsuit against banks brought by Mr. Lerach on behalf of Enron investors. His campaign said Mr. Edwards’s actions had nothing to do with Mr. Lerach, and were consistent with the candidate’s longstanding defense of working people.
***
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/07/busine...ocera.html
Serving Time, but Lacking Remorse
By JOE NOCERA
Published: June 7, 2008
Some guys just don’t know when to shut up. William S. Lerach is one of those guys.
William S. Lerach was sentenced to two years after pleading guilty to playing a role in a kickback scheme at his law firm.
Once the most feared plaintiffs’ lawyer in the land, Mr. Lerach went to prison last month for his involvement in a long-running kickback scheme. His former firm, Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman, you see, allegedly made secret payments to a small group of people who acted, in effect, as
Potemkin plaintiffs, allowing the firm to trot them out as clients whenever it wanted to sue a company whose stock had fallen. Which, by the way, was often; in its glory years, Milberg Weiss’s annual “market share” in securities litigation exceeded 50 percent.
Wait. Did I say “allegedly?” I take that back; at this point there is nothing alleged about it: Mr. Lerach and his partners absolutely, positively committed these crimes. David J. Bershad, Steven G. Schulman and Melvyn I. Weiss — three of the firm’s name partners — have all pleaded guilty to the same essential charges as Mr. Lerach. None of the cases came close to going to trial.
Mr. Bershad, who appears to have been the firm’s bagman as well as one of its top partners, used to keep safe full of cash in his office credenza; that was the firm’s slush fund for its crooked clients. According to the government, Milberg Weiss disbursed $11.3 million illegally over a 25-year period. In other words, this wasn’t some rogue operation — the kickbacks were at the heart of the firm’s business model.
Although neither Mr. Bershad nor Mr. Schulman has been sentenced, the denouement of the case came this week, when Mr. Weiss, one of the co-founders of Milberg Weiss — and long considered one of the giants of the securities bar — was sentenced to 30 months in prison. This came less than a month after Mr. Lerach began serving his two-year sentence. When I began asking around about why Mr. Lerach — Milberg’s other leading light until he broke away in 2004 — had gotten the lesser sentence, I was told that Mr. Lerach had pleaded guilty a year earlier than Mr. Weiss and that he had not tried to prevent the government from obtaining a crucial piece of evidence, as Mr. Weiss had.
Fair enough. But there is something about their disparate sentences — even though there is only a six-month difference — that sticks in my craw. In the aftermath of his guilty plea, Mr. Weiss has struck notes of genuine remorse. “Looking up from the deep pit into which I have descended has been painful,” he wrote in a letter to the judge before his sentencing. “I have spent day after day, and sleepless nights, reflecting on how I could have permitted myself to stray so far off course from the hopes and desires I established for my life’s work.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Lerach was publishing his reflections on the case in a first-person article that appeared this week on the Web site of Portfolio, the Condé Nast business magazine. In the article, Mr. Lerach expresses zero remorse, positions his crimes as having hurt no one while serving a greater good and makes the absurd claim that he was railroaded by his political opponents.
It is a brazen, shameful piece of work — and it must infuriate the prosecutors who made the plea agreement with him, and the judge who accepted it, especially since Mr. Lerach wrote his own remorseful letter to the judge ahead of his sentencing. It also ought to infuriate anyone who cares about the law. Plenty of criminals head to prison still believing they’re above the law, but Mr. Lerach takes the cake.
As regular readers know, I’m no fan of Mr. Lerach. I’ve long thought he ran a kind of extortion racket, filing class-actions suits against companies whose stock had dropped — without a shred of evidence that any wrongdoing had taken place — and then torturing them with motions, discovery and depositions until they settled. He used their own rational judgment — that it made more economic sense to settle than fight — against them. When a case settled, Mr. Lerach, in effect, took money from shareholders, sliced off a large percentage for his firm and gave whatever was left back to shareholders. The best description of Mr. Lerach’s methods I ever heard came from the venture capitalist John Doerr: a “cunning economic terrorist,” he called him.
