Judge Carpinello gets IG post
The Albany Times Union by James M. Odato - December 30, 2008
Rensselaer County State Supreme Court Justice Anthony Carpinello just got hired by the New York Power Authority as its inspector general. At $187,000, the job pays $47,300 more a year than the post Carpinello leaves at year’s end having lost the re-election in November to Democrat Patrick McGrath. The power authority IG position has been vacant since NYPA bid goodbye to Daniel Wiese in May. Carpinello, a Republican, served on the State Supreme Court since 1995 and was assigned to the Appellate Division since 1996. The Appellate Court post pays $139,700.
See Related Story: Big Bucks Appellate Judge Voted Out
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Holocaust Survivor Ties Madoff and Dreier to NY Ethics Scandal
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ------------------------------------------------------------------------x
GIZELLA WEISSHAUS, Plaintiff
FILED December 29, 2008
-against-
AFFIRMATION
08C Civ 4053 (DLC)
THE STATE OF NEW YORK; THE OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION OF THE UNIFIED COURT SYSTEM;
THOMAS J. CAHILL, in his official and individual capacity;
ALAN W. FRIEDBERG, in his official and individual capacity;
JUDITH N. STEIN, in her official and individual capacity;
HAL R. LIEBERMAN, in his official and individual capacity;
SAUL E. FEDER; MEL URBACH; EDWARD D. FAGAN; and
JOHN and JANE DOES, 1-20, Defendants.
------------------------------------------------------------------------x
Gizella Weisshaus, pro se, makes the following affirmation under the penalties of perjury:
1. I am the plaintiff in the above entitled Complaint (attached as Exhibit “A”), and I respectfully move this Court to order defendants to show cause why an order should not be issued:
(a) appointing a federal monitor to oversee the day-to-day operations of defendants’ Office of Court Administration’s, and State of New York’s, Departmental Disciplinary Committee located at 61 Broadway, New York, New York, for an indefinite period of time;
(b) referring all herein allegations for investigation to the Office of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Attention: Boyd M. Johnson III, Chief, Public Corruption Unit, for investigation;
(c) enjoining defendants, pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anyway altering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff;
(d) granting such other legal and equitable relief as the court deems just and proper; and
(e) pending the hearing of plaintiff’s application for a preliminary injunction, temporarily restraining and enjoining defendants from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in any way altering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff.
2. There is now evidence of criminal action by defendants including recent threats upon a federal witness, physical intimidation by “state actors,” and on-going ethics whitewashing.
$1.25 Billion Holocaust Fraud Now Pales Against Madoff’s $50 Billion
3. I am a 79-year-old Holocaust survivor who has been fighting to recover my father’s stolen assets since shortly after my entire family was exterminated during the Holocaust. I submi this affirmation upon personal knowledge as to my own facts and upon information and belief as to all other matters. I was the person who first filed the historic “Swiss Banks” lawsuit in 1996 against various Swiss banks for looting my family assets. My case eventually became a class action, and that class action was settled on behalf of Holocaust survivors for $1.25 billion in 1998. I opted out of the settlement because involved attorneys were paying themselves millions of dollars when some Holocaust survivors and class plaintiffs had not received a penny, and others had only received a few thousand dollars.
The Common Denominator is the DDC and its
Whitewashing of Ethics Complaints
4. I respectfully move this court for an order temporarily restraining and enjoining defendants from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anyway altering any portion of my files or ethics complaints concerning any herein defendants or any other attorney disciplinary files under the jurisdiction of defendants’ “ethics” body, the Departmental Disciplinary Committee (hereinafter “DDC”). I am extremely concerned over the DDC’s long-practiced improper manipulation of ethics complaint case files. I am well aware that I am not the lone victim of buried ethics complaints. The time has come for immediate and decisive judicial intervention.
Plaintiff Weisshauss and Victims of Madoff and Dreier are Defrauded
by Defendants’ On-Going Whitewashing of Ethics Complaints
5. It is of no surprise to me that the gross unethical misconduct and failings of Manhattan’s so-called “ethics” committee, the DDC, that I have witnessed, is the same “ethics” body that has ignored and whitewashed the outrageous conduct of legal, financial and business leaders, assisting in the current financial collapse. This court needs to know how many complaints have been filed with the DDC against our so-called financial and legal leaders over the last ten years. The refusal of the DDC to properly oversee the ethics failings of attorneys under its jurisdiction has harmed me greatly over the last ten years. And the knowing failure by the DDC to uphold ethics of any kind not only continues to harm me but the stability of the world’s financial, legal and business communities. Unless this order is issued, I will suffer immediate and irreparable injury, loss and further damage in that my constitutional right to fair proceedings will not be possible if defendants are allowed to continue their practice of altering and “cleansing” file documents to support whatever improper purposes may be served in furtherance of defendants’ manipulated “findings” involving complaints against select attorneys.
Federal Witness Tampering
6. I recently learned that in a case now pending before the Honorable Shira A. Scheindlin, Anderson v. The State of New York (S.D.N.Y. 07cv9599), a federal witness was physically intimidated just prior to giving testimony. The plaintiff, Christine Anderson, is widely regarded as the courageous whistleblower who, as a DDC staff attorney, exposed the criminal actions of the so-called DDC “ethics” committee. I am informed that the federal witness, who was another
DDC staff attorney, was threatened by a DDC Supervising Attorney! I am also informed that the NYS Office of Court Administration Inspector General, Sherril Spatz, investigated the matter and that the DDC Supervising Attorney who threatened the federal witness was transferred out of the DDC’s Broadway offices to another location.
Referral to US Attorney, Subpoenas and Public Testimony Needed
7. I request a public hearing before this Honorable Court because I believe testimony will support my request for this Court’s appointment of a federal monitor. Given the facts that: (1) Anderson (an attorney) alleges the “whitewashing of ethics complaints” at the DDC where she was employed; and (2) another DDC attorney has complained of “witness intimidation,” I respectfully submit that this Honorable Court must officially refer these allegations to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for investigation.
State Judges Want to Testify in Federal Court as to “Ethics” Corruption
8. In another DDC case related to Anderson, Judge Scheindlin So Ordered a request to file:
“An affirmation, dated June 8, 2008, from a retired elected judge of This state, and who sat on the bench for more than 20 years (3 pages); and An affirmation, dated June 3, 2008, from a sitting, elected justice of the NYS Supreme Court (11 pages)”
The document says, in part:
“Both affirmants want to personally testify before this Honorable Court…as to their first-hand knowledge of the systemic corruption…within the New York State attorney grievance committees…”
(See attached Exhibit “B” from McKeown v State of NY (08cv2391 SDNY)
9. I believe testimony by elected judges of this state at a public hearing before this Honorable Federal Court will clearly show, and fully support, the urgent need for this Honorable Court’s immediate appointment of a federal monitor over the Manhattan DDC “ethics” committee.
DDC STANDARD PRACTICE IS OF SELF-DEALING ACCEPTANCE AND ADVANCEMENT OF FRAUDULENT DOCUMENTS
11. The defendants’ collective failure to oversee or correct attorney misconduct confirms their inability, or lack of desire, to perform their trusted duty of attorney ethics oversight. Witness attorneys at the Dreier Law firm. Upon information and belief, the Dreier Law firm was a large “protected” Manhattan law firm, immune from any real ethics accountability. Clearly, the state defendants are not capable of overseeing the misconduct of any attorney under its charge. In addition, and because the involved attorney misconduct was by select members of the bar, the defendants have little time, and less desire, to address any attorney misconduct. The defendants’ collective continuation of neglecting their duty requires the immediate appointment of a federal monitor.
12. The defendants have knowingly acted to allow the DDC to disregard their state mandated duty to handle ethics complaints against attorneys whose offices are located within Manhattan and the Bronx. The DDC has long abandoned their duty to conduct full, fair and balanced investigations. The DDC is a division of the New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Judicial Department, and is therefore part of the New York State court system. As part
of the New York State court system, the DDC is obligated and duty-bound to administer justice in a fair, honest and lawful manner. They have failed this obligation and in doing so have, and continue to, violate federal laws.
TWENTY YEARS OF DDC CHAOS REQUIRES FEDERAL INTERVENTION
13. I recently became aware of the fact that the pattern of improper acts within the DDC has been the rule and not the exception-- egregious violations that continue to harm my right of due process and equal access, and actions that only serve to further the improper and selective enforcement of attorney ethical investigations.
14. As a result of flagrant abuse and neglect of duty in and about the DDC in 1988, according to The Murphy Report (attached hereto as Exhibit “C”), the DDC office locks were changed, and the two top DDC administrators were forced to resigned by then Appellate Division, First Department Presiding Justice Francis T. Murphy.
15. The Murphy Report tells of practices at the DDC from two decades ago that chillingly mirrors Madoff and Dreier neglect and current DDC operating procedure:
“In unlawfully closing the file, Mr. Gentile, wrote a servile letter to that political figure, inviting him to contact Mr. Gentile, and a letter to the complainant chastising him for having filed the complaints.”
16. The 20 year old Murphy report also, and prophetically, speaks of current-day conditions at the DDC:
“It was apparent to me that a chief counsel whom we could rarely locate, who seemingly tried no cases, whose backlog seemed permanent, whose staff lawyers fell from the masthead with an awe-inspiring frequency and whose unethical conduct in certain cases had caused alarm, and who
was lacking in professional courage, was not a chief counsel of anything.”
17. The collection of filed cases in the Southern District of New York alone tells of the continuing, and too-long accepted, “unethical conduct” of the DDC, and it speaks loudly to the urgent need for this Court’s immediate intervention by appointment of a federal monitor over all day-to-day operations of state actors at the DDC. The continuing inaction of DDC’s duty to properly oversee attorney ethics requires this court’s immediate action of appointing a federal monitor over the DDC so that the violations of federal laws harming me and all others similarly situated may, finally, come to an end.
18. I have a Constitutional right to a fair, lawful and honest judicial system, free from corruption, oppression, self-dealing and bias, with impartial arbiters of the law. I have no other adequate remedy of law, and have not previously sought the relief herein requested.
19. I respectfully request that a hearing being held on the herein sought relief and, further, that I be permitted to present the brief testimony of approximately ten credible witnesses.
WHEREFORE, I respectfully request that the court grant the within relief as well as such
other and further relief that may be just and proper.
The undersigned declares under penalty of perjury that she is the plaintiff in the above action, that she has read the above and that the information contained in the complaint is true and correct, 28 U.S.C. § 1746; 18 U.S.C § 1621.
