It's not hard for a progressive to be excited by the prospect of Eliot Spitzer becoming President of the United States. As a bit of a maverick in
New York politics, Spitzer has come on the scene with a well oiled machine, a progressive stance with regards to corporate behavior, as well as enough charisma and articulation to be electable (whatever that means).
Yet, as any good reaalist, it's important to examine our heart throbs and not glaze over obvious contradictions to assure that the candidate is worthy of our support and not just fooling us.
In the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king.
And so, Eliot Spitzer, Attorney General of New York, is king of the
corporate crime prosecutors.
Surely, no other prosecutor in the nation has the energy that moves Spitzer
to bring cases against some of the nations largest companies.
And there is no question that Spitzer's work has uncovered corporate
wrongdoing that would otherwise remain concealed -- and that his
investigative zeal exerts a deterrent effect on the executive class.
But when he is about to do justice, and all the cameras are focused on him,
Spitzer pulls his punches.
Why?
He wants to be Governor of New York.
And then President of the United States.
Let's take a well known corporate crime case that will hit home with many
parents.
And let's see how the king of the corporate crime prosecutors handled it.
Let's say you are a new parent.
And you want to start your kids in a top pre-school so they are on track for
an Ivy League education.
In New York, that means getting your kids into the 92nd Street Y in
Manhattan.
Two year olds are given IQ tests.
They are interviewed.
The parents are interviewed.
Tuition runs $15,000 a year.
In addition, parents are expected to make generous donations.
In the fall of 1999, this was the situation facing Jack Grubman and his wife
LuAnn.
Despite a number of meetings with the school, and promises of support, his
twin two-year olds didn't make the short list.
At the time, Grubman was an analyst with Citigroup unit Salomon Smith
Barney.
Grubman was the nation's top telecom analyst.
And he didn't like AT&T.
This presented a problem for Sandy Weill, then chairman of Citigroup, and
thus Grubman's boss.
Weill was in a power struggle with fellow co-CEO Jack Reed.
Weill needed all the votes he could get on the board to get rid of Reed.
And one of those votes was C. Michael Armstrong, the head of AT&T.
Armstrong was not happy with Grubman's negative rating of AT&T.
And he let Weill know it.
So, Weill began a campaign to get Grubman to take a fresh look at AT&T
stock.
And so Grubman began to take a fresh look.
And as he was taking a fresh look, he wrote a two page memo to Sandy
Weill, his boss, titled AT&T and the 92nd Street Y.
He reviewed for Weill how the fresh look was going -- meetings with top
AT&T executives, including with Armstrong, promises to keep Weill posted
But wait.
There is this matter of the ridiculous but necessary process of preschool
applications in Manhattan.
Given that it's statistically easier to get into the Harvard freshman class
than it is to get into preschool at the 92nd Street Y, it comes down to who
you know, Grubman wrote.
Anyway, anything you could do Sandy would be greatly appreciated. As I
mentioned, I will keep you posted on the progress with AT&T which I think is
going well. If you feel comfortable and know some of these board members
well enough, I would greatly appreciate it if you could ask them to use any
influence they feel comfortable in using to help us as well.
Weill then arranged to donate $1 million to the school if Grubman's kids
were let in.
And he did.
And they were.
And Grubman upgraded his rating of AT&T stock in November 1999.
Charles Gasparino relates this story in his new book, Blood on the Street:
The Sensational Inside Story of How Wall Street Analysts Duped A Generation
of Investors (Free Press, 2005).
Gasparino wrote about the analysts for hire while he was the Wall Street
Journal.
He's currently with Newsweek.
In an interview, Gasparino was critical of Spitzer for settling his cases
against the big Wall Street firms for pennies on the dollar, for not getting
them to admit wrongdoing, and for not bringing criminal prosecutions.
The 92nd Street Y story led Gasparino to ask -- why wasn't Weill charged
with wrongdoing in this case?
Because Attorney General Eliot Spitzer pulled his punches.
On December 2002, Spitzer stood before a slew of cameras at the New York
Stock Exchange and announced a global settlement with 10 big firms that
closed out Spitzer's investigation into the undue influence of investment
banking interests on securities research at brokerage firms.
In a separate civil case, Grubman was permanently barred from working in the
securities industry.
But were any charges ever brought against the big kahuna, Sanford Weill?
No.
And why not?
Eliot let him go, Gasparino told us. And that's a big problem. I'm not
saying that the guy should have been put in jail forever, but he should have
been charged. But Eliot knew that if he charged Weill, he might have lost
the chance to proclaim victory -- to claim that Wall Street research is
somehow now saved, that there are structural reforms now, when there really
wasn't.
If he charged Weill or any other individual executive in the case, then the
companies would not agree to a big global settlement, and Spitzer would
not have been given the chance to stand before all of those adoring cameras
at the NYSE.
And Weill was a big player in the Democratic Party.
And after all, Spitzer wants to be Governor of New York.
And then maybe President of the United States.
Don't bite the hand that might feed your political aspirations.
And of course it is not just the Weill case.
In May 2004, Spitzer sued Richard Grasso the former head of the New York
Stock Exchange, for excessive compensation.
The lawsuit was filed after a four-month investigation by Spitzer's office
determined that directors of the NYSE were misled about various aspects of
the $187.5 million payment package awarded to Grasso.
Well, if Grasso was charged, why not Carl McCall, the head of the NYSE
Compensation Committee, which approved Grasso's pay package?
Politics, Gasparino told us. Carl McCall is a prominent Democrat. He's an
African-American. If you are running as a Democrat, you need the African
American vote. For him to go after Carl McCall, he would get a lot of heat
from prominent African Americans in the state.
Earlier this month, Spitzer forced one of the nation's largest insurance
brokerage firms, Marsh and McLennan Companies Inc., to pay $850 million and
to agree to a ban contingent fees to resolve allegations that Marsh steered
its clients to insurers with which it had lucrative payoff agreements, and
that the firm solicited rigged bids for insurance contracts.
Spitzer has come under fire for settling case after case against big
companies without demanding an admission of wrongdoing.
And this case was no different. The company neither admitted nor denied
wrongdoing.
When asked why they were allowed to neither admit nor deny, Michele
Hirshman, the first deputy attorney general, told the New York Times: "We
are interested in seeing this company and its employees be able to survive
under this new business model -- we wanted to avoid corporate capital
punishment here."
Spitzer: in favor of the death penalty for individuals, but not for
corporations.
Spitzer is like every other politician -- cutting deals to get ahead. Or as
Gasparino told us: "Every politician is driven by publicity. I was trying to
show that there are way too many stories portraying him as this unconflicted
white knight trying to do what others won't do. This man is a politician. He
is ambitious. He does cut deals. And some of the deals are not very good for
small investors."
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. Mokhiber and Weissman are co-authors of On the
Rampage: Corporate Predators and the Destruction of Democracy (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press).
Spitzer still warrants our support. Yet that support should be conditional - Corporate crime does not stop at party lines.