None of this is illegal, alas. Lawyers like Mr. Lerach have the right to file bogus suits — and extract what they can from them. What is illegal is secretly paying off what Michael A. Perino, a St. John’s University law professor, calls “professional plaintiffs”— people who hold stock in dozens of companies just so a lawyer can use them as “aggrieved shareholders” whenever they want to file a lawsuit. Lawyers like Mr. Lerach needed such “on-call” clients because it was important to be first to the courtroom to file a suit; up until 1995, when the law changed, that was the crucial criteria in determining which lawyers would be lead counsel, and thus take the largest share of attorney’s fees.
In his Portfolio article, Mr. Lerach claims that before 1995, it was legal to pay plaintiffs the way Milberg Weiss did — and that everyone did it. It wasn’t, and they didn’t. “The practice of secretly paying plaintiffs was always illegal,” said Robert J. Giuffra Jr., a lawyer with Sullivan & Cromwell, who helped write the 1995 law when he was working for Congress. But the new law made its illegality even more explicit, while ending the “race to the courthouse,” as Mr. Giuffra calls it, by changing the criteria for lead counsel. (The lawyer whose client had the most shares now has the best shot at become lead counsel.) One of the shocking things about the Milberg Weiss case is that the firm continued to pay plaintiffs well after the passage of the 1995 law.
Still, Mr. Edwards’s willingness to be seen doing anything that could benefit Mr. Lerach, and allowing him to raise money, provided fodder for critics. At the time the Edwards campaign took on Mr. Lerach as a fund-raiser, it was already widely reported that Mr. Lerach, who left Milberg Weiss in 2004, was one of the unnamed co-conspirators cited in court documents related to the firm’s indictment.
In all, Mr. Edwards collected about $16,000 from people connected to Milberg Weiss, including Mr. Lerach and two other former Milberg Weiss lawyers who had joined him at his new firm, Patrick J. Coughlin and Keith F. Park. Federal authorities agreed not to prosecute them as part of the plea deal with Mr. Lerach. (Mr. Lerach also raised $64,000 for Mr. Edwards from members of his new firm who were not named in the Milberg case.)
“With Edwards, he has associated himself with people in his campaign that don’t represent the face that even the trial lawyers want to put forward to the country,” said Walter K. Olson, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative research group, who has written extensively on the American legal system.
Eric Schultz, a spokesman for the Edwards campaign, said that it had given Mr. Lerach’s $4,600 personal contribution to charity and that “should anyone else be found guilty of wrongdoing, we will donate their contributions to charity as well.”
“The bottom line is, the system is far from perfect,” Mr. Schultz said. “The influence of money in politics has gotten out of control. That’s why John Edwards has decided to play by the rules that were designed to ensure fairness in the election process by capping his campaign spending and seeking public financing.”
John W. Keker, a lawyer for Mr. Lerach, declined to comment on his client’s guilty plea.
A spokesman for Mrs. Clinton said her presidential campaign did not intend to return the contribution from Mr. Weiss. A spokesman for the Obama campaign, whose Milberg Weiss contributions came from lawyers not directly involved in the kickback scandal, declined to comment.
In a statement denying the charges in the indictment, Milberg Weiss, which continues to operate, said: “The indictment is unprecedented and unfair, and the firm intends to vigorously defend itself against the charges. We are confident that we will be fully vindicated.”
The indictment of Milberg Weiss was a stunning turnabout for the firm, which has recovered $45 billion for clients since it was founded in 1965.
Its approach was controversial. The moment a publicly traded company’s stock dropped, Milberg Weiss would enlist a shareholder as a plaintiff and rush to court with a lawsuit. Usually, the sued company would end up settling rather than risk going to trial.
Milberg Weiss’s supporters gave it credit for enforcing accountability in the boardroom. Critics, however, accused the firm of economic terrorism, and with the Republican takeover of Congress in 1994 a business-backed movement took hold to change securities laws to make it harder to bring shareholder lawsuits.
The firm found a friend in President Bill Clinton, who, a few days after being seen chatting and shaking hands with Mr. Lerach at a White House dinner in 1995, vetoed legislation that clamped down on class action suits. Congress overrode the veto, but the image remained of a close relationship between the president and Mr. Lerach, a Lincoln Bedroom guest during the Clinton presidency who donated more than $100,000 to Mr. Clinton’s presidential library.