Dated: Brooklyn, New York
December 28, 2008
GIZELLA WEISSHAUS, Pro Se
203 Wilson Street
Brooklyn, New York 11211
(718) 387-0026
Here's the Order to Show Cause:
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
------------------------------------------------------------------------x
08cv4053 (DLC)
GIZELLA WEISSHAUS, Plaintiff, ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION AND
TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER
-against-
THE STATE OF NEW YORK;
THE OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION
OF THE UNIFIED COURT SYSTEM;
THOMAS J. CAHILL, in his official and individual capacity;
ALAN W. FRIEDBERG, in his official and individual capacity;
JUDITH N. STEIN, in her official and individual capacity;
HAL R. LIEBERMAN, in his official and individual capacity;
SAUL E. FEDER;
MEL URBACH;
EDWARD D. FAGAN; and
JOHN and JANE DOES, 1-20, Defendants.
------------------------------------------------------------------------x
Upon the affirmation of Gizella Weisshaus, pro se, executed the 28th day of December, 2008,
it is ORDERED, that the above named defendants, or any party, appear and show cause before a motion term of this court, at Court Room 11B, in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, 500 Pearl Street, in the City, County and State of New York on January ______, 2009, at ___________ o’clock in the _______noon thereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, why an order should not be issued:
(a) appointing a federal monitor to oversee the day-to-day operations of defendants’Office of Court Administration’s, and State of New York’s, Departmental Disciplinary Committee, located at 61 Broadway, New York, New York, for an indefinite period of time;
(b) referring all herein allegations for investigation to the Office of the United States Attorney
for the Southern District of New York, Attention: Boyd M. Johnson III, Chief, Public Corruption Unit, for investigation;
(c) enjoining defendants, pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anyway altering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff; and
(d) granting such other legal and equitable relief as the court deems just and proper;
and it is further,
ORDERED, that sufficient reason having been shown, therefore, pending the hearing of
plaintiff’s application for a preliminary injunction, pursuant to FRCP Rule 65, the defendants are temporarily restrained and enjoined from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anywayaltering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff; and it is further
ORDERED, that no security be posted by plaintiff, and it is further,
ORDERED, that personal service of a copy of this order and annexed affirmation upon the defendants or counsel on or before _________ o’clock in the ____________noon ____________, 200__ shall be deemed good and sufficient service thereof.
DATED: December _____, 2008
New York, New York
_____________________________
Hon. Denise L. Cote
United States District Judge
THE OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION
OF THE UNIFIED COURT SYSTEM;
THOMAS J. CAHILL, in his official and individual capacity;
ALAN W. FRIEDBERG, in his official and individual capacity;
JUDITH N. STEIN, in her official and individual capacity;
HAL R. LIEBERMAN, in his official and individual capacity;
SAUL E. FEDER;
MEL URBACH;
EDWARD D. FAGAN; and
JOHN and JANE DOES, 1-20, Defendants.
------------------------------------------------------------------------x
Upon the affirmation of Gizella Weisshaus, pro se, executed the 28th day of December, 2008,
it is ORDERED, that the above named defendants, or any party, appear and show cause before a motion term of this court, at Court Room 11B, in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, 500 Pearl Street, in the City, County and State of New York on January ______, 2009, at ___________ o’clock in the _______noon thereof, or as soon thereafter as counsel may be heard, why an order should not be issued:
(a) appointing a federal monitor to oversee the day-to-day operations of defendants’Office of Court Administration’s, and State of New York’s, Departmental Disciplinary Committee, located at 61 Broadway, New York, New York, for an indefinite period of time;
(b) referring all herein allegations for investigation to the Office of the United States Attorney
for the Southern District of New York, Attention: Boyd M. Johnson III, Chief, Public Corruption Unit, for investigation;
(c) enjoining defendants, pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anyway altering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff; and
(d) granting such other legal and equitable relief as the court deems just and proper;
and it is further,
ORDERED, that sufficient reason having been shown, therefore, pending the hearing of
plaintiff’s application for a preliminary injunction, pursuant to FRCP Rule 65, the defendants are temporarily restrained and enjoined from destroying, concealing, discarding, secreting or in anywayaltering any portion of any files or ethics complaints involving plaintiff; and it is further
ORDERED, that no security be posted by plaintiff, and it is further,
ORDERED, that personal service of a copy of this order and annexed affirmation upon the defendants or counsel on or before _________ o’clock in the ____________noon ____________, 200__ shall be deemed good and sufficient service thereof.
DATED: December _____, 2008
New York, New York
_____________________________
Hon. Denise L. Cote
United States District Judge
NY Law Journal on Shameful Surrogate Judge
Court Stops Anderson From Taking Surrogate Slot
The New York Law Journal by Joel Stashenko - December 30, 2008
The Court of Appeals yesterday barred Nora S. Anderson from becoming Manhattan surrogate on Jan. 1 pending the outcome of Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau's prosecution of her for allegedly failing to accurately report contributions to her campaign this summer. A 6-0 Court suspended Ms. Anderson with pay effective Thursday, when the 10-year term she won earlier this year is to begin. The Court gave no reasoning for its decision. Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye took no part in the deliberations. Chief Administrative Judge Ann Pfau will designate an interim judge to fill the opening by early January, said David Bookstaver, a spokesman for the Office of Court Administration. Ms. Anderson is facing a 10-count indictment that she falsely reported $250,000 that flowed into her campaign in the days preceding her hard-fought primary victory in September over two Democratic rivals. Mr. Morganthau contends the money came in donations and loans from attorney Seth Rubenstein, for whom Ms. Anderson has worked for nearly a decade, but was not reported accurately by Ms. Anderson in filings with the Board of Elections. Both Ms. Anderson and Mr. Rubenstein have been free on their own recognizance since their arraignments (NYLJ, Dec. 11). Each faces a prison term of 1 1/3 to four years on each of the top six counts of the indictment, all Class E. felonies. In a letter to the Court of Appeals, Ms. Anderson's attorney, Richard Godosky, had argued that the Court was not obligated to suspend Ms. Anderson as she contested the charges against her. He also urged that if suspension was the Court's decision, that it be with pay. Manhattan's other surrogate, Kristin Booth Glen, confirmed to the Law Journal earlier this month that she swore Ms. Anderson in as surrogate about a month after the election. Mr. Godosky argued before the Court of Appeals that because she has already been sworn in, Ms. Anderson cannot legally practice law after Jan. 1, even if she is prohibited from taking the bench as her prosecution unfolds. Mr. Godosky also told the Court that Ms. Anderson contributes $800 a month toward the care of her elderly mother, who has Alzheimer's disease, and her terminally ill brother, who lost his job when the firm he worked for was destroyed when the World Trade Center towers were felled on Sept. 11, 2001. Surrogates are paid $136,700 a year. Mr. Godosky, of Godosky & Gentile, said yesterday the Court's determination to suspend Ms. Anderson with pay is a "decision that they've made consistently" in cases where judges face felony charges unrelated to the performance of their official duties. He declined further comment. Mr. Godosky is handling the disciplinary issues related to Ms. Anderson's case. Gustave H. Newman of Newman & Greenberg is her trial counsel. The Court of Appeals has traditionally suspended judges with pay when they are facing felony charges unrelated to their judicial duties and suspended judges without pay when charges allege official malfeasance. The Commission on Judicial Conduct had urged that Ms. Anderson be suspended at the beginning of her term pending the outcome of the criminal case against her (NYLJ, Dec. 23). It took no position on whether she should be paid or not. Commission Administrator Robert Tembeckjian declined comment yesterday. In similar cases, the commission has refrained from initiating its own misconduct investigations until prosecutors complete criminal proceedings. Ms. Anderson captured 48 percent of the 55,000 votes cast in September's Democratic primary to defeat John J. Reddy, counsel to the public administrator, and Manhattan Justice Milton A. Tingling. She ran unopposed in November's general election. They were vying to replace Surrogate Renee Roth, who is retiring. - Joel Stashenko
The New York Law Journal by Joel Stashenko - December 30, 2008
The Court of Appeals yesterday barred Nora S. Anderson from becoming Manhattan surrogate on Jan. 1 pending the outcome of Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau's prosecution of her for allegedly failing to accurately report contributions to her campaign this summer. A 6-0 Court suspended Ms. Anderson with pay effective Thursday, when the 10-year term she won earlier this year is to begin. The Court gave no reasoning for its decision. Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye took no part in the deliberations. Chief Administrative Judge Ann Pfau will designate an interim judge to fill the opening by early January, said David Bookstaver, a spokesman for the Office of Court Administration. Ms. Anderson is facing a 10-count indictment that she falsely reported $250,000 that flowed into her campaign in the days preceding her hard-fought primary victory in September over two Democratic rivals. Mr. Morganthau contends the money came in donations and loans from attorney Seth Rubenstein, for whom Ms. Anderson has worked for nearly a decade, but was not reported accurately by Ms. Anderson in filings with the Board of Elections. Both Ms. Anderson and Mr. Rubenstein have been free on their own recognizance since their arraignments (NYLJ, Dec. 11). Each faces a prison term of 1 1/3 to four years on each of the top six counts of the indictment, all Class E. felonies. In a letter to the Court of Appeals, Ms. Anderson's attorney, Richard Godosky, had argued that the Court was not obligated to suspend Ms. Anderson as she contested the charges against her. He also urged that if suspension was the Court's decision, that it be with pay. Manhattan's other surrogate, Kristin Booth Glen, confirmed to the Law Journal earlier this month that she swore Ms. Anderson in as surrogate about a month after the election. Mr. Godosky argued before the Court of Appeals that because she has already been sworn in, Ms. Anderson cannot legally practice law after Jan. 1, even if she is prohibited from taking the bench as her prosecution unfolds. Mr. Godosky also told the Court that Ms. Anderson contributes $800 a month toward the care of her elderly mother, who has Alzheimer's disease, and her terminally ill brother, who lost his job when the firm he worked for was destroyed when the World Trade Center towers were felled on Sept. 11, 2001. Surrogates are paid $136,700 a year. Mr. Godosky, of Godosky & Gentile, said yesterday the Court's determination to suspend Ms. Anderson with pay is a "decision that they've made consistently" in cases where judges face felony charges unrelated to the performance of their official duties. He declined further comment. Mr. Godosky is handling the disciplinary issues related to Ms. Anderson's case. Gustave H. Newman of Newman & Greenberg is her trial counsel. The Court of Appeals has traditionally suspended judges with pay when they are facing felony charges unrelated to their judicial duties and suspended judges without pay when charges allege official malfeasance. The Commission on Judicial Conduct had urged that Ms. Anderson be suspended at the beginning of her term pending the outcome of the criminal case against her (NYLJ, Dec. 23). It took no position on whether she should be paid or not. Commission Administrator Robert Tembeckjian declined comment yesterday. In similar cases, the commission has refrained from initiating its own misconduct investigations until prosecutors complete criminal proceedings. Ms. Anderson captured 48 percent of the 55,000 votes cast in September's Democratic primary to defeat John J. Reddy, counsel to the public administrator, and Manhattan Justice Milton A. Tingling. She ran unopposed in November's general election. They were vying to replace Surrogate Renee Roth, who is retiring. - Joel Stashenko
Monday, December 29, 2008
NY High Court Blocks Surrogate from Bench
New York State Court of Appeals blocks Judge-elect Nora Anderson from taking office
The New York Daily News by GLENN BLAIN - ALBANY BUREAU - December 29, 2008
ALBANY - The state's highest court Monday blocked a newly-elected Manhattan judge from taking office because of charges she violated campaign finance laws. The Court of Appeals, in a one paragraph decision, indefinitely suspended Surrogate Court Judge-elect Nora Anderson with pay, effective Jan. 1. "She's suspended until these criminal charges are resolved," said Gary Spencer, a court spokesman. Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau has accused Anderson of financing her campaign for Surrogate Court with illegal contributions from Brooklyn trusts and estates lawyer Seth Rubenstein. Anderson, 56, has pleaded not guilty. Gus Newman, Anderson's lawyer, did not immediately respond to a telephone call seeking comment. Newman has argued that Anderson is qualified to be a surrogate's judge, where she would preside over estates of the dead. The Court of Appeals' ruled unanimously with one abstention to suspend Anderson. Chief Justice Judith Kaye, who is retiring, did not participate in the decision.
Here's the Court of Appeals Decision:
In the Matter of the consideration of the suspension of the Hon. Nora S. Anderson, from the office of Surrogate, New York County
DECEMBER 29, 2008 - No. 226 - On the Court's own motion, it is determined that the Honorable Nora S. Anderson is suspended, with pay, from the office of Surrogate, New York County, effective January 1, 2009, pursuant to NY Constitution, article VI, § 22 and Judiciary Law § 44(8). Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Read, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur. Chief Judge Kaye took no part.
The New York Daily News by GLENN BLAIN - ALBANY BUREAU - December 29, 2008
ALBANY - The state's highest court Monday blocked a newly-elected Manhattan judge from taking office because of charges she violated campaign finance laws. The Court of Appeals, in a one paragraph decision, indefinitely suspended Surrogate Court Judge-elect Nora Anderson with pay, effective Jan. 1. "She's suspended until these criminal charges are resolved," said Gary Spencer, a court spokesman. Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau has accused Anderson of financing her campaign for Surrogate Court with illegal contributions from Brooklyn trusts and estates lawyer Seth Rubenstein. Anderson, 56, has pleaded not guilty. Gus Newman, Anderson's lawyer, did not immediately respond to a telephone call seeking comment. Newman has argued that Anderson is qualified to be a surrogate's judge, where she would preside over estates of the dead. The Court of Appeals' ruled unanimously with one abstention to suspend Anderson. Chief Justice Judith Kaye, who is retiring, did not participate in the decision.
Here's the Court of Appeals Decision:
In the Matter of the consideration of the suspension of the Hon. Nora S. Anderson, from the office of Surrogate, New York County
DECEMBER 29, 2008 - No. 226 - On the Court's own motion, it is determined that the Honorable Nora S. Anderson is suspended, with pay, from the office of Surrogate, New York County, effective January 1, 2009, pursuant to NY Constitution, article VI, § 22 and Judiciary Law § 44(8). Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Read, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur. Chief Judge Kaye took no part.
LOL: Astor Surrogate Cites Code of Judicial Conduct
Estate of Brooke Russell Astor, 2127/2007
Decided: November 20, 2008 - Surrogate Anthony A. Scarpino Jr.
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, Surrogate's Court
Attorneys for JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA
Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP
Attorneys for Howard Levine
Whitman Osterman & Hanna, LLP
Attorneys for Annette de la Renta
Cravath Swaine & Moore LLP
Attorneys for the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Rockefeller University, Historic Hudson Valley, and the Wildlife Conservation Society
Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP
Attorneys for Anthony Marshall
Warner Partners, P.C.
Attorneys for the New York Public Library
Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Alison Fischer, Esq.
Casper & Fischer, LLP
Guardian ad litem for Hilary Marshall, Winslow Marshall and Sophie Marshall
Attorneys for the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Farrell Fritz, P.C.
Attorneys for the Ultimate Charitable Beneficiaries
Attorney General of the State of New York Charities Bureau
Attorneys for Philip Marshall
Miller Canfield Paddock and Stone, P.L.C.
Office of Legal Counsel
New York University
Attorney for the Trinity Episcopal Church
Marianne T. O'Toole, LLC
Attorneys for Carnegie Hall
Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP
United Nations Headquarters
Robert M. Morgenthau
District Attorney, New York County
Surrogate Scarpino
DECISION & ORDER
In these three probate proceedings in the estate of Brooke Russell Astor, the court issued a decision and order dated September 5, 2008 (the "September 5, 2008 order"), in which it ordered, among other things, (1) that by November 17, 2008, Anthony Marshall "must turn over to the court only, all documents responsive to the discovery notices over which he asserts any privilege" for an in camera review and (2) "a privilege log which complies with CPLR 3122[b] and which states as to the privilege against self-incrimination as to each document, specific facts as to why the production is both testimonial and incriminating and as to each other privilege as to each document, why that privilege is claimed."
The September 5, 2008 order went on to read that "[t]hereafter, the court will render a decision on the production of the documents against which the privilege against self-incrimination has been asserted", that "[w]ith respect to those documents over which the privilege against self-incrimination and other privileges were asserted but which the court finds the privilege against self-incrimination unsupported, the court will order the production and service of a privilege log with respect to these documents only on all parties (exclusive of the District Attorney)" and that "[u]pon receipt of the privilege log, the Attorney General may renew his motion to compel document discovery."
By letter dated Friday, November 14, 2008 (faxed to the court at 10:43 p.m. and emailed to the court at 10:51 p.m.), counsel for Mr. Marshall wrote that the September 5, 2008 order had been appealed to the Appellate Division, Second Department; that on October 27, 2008, Mr. Marshall moved by order to show cause to that Court for a stay of the September 5, 2008 order pending the appeal and a preference; that the order to show cause was signed on that date with the stay intact; and that on this date, counsel had been advised orally by a clerk of the Appellate Division, Second Department, that the Court had decided the motion, denying the stay and granting the preference. The letter went on to request that this court should stay the September 5, 2008 order, sua sponte, pending the appeal and listed reasons for that request. Upon receipt of counsel's letter on November 17, 2008, the court declined to modify its September 5, 2008 order.
On that same day, in response, counsel for Mr. Marshall wrote that they had not yet received the written Appellate Division, Second Department decision and order on their motion so that the stay was still in place and requested additional time until November 19, 2008, to comply with the court's September 5, 2008 order. This court notified all counsel that the Appellate Division, Second Department had on this day in fact signed a decision and order denying the stay and granting the preference. On November 19, 2008, counsel for Mr. Marshall delivered to the court a box of documents. The box was labeled on each of its four sides and on the top in large and bold letters as follows:
HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL FOR IN CAMERA REVIEW FOR SURROGATE'S EYES ONLY
The binders inside the box had labels on them which stated that the documents were for "Surrogate Scarpino's eyes only." Also attached to the box, was a sealed envelope addressed to the Surrogate which contained a letter. The Chief Clerk of the court cursorily reviewed the contents of the letter (which appeared to contain additional legal argument concerning the production of the privilege log and the documents) and returned the letter to counsel for Mr. Marshall as it constituted an ex parte communication with the court. Counsel for Mr. Marshall retrieved a second copy of the letter from the box.
As a preliminary matter, despite the clearly proscriptive labeling by Mr. Marshall's counsel on the outside of the box and the binders that the documents and privilege log are to be reviewed by the Surrogate only, these documents will be reviewed by the court in accordance with Canon 3[B][6][c] of the Code of Judicial Conduct which provides that "a judge may consult with court personnel whose function is to aid the judge in carrying out the judge's adjudicative responsibilities or with other judges".
Next, the court notes that the privilege log submitted by counsel for Mr. Marshall does not appear to be in compliance with the requirements set forth in this court's September 5, 2008 order. The Fifth Amendment privilege is the only privilege set forth in the log. As quoted above, the September 5, 2008 order clearly stated that all privileges that Mr. Marshall intended to assert with respect to each document needed to be set forth in the log. If Mr. Marshall asserts no other privileges (which assertion appears contrary to representations made in his March 2008 motion papers), then by affidavit his counsel shall notify the court by November 26, 2008, that he intends to assert no other privileges. If Mr. Marshall intends to assert other privileges, then, by December 8, 2008, his counsel shall submit a revised privilege log to the court which complies with the requirements set forth in the September 5, 2008 order.
THIS IS THE DECISION AND ORDER OF THE COURT.
Decided: November 20, 2008 - Surrogate Anthony A. Scarpino Jr.
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, Surrogate's Court
Attorneys for JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA
Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP
Attorneys for Howard Levine
Whitman Osterman & Hanna, LLP
Attorneys for Annette de la Renta
Cravath Swaine & Moore LLP
Attorneys for the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Rockefeller University, Historic Hudson Valley, and the Wildlife Conservation Society
Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP
Attorneys for Anthony Marshall
Warner Partners, P.C.
Attorneys for the New York Public Library
Debevoise & Plimpton LLP
Alison Fischer, Esq.
Casper & Fischer, LLP
Guardian ad litem for Hilary Marshall, Winslow Marshall and Sophie Marshall
Attorneys for the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Farrell Fritz, P.C.
Attorneys for the Ultimate Charitable Beneficiaries
Attorney General of the State of New York Charities Bureau
Attorneys for Philip Marshall
Miller Canfield Paddock and Stone, P.L.C.
Office of Legal Counsel
New York University
Attorney for the Trinity Episcopal Church
Marianne T. O'Toole, LLC
Attorneys for Carnegie Hall
Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP
United Nations Headquarters
Robert M. Morgenthau
District Attorney, New York County
Surrogate Scarpino
DECISION & ORDER
In these three probate proceedings in the estate of Brooke Russell Astor, the court issued a decision and order dated September 5, 2008 (the "September 5, 2008 order"), in which it ordered, among other things, (1) that by November 17, 2008, Anthony Marshall "must turn over to the court only, all documents responsive to the discovery notices over which he asserts any privilege" for an in camera review and (2) "a privilege log which complies with CPLR 3122[b] and which states as to the privilege against self-incrimination as to each document, specific facts as to why the production is both testimonial and incriminating and as to each other privilege as to each document, why that privilege is claimed."