Beginning in 2000, federal investigators began looking into Milberg Weiss’s litigation practices, particularly its uncanny ability to beat other firms in the race to be named lead counsel in large class action suits, thereby ensuring itself a larger percentage of fees. By last year, two people had pleaded guilty to accepting kickbacks from Milberg Weiss in return for being on call to serve as plaintiffs in more than 100 lawsuits; an expert witness used by the firm was implicated in the fraud; and two partners, Steven G. Schulman and David J. Bershad, had been indicted.
Both Mr. Schulman and Mr. Bershad have since pleaded guilty. Late last month, Mr. Lerach also pleaded guilty, leaving Mr. Weiss as the only named partner facing criminal charges.
The case has taken a toll not only on the lawyers involved, but also on the firm’s name plate. After Mr. Lerach left to form his own practice in San Diego, his old firm dropped his name, becoming Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman. Two resignations and guilty pleas later, it is now simply Milberg Weiss.
Mr. Lerach’s statement has infuriated other plaintiffs’ lawyers. “It would just be unthinkable” to give kickbacks to lead plaintiffs, said Max Berger, of the firm Bernstein, Litowitz, Berger & Grossman. Added Sean Coffey, another Bernstein, Litowitz partner: “It is bad enough that this confessed criminal cheated for years to get an unfair advantage over his rival firms. But for this guy, on his way to prison, to say that everyone does it is just beyond the pale.”
Mr. Lerach’s “everybody-does-it” claim — which he has made in numerous pre-prison interviews, as well as the Portfolio article — is also giving the Congressional enemies of the plaintiffs’ bar a new weapon with which to club it. For instance, Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, has introduced legislation that would both force new disclosures on the plaintiff’s bar and reduce their fees; the senator told me point-blank that Mr. Lerach’s pronouncements helped spur him to file the legislation. So as he heads to jail, Mr. Lerach has succeeded in making life more difficult everyone who sues companies for a living. Nice going.
Let’s take another of Mr. Lerach’s claims: “The government contends that the people on whose behalf we sued were damaged by the fees paid to plaintiffs,” he wrote in the Portfolio article. “This is false.” According to Mr. Lerach, the kickback came out the lawyer’s fees. In other words, he was the one sacrificing when he kicked money back to one of his on-call plaintiffs!
To which the only appropriate response is: What a crock. Think about it: Why is it illegal for a lead plaintiff to take money under the table from his lawyer in a class-action suit? Because in doing so, the client has a conflict with the rest of the class, for whom he is supposed to be fighting. If he knows he is going to get a kickback that comes out of the attorney’s fees, he will care more about the fees than the amount of the settlement — or the amount he might reap from a trial. Indeed, Mr. Perino recently published a study that showed that the fees awarded in Milberg Weiss cases that were included in the indictment were considerably higher than the fees in other Milberg Weiss cases — but that “the recoveries are statistically indistinguishable.” Which is to say, the lead plaintiffs didn’t spend a lot of time worrying about extracting the maximum settlement.
There is a second reason why having Potemkin plaintiffs constitutes wrongdoing. The plaintiffs are the ones who are supposed to bring the cases — not the lawyers. They hire lawyers because they have suffered harm and want redress — and they are the ones who should be making the final decisions about fighting, settling or dropping the case. The Milberg Weiss method really meant that the client was a nonentity in the process. As Mr. Lerach once famously put it to Forbes — in another great example of his lack of discretion — “I have the greatest practice of law in the world. I have no clients.”
Ultimately, what Mr. Lerach wants us to believe is that it was his zealotry in bringing evil corporations to heel that caused him to cross the line. There is no question that corporations do things they shouldn’t, and given the system we have, plaintiffs lawyers, at their best, can offer a kind of rough justice. Even Mr. Lerach has had his bright, shining moment, when he extracted billions from the banks that aided Enron.
But Enron is not really representative of Mr. Lerach’s career, much as he’d like you to believe it. He’s a crook who got caught, and if putting him in prison for his little kickback scheme — rather than his far more venal form of economic extortion — is a little like putting Al Capone in jail for tax evasion, well, so be it.
That’s a form of rough justice, too.