The September 5, 2008 order went on to read that "[t]hereafter, the court will render a decision on the production of the documents against which the privilege against self-incrimination has been asserted", that "[w]ith respect to those documents over which the privilege against self-incrimination and other privileges were asserted but which the court finds the privilege against self-incrimination unsupported, the court will order the production and service of a privilege log with respect to these documents only on all parties (exclusive of the District Attorney)" and that "[u]pon receipt of the privilege log, the Attorney General may renew his motion to compel document discovery."
By letter dated Friday, November 14, 2008 (faxed to the court at 10:43 p.m. and emailed to the court at 10:51 p.m.), counsel for Mr. Marshall wrote that the September 5, 2008 order had been appealed to the Appellate Division, Second Department; that on October 27, 2008, Mr. Marshall moved by order to show cause to that Court for a stay of the September 5, 2008 order pending the appeal and a preference; that the order to show cause was signed on that date with the stay intact; and that on this date, counsel had been advised orally by a clerk of the Appellate Division, Second Department, that the Court had decided the motion, denying the stay and granting the preference. The letter went on to request that this court should stay the September 5, 2008 order, sua sponte, pending the appeal and listed reasons for that request. Upon receipt of counsel's letter on November 17, 2008, the court declined to modify its September 5, 2008 order.
On that same day, in response, counsel for Mr. Marshall wrote that they had not yet received the written Appellate Division, Second Department decision and order on their motion so that the stay was still in place and requested additional time until November 19, 2008, to comply with the court's September 5, 2008 order. This court notified all counsel that the Appellate Division, Second Department had on this day in fact signed a decision and order denying the stay and granting the preference. On November 19, 2008, counsel for Mr. Marshall delivered to the court a box of documents. The box was labeled on each of its four sides and on the top in large and bold letters as follows:
HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL FOR IN CAMERA REVIEW FOR SURROGATE'S EYES ONLY
The binders inside the box had labels on them which stated that the documents were for "Surrogate Scarpino's eyes only." Also attached to the box, was a sealed envelope addressed to the Surrogate which contained a letter. The Chief Clerk of the court cursorily reviewed the contents of the letter (which appeared to contain additional legal argument concerning the production of the privilege log and the documents) and returned the letter to counsel for Mr. Marshall as it constituted an ex parte communication with the court. Counsel for Mr. Marshall retrieved a second copy of the letter from the box.
As a preliminary matter, despite the clearly proscriptive labeling by Mr. Marshall's counsel on the outside of the box and the binders that the documents and privilege log are to be reviewed by the Surrogate only, these documents will be reviewed by the court in accordance with Canon 3[B][6][c] of the Code of Judicial Conduct which provides that "a judge may consult with court personnel whose function is to aid the judge in carrying out the judge's adjudicative responsibilities or with other judges".
Next, the court notes that the privilege log submitted by counsel for Mr. Marshall does not appear to be in compliance with the requirements set forth in this court's September 5, 2008 order. The Fifth Amendment privilege is the only privilege set forth in the log. As quoted above, the September 5, 2008 order clearly stated that all privileges that Mr. Marshall intended to assert with respect to each document needed to be set forth in the log. If Mr. Marshall asserts no other privileges (which assertion appears contrary to representations made in his March 2008 motion papers), then by affidavit his counsel shall notify the court by November 26, 2008, that he intends to assert no other privileges. If Mr. Marshall intends to assert other privileges, then, by December 8, 2008, his counsel shall submit a revised privilege log to the court which complies with the requirements set forth in the September 5, 2008 order.
THIS IS THE DECISION AND ORDER OF THE COURT.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Attorneys Guided Madoff's Tax Havens
Madoff probe focuses on tax havens
The Observer by James Doran in New York - December 28, 2008 (United Kingdom)
The hunt for funds allegedly cheated out of investors by Bernard Madoff, who faces fraud charges in New York, has turned to offshore tax havens where investigators believe he may have salted away hundreds of millions of dollars. Stephen Harbeck, chief executive of America's Securities Investor Protection Corporation (Sipc) and official receiver of Madoff's now defunct brokerage business, said the hunt for funds was likely to spread all over the world. "We will trace funds wherever the trail goes," he said on the steps of the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.
Sources close to the investigation said forensic accountants examining Madoff's books believed he had regularly sent large sums of money to offshore accounts in the Caribbean and Europe. "There are accounts at New York Mellon Bank that we have been looking at that appear to have sent and received money from offshore locations," a senior source said. Tracking down the money investors entrusted to Madoff is likely to be one of the longest and most complicated financial investigations on record. Harbeck said investigators were dealing with a "highly complex hybrid fraud", adding each individual investment account operated by Madoff could be its own self-contained fraud. "But it is still too early to say with any certainty what was going on inside Madoff's business." The scandal took a chilling turn last week when Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, the co-founder of a firm that lost millions investing with Madoff, was found dead in his New York apartment. Access International Advisors - Magon de La Villehuchet's firm - is understood to have lost $1.5bn in the Madoff affair.
On the same day a New York judge ruled that Madoff's investors would receive no more than $100,000 in cash compensation, no matter how much they lost. The ruling was included in a series of court orders made on 23 December by US bankruptcy judge Burton Lifland. For the biggest losers in the Madoff scandal, the compensation is a drop in the ocean. Fairfield Greenwich, the investment firm run by Madoff chum Walter Noel, lost $7.5bn in the fraud while womenswear magnate and Madoff mentor Carl Shapiro lost $545m of his personal fortune. Claims for compensation will be restricted to those investors who can prove they sent money to Madoff in the 12 months prior to his arrest on 11 December. Judge Lifland invited Madoff investors to attend a meeting at the US Bankruptcy Court on 18 February.
The Observer by James Doran in New York - December 28, 2008 (United Kingdom)
The hunt for funds allegedly cheated out of investors by Bernard Madoff, who faces fraud charges in New York, has turned to offshore tax havens where investigators believe he may have salted away hundreds of millions of dollars. Stephen Harbeck, chief executive of America's Securities Investor Protection Corporation (Sipc) and official receiver of Madoff's now defunct brokerage business, said the hunt for funds was likely to spread all over the world. "We will trace funds wherever the trail goes," he said on the steps of the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.
Sources close to the investigation said forensic accountants examining Madoff's books believed he had regularly sent large sums of money to offshore accounts in the Caribbean and Europe. "There are accounts at New York Mellon Bank that we have been looking at that appear to have sent and received money from offshore locations," a senior source said. Tracking down the money investors entrusted to Madoff is likely to be one of the longest and most complicated financial investigations on record. Harbeck said investigators were dealing with a "highly complex hybrid fraud", adding each individual investment account operated by Madoff could be its own self-contained fraud. "But it is still too early to say with any certainty what was going on inside Madoff's business." The scandal took a chilling turn last week when Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, the co-founder of a firm that lost millions investing with Madoff, was found dead in his New York apartment. Access International Advisors - Magon de La Villehuchet's firm - is understood to have lost $1.5bn in the Madoff affair.
On the same day a New York judge ruled that Madoff's investors would receive no more than $100,000 in cash compensation, no matter how much they lost. The ruling was included in a series of court orders made on 23 December by US bankruptcy judge Burton Lifland. For the biggest losers in the Madoff scandal, the compensation is a drop in the ocean. Fairfield Greenwich, the investment firm run by Madoff chum Walter Noel, lost $7.5bn in the fraud while womenswear magnate and Madoff mentor Carl Shapiro lost $545m of his personal fortune. Claims for compensation will be restricted to those investors who can prove they sent money to Madoff in the 12 months prior to his arrest on 11 December. Judge Lifland invited Madoff investors to attend a meeting at the US Bankruptcy Court on 18 February.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Judicial Reports: Fee Fight Flim Flam
Fee Fight Flim Flam
Judicial Reports by Dirk Olin - September 24, 2008
dirkolin@judicialstudies.com
You would think the Attorney-Client Fee Dispute Resolution Program would bend over backward to protect the client. According to at least one judge, you would be wrong. Imagine that you bought a car, and the dealer signed a warranty promising your money back if a serious defect was found. A few weeks later, your transmission locks up. You ask the dealer for your money back. But he refuses to honor the document, because he says he had given you an improperly printed warranty. How could that be your fault? You’d go to the Better Business Bureau, right? Well, check out this revisionist doozy by a local attorney against his client.
THE DOOZY IN QUESTION
Paul H. Altman, a father involved in a dispute with his former girlfriend over visitation rights to their son, had a falling out with his lawyer, Richard L. Gold of Morelli & Gold, LLP. They disagreed about legal fees. The retainer agreement prepared by Gold in anticipation of such a possibility declared that Altman had "an absolute right to have those disputed fees resolved through arbitration which will be binding upon both our firm and yourself." They went to arbitration. The arbitrators ruled in Altman's favor, ordering the lawyer to waive some $20,000 at issue and further requiring him to refund an additional $5,000. But then the lawyer sought a whole new trial of the fee dispute. He said he had not waived his right to a trial, because the retainer agreement that he had drafted had not incorporated a pre-printed form that he claimed the New York State Court System required.
Rough translation: "That 'binding' arbitration I promised you was actually 'non-binding.' I get a do-over." On its face, this sounds manifestly unfair and a threat to legal consumers everywhere. On the other hand, readers of Dickens or Kafka know full well that black-letter law can be an unforgiving master. So perhaps it should not have shocked the conscience in July when Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Carol Robinson Edmead ruled that the lawyer was right in the decision, Morelli & Gold, LLP v Altman. Edmead found that the attorney was not bound by the “binding” arbitration, because the retainer agreement did not contain "the express waiver language required by [Part] 137.2(c)." That was a reference to the rules governing New York’s Attorney-Client Fee Dispute Resolution Program. Justice Edmead concluded that Gold's entirely new lawsuit could proceed. (Altman, who lives in Florida, would now have to buy more plane tickets and spend more money to rebuild his case to present in a New York courtroom.) The key part of Edmead's ruling turned on her interpretation of one sentence in the statute that addresses consent in advance for the arbitration to be binding (with no further new trial permited): “Such consent shall be in writing in a form prescribed by the Board of Governors.” What does “in a form” mean? Pointing to the law Altman argued that “in a form” meant “in a manner,” as opposed to a pre-composed document. But, ignoring that contention in her decision, Edmead agreed with Gold that the phrase referred to a specific piece of paper, or at least the "express waiver wording" contained in that specific piece of paper, kept on file by the court system. There’s your Dickens moment — Altman done in by a technicality.
ON BEYOND DICKENS
But wait. The fee dispute program is overseen by a board of governors that is the official authority on guidelines interpreting the statute. Those guidelines explain that this special language is only required to be in place to ensure that the waiver is “valid on the part of the client.” In other words, the provision was made to protect a client — as opposed to a lawyer — from unwittingly surrendering a right. By that logic, since the special language wasn’t used, the client should be the only one who has the right to decide if he or she wants a new trial. The attorney should have to live with the wording of his own retainer. Bemused by all of this, we called the chairman of the fee dispute oversight board, Guy Mangano, a former Presiding Justice in the New York Court System. Did he think that a client was required to use a specific, pre-printed form to prevent a lawyer from slipping out of an arbitration? Mangano hemmed and hawed, but did not give a definitive answer. He declined to comment on the Altman case, per se, which is understandable since it’s on appeal. But he acknowledged his awareness of Altman’s argument about what the statute meant. “We’re looking into this,” he said. “It’s been referred to the legal issues committee. If it’s something that needs to be corrected, it will be corrected. If it’s not, it won’t.” But if the chairman of the oversight board can’t say for sure what the statute means, how is a client supposed to know that he can’t trust the plain wording of the retainer agreement presented to him by an attorney? Granting clients the right to take fee disputes to mandatory arbitration was one of a series of reforms recommended in 1995 by a commission appointed by Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye. Its purpose: to restore "public confidence in the entire legal system" — which, she said, had become "seriously eroded." If lawyers can rely on their own errors to force clients to draft their own consumer protections, that erosion of public confidence will turn into a mudslide.
Judicial Reports by Dirk Olin - September 24, 2008
dirkolin@judicialstudies.com
You would think the Attorney-Client Fee Dispute Resolution Program would bend over backward to protect the client. According to at least one judge, you would be wrong. Imagine that you bought a car, and the dealer signed a warranty promising your money back if a serious defect was found. A few weeks later, your transmission locks up. You ask the dealer for your money back. But he refuses to honor the document, because he says he had given you an improperly printed warranty. How could that be your fault? You’d go to the Better Business Bureau, right? Well, check out this revisionist doozy by a local attorney against his client.
THE DOOZY IN QUESTION
Paul H. Altman, a father involved in a dispute with his former girlfriend over visitation rights to their son, had a falling out with his lawyer, Richard L. Gold of Morelli & Gold, LLP. They disagreed about legal fees. The retainer agreement prepared by Gold in anticipation of such a possibility declared that Altman had "an absolute right to have those disputed fees resolved through arbitration which will be binding upon both our firm and yourself." They went to arbitration. The arbitrators ruled in Altman's favor, ordering the lawyer to waive some $20,000 at issue and further requiring him to refund an additional $5,000. But then the lawyer sought a whole new trial of the fee dispute. He said he had not waived his right to a trial, because the retainer agreement that he had drafted had not incorporated a pre-printed form that he claimed the New York State Court System required.
Rough translation: "That 'binding' arbitration I promised you was actually 'non-binding.' I get a do-over." On its face, this sounds manifestly unfair and a threat to legal consumers everywhere. On the other hand, readers of Dickens or Kafka know full well that black-letter law can be an unforgiving master. So perhaps it should not have shocked the conscience in July when Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Carol Robinson Edmead ruled that the lawyer was right in the decision, Morelli & Gold, LLP v Altman. Edmead found that the attorney was not bound by the “binding” arbitration, because the retainer agreement did not contain "the express waiver language required by [Part] 137.2(c)." That was a reference to the rules governing New York’s Attorney-Client Fee Dispute Resolution Program. Justice Edmead concluded that Gold's entirely new lawsuit could proceed. (Altman, who lives in Florida, would now have to buy more plane tickets and spend more money to rebuild his case to present in a New York courtroom.) The key part of Edmead's ruling turned on her interpretation of one sentence in the statute that addresses consent in advance for the arbitration to be binding (with no further new trial permited): “Such consent shall be in writing in a form prescribed by the Board of Governors.” What does “in a form” mean? Pointing to the law Altman argued that “in a form” meant “in a manner,” as opposed to a pre-composed document. But, ignoring that contention in her decision, Edmead agreed with Gold that the phrase referred to a specific piece of paper, or at least the "express waiver wording" contained in that specific piece of paper, kept on file by the court system. There’s your Dickens moment — Altman done in by a technicality.
ON BEYOND DICKENS
But wait. The fee dispute program is overseen by a board of governors that is the official authority on guidelines interpreting the statute. Those guidelines explain that this special language is only required to be in place to ensure that the waiver is “valid on the part of the client.” In other words, the provision was made to protect a client — as opposed to a lawyer — from unwittingly surrendering a right. By that logic, since the special language wasn’t used, the client should be the only one who has the right to decide if he or she wants a new trial. The attorney should have to live with the wording of his own retainer. Bemused by all of this, we called the chairman of the fee dispute oversight board, Guy Mangano, a former Presiding Justice in the New York Court System. Did he think that a client was required to use a specific, pre-printed form to prevent a lawyer from slipping out of an arbitration? Mangano hemmed and hawed, but did not give a definitive answer. He declined to comment on the Altman case, per se, which is understandable since it’s on appeal. But he acknowledged his awareness of Altman’s argument about what the statute meant. “We’re looking into this,” he said. “It’s been referred to the legal issues committee. If it’s something that needs to be corrected, it will be corrected. If it’s not, it won’t.” But if the chairman of the oversight board can’t say for sure what the statute means, how is a client supposed to know that he can’t trust the plain wording of the retainer agreement presented to him by an attorney? Granting clients the right to take fee disputes to mandatory arbitration was one of a series of reforms recommended in 1995 by a commission appointed by Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye. Its purpose: to restore "public confidence in the entire legal system" — which, she said, had become "seriously eroded." If lawyers can rely on their own errors to force clients to draft their own consumer protections, that erosion of public confidence will turn into a mudslide.
Friday, December 26, 2008
Ethics Hypocrites Disbar Attorney for Reply Failure
Matter of George
2008 NY Slip Op 09993
Decided on December 16, 2008
Appellate Division, Second Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 16, 2008
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
APPELLATE DIVISION : SECOND JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
A. GAIL PRUDENTI, P.J.
REINALDO E. RIVERA
ROBERT A. SPOLZINO
PETER B. SKELOS
RUTH C. BALKIN, JJ. 2007-11308
[*1]In the Matter of Donnahue G. George, an attorney and counselor-at-law. Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts, petitioner; Donnahue G. George, respondent. (Attorney Registration No. 4221586)
DISCIPLINARY proceeding instituted by the Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts. The respondent was admitted to the Bar at a term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Second Judicial Department on May 19, 2004.
Diana Maxfield Kearse, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Susan Korenberg of counsel), for petitioner.
OPINION & ORDER
PER CURIAM.By decision and order on motion of this Court dated March 27, 2008, the respondent was suspended, pursuant to 22 NYCRR 691.4(l)(1)(i), upon a finding that he was guilty of serious professional misconduct immediately threatening the public interest based upon his failure to comply with the lawful demands of the Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts (hereinafter the Grievance Committee), the Grievance Committee was authorized to institute and prosecute a disciplinary proceeding against the respondent, and the issues raised were referred to the Honorable Herbert Altman as Special Referee to hear and report. Pursuant to this Court's decision and order on motion dated March 27, 2008, the respondent was directed to submit an answer to the petition within 20 days after service upon him of a copy of that order. The order was served on the respondent on April 2 and April 3, 2008, in the manner designated by the order to show cause dated January 17, 2008, by mailing copies to the address at which he is registered with the Office of Court Administration, the address on his driver's license [*2]and vehicle registration, and the address where his wife currently resides, and by affixing copies to the front door of each of those residences.
The petition contains one charge of professional misconduct alleging that the respondent failed to cooperate with three investigations into allegations of his professional misconduct. Notwithstanding efforts to effect service upon the respondent as authorized by this Court in the order to show cause dated January 17, 2008, the respondent has failed to file an answer as directed by the Court's decision and order on motion dated March 27, 2008. Accordingly, he is in default and the charge against him must be deemed established (see Matter of Anello, 228 AD2d 1). The Grievance Committee thereupon moves for an order adjudicating the respondent in default, deeming the charge established, and directing that the respondent, a suspended attorney, be disciplined upon the charge set forth in the petition. Although served with this motion by mailing copies to the three aforementioned residences and affixing copies to the front door of each of those premises, the respondent failed to reply. Significantly, the respondent failed to submit any opposition to the Grievance Committee's earlier motion, inter alia, to suspend him. He is, thus, in default.
Accordingly, the Grievance Committee's motion is granted, the charge contained in the petition is deemed established and, effective immediately, the respondent is disbarred and his name is stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law.
PRUDENTI, P.J., RIVERA, SPOLZINO, SKELOS and BALKIN, JJ., concur.
ORDERED that the petitioner's motion is granted upon the respondent's default; and it is further,
ORDERED that, pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90, effective immediately, the respondent, Donnahue G. George, is disbarred and his name is stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law; and it is further,
ORDERED that the respondent, Donnahue G. George, shall continue to comply with this Court's rules governing the conduct of disbarred, suspended, and resigned attorneys (see 22 NYCRR 691.10); and it is further,
ORDERED that pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90, the respondent, Donnahue G. George, is commanded to continue to desist and refrain from (1) practicing law in any form, either as principal or agent, clerk, or employee of another, (2) appearing as an attorney or counselor-at-law before any court, Judge, Justice, board, commission, or other public authority, (3) giving to another an opinion as to the law or its application or any advice in relation thereto, and (4) holding himself out in any way as an attorney and counselor-at-law; and it is further,
ORDERED that if the respondent, Donnahue G. George, has been issued a secure pass by the Office of Court Administration, it shall be returned forthwith to the issuing agency and the respondent shall certify to the same in his affidavit of compliance pursuant to 22 NYCRR 691.10(f).
ENTER:
James Edward Pelzer, Clerk of the Court
2008 NY Slip Op 09993
Decided on December 16, 2008
Appellate Division, Second Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 16, 2008
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
APPELLATE DIVISION : SECOND JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
A. GAIL PRUDENTI, P.J.
REINALDO E. RIVERA
ROBERT A. SPOLZINO
PETER B. SKELOS
RUTH C. BALKIN, JJ. 2007-11308
[*1]In the Matter of Donnahue G. George, an attorney and counselor-at-law. Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts, petitioner; Donnahue G. George, respondent. (Attorney Registration No. 4221586)
DISCIPLINARY proceeding instituted by the Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts. The respondent was admitted to the Bar at a term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Second Judicial Department on May 19, 2004.
Diana Maxfield Kearse, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Susan Korenberg of counsel), for petitioner.
OPINION & ORDER
PER CURIAM.By decision and order on motion of this Court dated March 27, 2008, the respondent was suspended, pursuant to 22 NYCRR 691.4(l)(1)(i), upon a finding that he was guilty of serious professional misconduct immediately threatening the public interest based upon his failure to comply with the lawful demands of the Grievance Committee for the Second and Eleventh Judicial Districts (hereinafter the Grievance Committee), the Grievance Committee was authorized to institute and prosecute a disciplinary proceeding against the respondent, and the issues raised were referred to the Honorable Herbert Altman as Special Referee to hear and report. Pursuant to this Court's decision and order on motion dated March 27, 2008, the respondent was directed to submit an answer to the petition within 20 days after service upon him of a copy of that order. The order was served on the respondent on April 2 and April 3, 2008, in the manner designated by the order to show cause dated January 17, 2008, by mailing copies to the address at which he is registered with the Office of Court Administration, the address on his driver's license [*2]and vehicle registration, and the address where his wife currently resides, and by affixing copies to the front door of each of those residences.
The petition contains one charge of professional misconduct alleging that the respondent failed to cooperate with three investigations into allegations of his professional misconduct. Notwithstanding efforts to effect service upon the respondent as authorized by this Court in the order to show cause dated January 17, 2008, the respondent has failed to file an answer as directed by the Court's decision and order on motion dated March 27, 2008. Accordingly, he is in default and the charge against him must be deemed established (see Matter of Anello, 228 AD2d 1). The Grievance Committee thereupon moves for an order adjudicating the respondent in default, deeming the charge established, and directing that the respondent, a suspended attorney, be disciplined upon the charge set forth in the petition. Although served with this motion by mailing copies to the three aforementioned residences and affixing copies to the front door of each of those premises, the respondent failed to reply. Significantly, the respondent failed to submit any opposition to the Grievance Committee's earlier motion, inter alia, to suspend him. He is, thus, in default.
Accordingly, the Grievance Committee's motion is granted, the charge contained in the petition is deemed established and, effective immediately, the respondent is disbarred and his name is stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law.
PRUDENTI, P.J., RIVERA, SPOLZINO, SKELOS and BALKIN, JJ., concur.
ORDERED that the petitioner's motion is granted upon the respondent's default; and it is further,
ORDERED that, pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90, effective immediately, the respondent, Donnahue G. George, is disbarred and his name is stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law; and it is further,
ORDERED that the respondent, Donnahue G. George, shall continue to comply with this Court's rules governing the conduct of disbarred, suspended, and resigned attorneys (see 22 NYCRR 691.10); and it is further,
ORDERED that pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90, the respondent, Donnahue G. George, is commanded to continue to desist and refrain from (1) practicing law in any form, either as principal or agent, clerk, or employee of another, (2) appearing as an attorney or counselor-at-law before any court, Judge, Justice, board, commission, or other public authority, (3) giving to another an opinion as to the law or its application or any advice in relation thereto, and (4) holding himself out in any way as an attorney and counselor-at-law; and it is further,
ORDERED that if the respondent, Donnahue G. George, has been issued a secure pass by the Office of Court Administration, it shall be returned forthwith to the issuing agency and the respondent shall certify to the same in his affidavit of compliance pursuant to 22 NYCRR 691.10(f).
ENTER:
James Edward Pelzer, Clerk of the Court
Melvyn I. Weiss Disbarred
Matter of Weiss
2008 NY Slip Op 09935
Decided on December 18, 2008
Appellate Division, First Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 18, 2008
SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION
First Judicial Department
Angela M. Mazzarelli,Justice Presiding,
John T. Buckley
Rolando T. Acosta
Dianne T. Renwick
Leland G. DeGrasse, Justices.
M3362
[*1]In the Matter of Melvyn I. Weiss, (admitted as Melvin Irwin Weiss), an attorney and counselor-at-law: Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department, Petitioner, Melvyn I. Weiss, Respondent.
Disciplinary proceedings instituted by the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department. Respondent, Melvyn I. Weiss, was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York at a Term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court for the Second Judicial Department on April 2, 1960.
Alan W. Friedberg, Chief Counsel, Departmental Disciplinary Committee, New York
(Raymond Vallejo, of counsel), for petitioner. No appearance for respondent.
M-3362 - August 11, 2008 IN THE MATTER OF MELVYN I. WEISS, AN ATTORNEY [*2]
PER CURIAM
Respondent Melvyn I. Weiss was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York by the Second Judicial Department on April 2, 1960, under the name Melvyn Irwin Weiss. At all times relevant to this proceeding, respondent was a named partner with the law firm formerly known as Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman LLP ("Milberg Weiss"), located within the First Judicial Department. The Departmental Disciplinary Committee now seeks an order, pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a), striking respondent's name from the roll of attorneys on the ground that he was automatically disbarred as a result of his conviction of a federal felony that would also constitute a felony under New York law (Judiciary Law § 90[4][e]). Although served with this petition, respondent has not submitted a response.
On April 2, 2008, respondent was convicted, upon his guilty plea, in the United States District Court for the Central District of California of racketeering conspiracy in violation of 18 USC § 1962(d), a felony under the United States Code. On June 2, 2008, respondent was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 30 months, three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay a fine of $250,000. In addition, respondent agreed to forfeit $9.75 million (amounting to net proceeds earned from the racketeering conspiracy). According to the fourth superceding information, Milberg Weiss constituted an enterprise specializing in representing plaintiffs in class actions and shareholder derivative actions. Respondent admitted in his plea allocution and plea agreement, read in conjunction with the information, that he possessed substantial control over the management and control of Milberg Weiss' business affairs and he joined in an illegal agreement among two or more individuals employed by or associated with Milberg Weiss to conduct the firm's affairs through a "pattern of racketeering activity," knowing of its object and intending to help accomplish it. It was further part of the conspiracy that respondent agreed that a conspirator would commit at least two racketeering acts in the conduct of the affairs of the enterprise.
Specifically, respondent admitted that beginning around the 1970's and continuing at least into 2005, he and other individuals at Milberg Weiss, entered into secret, illegal kickbacks with a cohort of persons who were essentially on call to act as lead plaintiffs in class actions. The Milberg Weiss partners who agreed to this secret pay arrangement to certain named plaintiffs included, among others, William Lerach, David Bershad, and Steven Schulman ("the conspiring partners"). The individuals, who received the secret kickbacks to serve as lead plaintiffs in the class actions ("paid plaintiffs") included Howard Vogel, Seymour Lazar, Steven Cooperman and three individuals who resided in Florida. This arrangement permitted Milberg Weiss to file lawsuits faster and to gain the position as lead counsel to receive higher legal fees.
Respondent further admitted that he agreed to the secret payment agreement between Milberg Weiss and Lazar; he was aware of the payment arrangements between Milberg Weiss and the Florida plaintiffs, and personally made a cash payment to one of those plaintiffs in the late 1980's; and he was aware of the payment arrangement between Milberg Weiss and Cooperman, to whom he personally made at least one payment by check. In addition, respondent and others caused Milberg Weiss to issue checks to intermediary law firms, lawyers and other professionals with the intent and understanding that the money would be distributed to the paid plaintiffs. Respondent and others' also knew that although these payments were falsely described [*3]as, among other things, "referral fees" or "professional fees" owed by Milberg Weiss to the intermediaries, they were actually disguised kickbacks to the paid plaintiffs.
Additionally, respondent and others knew they had to conceal their payment scheme with the paid plaintiffs from the federal and state courts presiding over the class actions by making and causing to be made false and/or misleading statements in documents filed in class actions (including complaints, motions and certifications) and in testimony and discovery documents. Absent such concealment, there was a risk of disqualification because the kickbacks created an apparent conflict of interest between the paid plaintiffs and the class members they purported to represent. Respondent admitted that he knew the secret arrangement was improper. Among the false and/or misleading statements one or more of the conspiring partners caused to be submitted to the court in connection with four class actions were certifications by Cooperman, Lazar, and Vogel that they would not accept any payment for serving as a representative party beyond their pro rata shares of any recovery. These certifications falsely represented the true nature of Milberg Weiss' payment arrangement with the paid plaintiffs and constituted four racketeering acts that formed a "pattern of racketeering activity" under 18 USC § 1961(1) and (5).
A conviction of a federal felony does not trigger automatic disbarment unless the offense would also constitute a felony under the New York Penal Law (Matter of Sorin, 47 AD3d 1 [2007]). The federal felony need not be a "mirror image" of the New York felony, corresponding precisely in every detail, but it must have essential similarity (Matter of Margiotta, 60 NY2d 147, 150 [1983]). Essential similarity may be demonstrated by reviewing evidentiary materials such as admissions made under oath in the respondent's plea that the Court may read in conjunction with the indictment or information (Matter of Amsterdam, 26 AD3d 94, 96 [2005]; Matter of Mercado, 1 AD3d 54, 55-56 [2003]).
Respondent was convicted of racketeering conspiracy under 18 USC § 1962(d). 18 USC § 1962(d) states that "[i]t shall be unlawful for any person to conspire to violate any of the provisions of subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this section." Subsection (c) prohibits participation in the conduct of an "enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity ***."
A person is guilty of the felony of enterprise corruption in violation of New York Penal Law § 460.20 when, "having knowledge of the existence of a criminal enterprise and the nature of its activities, and being employed by or associated with such enterprise, he [ ] intentionally conducts or participates in the affairs of an enterprise by participating in a pattern of criminal activity." In Matter of Schulman (51 AD3d 220 [2008]), another disciplinary matter arising out of the same illegal activity, this Court found essential similarity between the New York State felony of enterprise corruption in violation of Penal Law § 460.20 and racketeering conspiracy under 18 USC § 1962(d). Clearly respondent's admissions come under subsection (c) because, inter alia, respondent admitted that he engaged in a "pattern of racketeering activity" and that on at least four separate occasions he knowingly participated in the filing of falsified documents to the courts. Thus, the activities to which respondent admitted are essentially similar to the New York felony of enterprise corruption under Penal Law § 460.20. Therefore, automatic disbarment under Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a) is appropriate.
In addition, respondent's admission that he knowingly participated in the filing of false certifications with federal courts in four different class actions in order to conceal the secret payment arrangements with the paid plaintiffs satisfies the elements of the New York felony of [*4]offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree. This New York felony occurs when:
[a] person *** knowing that a written instrument contains a false statement or false information, and with intent to defraud the state or any political subdivision . . . he offers or presents it to a public office . . . with the knowledge or belief that it will be filed with, registered or recorded in or otherwise become a part of the records of such public office ***
(Penal Law § 175.35)(see Matter of Amsterdam, supra [attorney's conviction of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. was essentially similar to offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree]). Thus, respondent's admissions of criminal conduct also satisfy the elements of the New York felony of offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree (PL § 175.35).
Accordingly, the Disciplinary Committee's petition should be granted and respondent's name stricken from the roll of attorneys pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a),(b), nunc pro tunc to April 2, 2008.
All concur.
Order filed.[December 18, 2008]
Mazzarelli, J.P., Buckley, Acosta, Renwick, and DeGrasse, JJ.
Respondent's name stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law in the State of New York, nunc pro tunc to April 2, 2008. Opinion Per Curiam. All concur.
2008 NY Slip Op 09935
Decided on December 18, 2008
Appellate Division, First Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 18, 2008
SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION
First Judicial Department
Angela M. Mazzarelli,Justice Presiding,
John T. Buckley
Rolando T. Acosta
Dianne T. Renwick
Leland G. DeGrasse, Justices.
M3362
[*1]In the Matter of Melvyn I. Weiss, (admitted as Melvin Irwin Weiss), an attorney and counselor-at-law: Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department, Petitioner, Melvyn I. Weiss, Respondent.
Disciplinary proceedings instituted by the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department. Respondent, Melvyn I. Weiss, was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York at a Term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court for the Second Judicial Department on April 2, 1960.
Alan W. Friedberg, Chief Counsel, Departmental Disciplinary Committee, New York
(Raymond Vallejo, of counsel), for petitioner. No appearance for respondent.
M-3362 - August 11, 2008 IN THE MATTER OF MELVYN I. WEISS, AN ATTORNEY [*2]
PER CURIAM
Respondent Melvyn I. Weiss was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York by the Second Judicial Department on April 2, 1960, under the name Melvyn Irwin Weiss. At all times relevant to this proceeding, respondent was a named partner with the law firm formerly known as Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman LLP ("Milberg Weiss"), located within the First Judicial Department. The Departmental Disciplinary Committee now seeks an order, pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a), striking respondent's name from the roll of attorneys on the ground that he was automatically disbarred as a result of his conviction of a federal felony that would also constitute a felony under New York law (Judiciary Law § 90[4][e]). Although served with this petition, respondent has not submitted a response.
On April 2, 2008, respondent was convicted, upon his guilty plea, in the United States District Court for the Central District of California of racketeering conspiracy in violation of 18 USC § 1962(d), a felony under the United States Code. On June 2, 2008, respondent was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 30 months, three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay a fine of $250,000. In addition, respondent agreed to forfeit $9.75 million (amounting to net proceeds earned from the racketeering conspiracy). According to the fourth superceding information, Milberg Weiss constituted an enterprise specializing in representing plaintiffs in class actions and shareholder derivative actions. Respondent admitted in his plea allocution and plea agreement, read in conjunction with the information, that he possessed substantial control over the management and control of Milberg Weiss' business affairs and he joined in an illegal agreement among two or more individuals employed by or associated with Milberg Weiss to conduct the firm's affairs through a "pattern of racketeering activity," knowing of its object and intending to help accomplish it. It was further part of the conspiracy that respondent agreed that a conspirator would commit at least two racketeering acts in the conduct of the affairs of the enterprise.
Specifically, respondent admitted that beginning around the 1970's and continuing at least into 2005, he and other individuals at Milberg Weiss, entered into secret, illegal kickbacks with a cohort of persons who were essentially on call to act as lead plaintiffs in class actions. The Milberg Weiss partners who agreed to this secret pay arrangement to certain named plaintiffs included, among others, William Lerach, David Bershad, and Steven Schulman ("the conspiring partners"). The individuals, who received the secret kickbacks to serve as lead plaintiffs in the class actions ("paid plaintiffs") included Howard Vogel, Seymour Lazar, Steven Cooperman and three individuals who resided in Florida. This arrangement permitted Milberg Weiss to file lawsuits faster and to gain the position as lead counsel to receive higher legal fees.
Respondent further admitted that he agreed to the secret payment agreement between Milberg Weiss and Lazar; he was aware of the payment arrangements between Milberg Weiss and the Florida plaintiffs, and personally made a cash payment to one of those plaintiffs in the late 1980's; and he was aware of the payment arrangement between Milberg Weiss and Cooperman, to whom he personally made at least one payment by check. In addition, respondent and others caused Milberg Weiss to issue checks to intermediary law firms, lawyers and other professionals with the intent and understanding that the money would be distributed to the paid plaintiffs. Respondent and others' also knew that although these payments were falsely described [*3]as, among other things, "referral fees" or "professional fees" owed by Milberg Weiss to the intermediaries, they were actually disguised kickbacks to the paid plaintiffs.
Additionally, respondent and others knew they had to conceal their payment scheme with the paid plaintiffs from the federal and state courts presiding over the class actions by making and causing to be made false and/or misleading statements in documents filed in class actions (including complaints, motions and certifications) and in testimony and discovery documents. Absent such concealment, there was a risk of disqualification because the kickbacks created an apparent conflict of interest between the paid plaintiffs and the class members they purported to represent. Respondent admitted that he knew the secret arrangement was improper. Among the false and/or misleading statements one or more of the conspiring partners caused to be submitted to the court in connection with four class actions were certifications by Cooperman, Lazar, and Vogel that they would not accept any payment for serving as a representative party beyond their pro rata shares of any recovery. These certifications falsely represented the true nature of Milberg Weiss' payment arrangement with the paid plaintiffs and constituted four racketeering acts that formed a "pattern of racketeering activity" under 18 USC § 1961(1) and (5).
A conviction of a federal felony does not trigger automatic disbarment unless the offense would also constitute a felony under the New York Penal Law (Matter of Sorin, 47 AD3d 1 [2007]). The federal felony need not be a "mirror image" of the New York felony, corresponding precisely in every detail, but it must have essential similarity (Matter of Margiotta, 60 NY2d 147, 150 [1983]). Essential similarity may be demonstrated by reviewing evidentiary materials such as admissions made under oath in the respondent's plea that the Court may read in conjunction with the indictment or information (Matter of Amsterdam, 26 AD3d 94, 96 [2005]; Matter of Mercado, 1 AD3d 54, 55-56 [2003]).
Respondent was convicted of racketeering conspiracy under 18 USC § 1962(d). 18 USC § 1962(d) states that "[i]t shall be unlawful for any person to conspire to violate any of the provisions of subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this section." Subsection (c) prohibits participation in the conduct of an "enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity ***."
A person is guilty of the felony of enterprise corruption in violation of New York Penal Law § 460.20 when, "having knowledge of the existence of a criminal enterprise and the nature of its activities, and being employed by or associated with such enterprise, he [ ] intentionally conducts or participates in the affairs of an enterprise by participating in a pattern of criminal activity." In Matter of Schulman (51 AD3d 220 [2008]), another disciplinary matter arising out of the same illegal activity, this Court found essential similarity between the New York State felony of enterprise corruption in violation of Penal Law § 460.20 and racketeering conspiracy under 18 USC § 1962(d). Clearly respondent's admissions come under subsection (c) because, inter alia, respondent admitted that he engaged in a "pattern of racketeering activity" and that on at least four separate occasions he knowingly participated in the filing of falsified documents to the courts. Thus, the activities to which respondent admitted are essentially similar to the New York felony of enterprise corruption under Penal Law § 460.20. Therefore, automatic disbarment under Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a) is appropriate.
In addition, respondent's admission that he knowingly participated in the filing of false certifications with federal courts in four different class actions in order to conceal the secret payment arrangements with the paid plaintiffs satisfies the elements of the New York felony of [*4]offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree. This New York felony occurs when:
[a] person *** knowing that a written instrument contains a false statement or false information, and with intent to defraud the state or any political subdivision . . . he offers or presents it to a public office . . . with the knowledge or belief that it will be filed with, registered or recorded in or otherwise become a part of the records of such public office ***
(Penal Law § 175.35)(see Matter of Amsterdam, supra [attorney's conviction of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. was essentially similar to offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree]). Thus, respondent's admissions of criminal conduct also satisfy the elements of the New York felony of offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree (PL § 175.35).
Accordingly, the Disciplinary Committee's petition should be granted and respondent's name stricken from the roll of attorneys pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90(4)(a),(b), nunc pro tunc to April 2, 2008.
All concur.
Order filed.[December 18, 2008]
Mazzarelli, J.P., Buckley, Acosta, Renwick, and DeGrasse, JJ.
Respondent's name stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law in the State of New York, nunc pro tunc to April 2, 2008. Opinion Per Curiam. All concur.
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Feds to Citizens: "What Fraud?"
Federal Cases of Stock Fraud Drop Sharply
The New York Times by ERIC LICHTBLAU - December 25, 2008
The New York Times by ERIC LICHTBLAU - December 25, 2008
WASHINGTON — Federal officials are bringing far fewer prosecutions as a result of fraudulent stock schemes than they did eight years ago, according to new data, raising further questions about whether the Bush administration has been too lax in policing Wall Street. Legal and financial experts say that a loosening of enforcement measures, cutbacks in staffing at the Securities and Exchange Commission, and a shift in resources toward terrorism at the F.B.I. have combined to make the federal government something of a paper tiger in investigating securities crimes.
At a time when the financial news is being dominated by the $50 billion Ponzi scheme that Bernard L. Madoff is accused of running, federal officials are on pace this year to bring the fewest prosecutions for securities fraud since at least 1991, according to the data, compiled by a Syracuse University research group using Justice Department figures. There were 133 prosecutions for securities fraud in the first 11 months of this fiscal year. That is down from 437 cases in 2000 and from a high of 513 cases in 2002, when Wall Street scandals from Enron to WorldCom led to a crackdown on corporate crime, the data showed. At the S.E.C., agency investigations that led to Justice Department prosecutions for securities fraud dropped from 69 in 2000 to just 9 in 2007, a decline of 87 percent, the data showed.
Federal officials took issue with some of the data compiled by the Syracuse group and said that they had maintained a strong commitment to rooting out fraud and abuse in the stock markets. While the S.E.C. could not provide numbers of its own on criminal cases arising from its investigations, Scott Friedstad, the deputy director of enforcement at the commission, said the numbers did not reflect “the reality that I see on the ground.” “We are as committed as ever to vigorous enforcement efforts,” he said. But a number of investor advocates and securities lawyers who are critical of the S.E.C.’s recent performance say they will be anxiously watching the incoming Obama administration to see what steps it may take to restore the agency’s battered credibility and re-establish it as a watchdog against corporate abuse.
President-elect Barack Obama has named Mary Schapiro, head of the Financial Services Regulatory Authority, to lead the S.E.C, and he has promised an overhaul of the agency and other financial regulatory offices to provide tougher oversight. “I think the S.E.C. has completely fallen down on the job,” said Jacob H. Zamansky, a New York lawyer who specializes in representing investors who have lost money in fraud cases. “They’re more interested in protecting Wall Street than protecting investors. The new administration has to do a complete overhaul of the S.E.C.”
The F.B.I., which frequently investigates stock fraud cases either on its own or in partnership with the S.E.C., has also had a sharp decline in the number of white-collar cases it has brought in the last several years — partly a reflection of a huge shift in staffing and resources to counterterrorism operations since the Sept. 11 attacks, officials said. David Burnham, co-director of the Syracuse research group, which is known as the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, or TRAC, said the decline in stock fraud prosecutions growing out of the F.B.I. “really is no surprise. It’s a reflection of a choice that was made right after 9-11 to move investigators into terrorism, and this is the cost of that. “Maybe it’s the correct call,” he added, “but with both the F.B.I. and the S.E.C., the federal government is really the only place that does white-collar crime on a systematic basis.”
The economic collapse of the last few months has brought intense scrutiny of the S.E.C. amid accusations that it failed to foresee and prevent the collapse of one major financial institution after another as a result of risky overinvestment in mortgage-backed securities. “As an overheated market needed a strong referee to rein in dangerously risky behavior, the commission too often remained on the sidelines,” Arthur Levitt, who served as chairman of the S.E.C. during the Clinton administration, told the Senate Banking Committee in October. The Madoff scandal, now under investigation by federal prosecutors in Manhattan, has ratcheted up criticism even further.
Christopher Cox, chairman of the S.E.C., ordered an internal investigation last week into what he said were the agency’s “multiple failures” to investigate credible allegations of wrongdoing by Mr. Madoff. The S.E.C.’s own data suggests that the agency has put increasing emphasis on using non-criminal means, like civil fines and what are known as deferred prosecution agreements, in dealing with allegations of wrongdoing. The number of S.E.C. cases handled through civil or administrative remedies has grown from 503 in 2000 to 636 this year. Critics of the S.E.C. also attribute the decline in criminal cases to shortages in staffing and resources in the agency’s investigative units, policy changes that have reduced the authority of investigators to pursue cases on their own, and a “revolving door” phenomenon that has led investigators to leave the agency for high-paying jobs in the industry that they once helped to monitor.
“It’s been awful,” Sean Coffey, a former fraud prosecutor in New York who now represents investors in securities litigation, said of the S.E.C.’s recent enforcement record. The agency has “neutered the ability of the enforcement staff to be as proactive as they could be. It’s hard to square the motto of investor advocate with the way they’ve performed the last eight years.” Mr. Coffey said he believed the declining number of stock fraud prosecutions is partly a result of the backlash the Bush administration experienced after its aggressive pursuit of corporate crime following the Enron collapse in 2002, which led to the creation of a national task force on corporate wrongdoing. In the last few years, he said, “the administration has been sending the message that we’re going to loosen the binds on the market to compete in the global marketplace, and they’ve pulled the throttle back on prosecutions because it wasn’t politically necessary anymore.”
At a time when the financial news is being dominated by the $50 billion Ponzi scheme that Bernard L. Madoff is accused of running, federal officials are on pace this year to bring the fewest prosecutions for securities fraud since at least 1991, according to the data, compiled by a Syracuse University research group using Justice Department figures. There were 133 prosecutions for securities fraud in the first 11 months of this fiscal year. That is down from 437 cases in 2000 and from a high of 513 cases in 2002, when Wall Street scandals from Enron to WorldCom led to a crackdown on corporate crime, the data showed. At the S.E.C., agency investigations that led to Justice Department prosecutions for securities fraud dropped from 69 in 2000 to just 9 in 2007, a decline of 87 percent, the data showed.
Federal officials took issue with some of the data compiled by the Syracuse group and said that they had maintained a strong commitment to rooting out fraud and abuse in the stock markets. While the S.E.C. could not provide numbers of its own on criminal cases arising from its investigations, Scott Friedstad, the deputy director of enforcement at the commission, said the numbers did not reflect “the reality that I see on the ground.” “We are as committed as ever to vigorous enforcement efforts,” he said. But a number of investor advocates and securities lawyers who are critical of the S.E.C.’s recent performance say they will be anxiously watching the incoming Obama administration to see what steps it may take to restore the agency’s battered credibility and re-establish it as a watchdog against corporate abuse.
President-elect Barack Obama has named Mary Schapiro, head of the Financial Services Regulatory Authority, to lead the S.E.C, and he has promised an overhaul of the agency and other financial regulatory offices to provide tougher oversight. “I think the S.E.C. has completely fallen down on the job,” said Jacob H. Zamansky, a New York lawyer who specializes in representing investors who have lost money in fraud cases. “They’re more interested in protecting Wall Street than protecting investors. The new administration has to do a complete overhaul of the S.E.C.”
The F.B.I., which frequently investigates stock fraud cases either on its own or in partnership with the S.E.C., has also had a sharp decline in the number of white-collar cases it has brought in the last several years — partly a reflection of a huge shift in staffing and resources to counterterrorism operations since the Sept. 11 attacks, officials said. David Burnham, co-director of the Syracuse research group, which is known as the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, or TRAC, said the decline in stock fraud prosecutions growing out of the F.B.I. “really is no surprise. It’s a reflection of a choice that was made right after 9-11 to move investigators into terrorism, and this is the cost of that. “Maybe it’s the correct call,” he added, “but with both the F.B.I. and the S.E.C., the federal government is really the only place that does white-collar crime on a systematic basis.”
The economic collapse of the last few months has brought intense scrutiny of the S.E.C. amid accusations that it failed to foresee and prevent the collapse of one major financial institution after another as a result of risky overinvestment in mortgage-backed securities. “As an overheated market needed a strong referee to rein in dangerously risky behavior, the commission too often remained on the sidelines,” Arthur Levitt, who served as chairman of the S.E.C. during the Clinton administration, told the Senate Banking Committee in October. The Madoff scandal, now under investigation by federal prosecutors in Manhattan, has ratcheted up criticism even further.
Christopher Cox, chairman of the S.E.C., ordered an internal investigation last week into what he said were the agency’s “multiple failures” to investigate credible allegations of wrongdoing by Mr. Madoff. The S.E.C.’s own data suggests that the agency has put increasing emphasis on using non-criminal means, like civil fines and what are known as deferred prosecution agreements, in dealing with allegations of wrongdoing. The number of S.E.C. cases handled through civil or administrative remedies has grown from 503 in 2000 to 636 this year. Critics of the S.E.C. also attribute the decline in criminal cases to shortages in staffing and resources in the agency’s investigative units, policy changes that have reduced the authority of investigators to pursue cases on their own, and a “revolving door” phenomenon that has led investigators to leave the agency for high-paying jobs in the industry that they once helped to monitor.
“It’s been awful,” Sean Coffey, a former fraud prosecutor in New York who now represents investors in securities litigation, said of the S.E.C.’s recent enforcement record. The agency has “neutered the ability of the enforcement staff to be as proactive as they could be. It’s hard to square the motto of investor advocate with the way they’ve performed the last eight years.” Mr. Coffey said he believed the declining number of stock fraud prosecutions is partly a result of the backlash the Bush administration experienced after its aggressive pursuit of corporate crime following the Enron collapse in 2002, which led to the creation of a national task force on corporate wrongdoing. In the last few years, he said, “the administration has been sending the message that we’re going to loosen the binds on the market to compete in the global marketplace, and they’ve pulled the throttle back on prosecutions because it wasn’t politically necessary anymore.”
More on Dreier, Kovachev, Solow, Kalikow
New Defendant in Dreier Scandal May Have Had History With Marc Dreier
Posted by Dan Slater - December 23, 2008
Another shoe has dropped in the case of fallen lawyer Marc Dreier, who’s alleged to have perpetrated a massive fraud against a group of hedge funds. In a criminal complaint, prosecutors are attempting to tie a former broker, Kosta Kovachev, to the fraud. Kovachev was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The complaint alleges, among other things, that Kovachev pretended to be the controller of a realty company to effect a meeting with a hedge fund. (We’ve confirmed that the company was New York-based Solow Realty, though the name is not in the complaint.) Dreier purported to sell promissory notes on behalf of the realty company, but the notes were fictitious, according to the complaint. Federal officials have said that Solow was uninvolved.
Peter Kalikow, March 31, 2005. (AP/Richard Drew)
Dreier and Kovachev have crossed paths before. This 2004 NYT article, which details a legal skirmish between New York real estate competitors Sheldon Solow (owner of Solow Realty) and Peter Kalikow, tells the following story. Kalikow sued Solow, believing he was responsible for newspaper ads listing more than 400 creditors from Kalikow’s personal bankruptcy proceeding in 1991. The ads suggested that Kalikow had misled the bankruptcy court about the extent of his assets. But the bankruptcy had been settled years before, and there were no outstanding creditors.
Real estate mogul Sheldon Solow, Dec. 5, 2007. (AP/Evan Agostini)
A bankruptcy judge agreed that Kalikow had proved that Solow was the man behind the notices. The judge, according to the Times, said that even a man from Mars would conclude that the ads represented “an affront to the court” and a “somewhat sleazy course of conduct.” He ordered Solow to pay Kalikow’s expenses, and, according to the Times, “practically invited him to pursue claims against Mr. Solow’s law firm before ‘professional or legal tribunals that govern professional conduct.’ ”
At that time, Solow’s law firm was Dreier LLP, according to the Times. And here’s where Dreier and Kovachev come in: At the bottom of the ads was the name of a company, Evergence Capital Advisors, and a telephone number, the Times reported. An investigation revealed that Evergence was a dissolved Florida company that had been headed by Kosta Kovachev, but the phone number led to Dreier LLP. The ad reportedly generated 58 phone calls to Dreier’s firm, according to the Times. During a subsequent deposition, Dreier acknowledged that Kovachev was his client and that he had a second client involved in the case, Sheldon Solow, according to the Times. A lawyer for Kalikow, Stanley S. Arkin, criticized what he called Solow’s “irrational animus for [Kalikow],” but he reserved his sharpest jab for Dreier. “He was facilitating an angry and vicious assault on his client’s perceived enemy,” Arkin told the Times. A Solow spokesman declined to comment. Mr. Kovachev, who is expected to appear in court today, could not be reached for comment this morning.
Madoff Litigation Mounts: Largest Feeder Funds (and SEC) Get Sued
Posted by Dan Slater - December 23, 2008
If you put your ear to the ground you can almost hear it. Almost. The trickle of Madoff-related lawsuits is turning into a stream. Among the latest defendants: the two largest institutional investors in the Madoff fund — Tremont Group Holdings Inc., a hedge-fund owned by Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.; and Fairfield Greenwich Group, Walter Noel’s hedge-fund.
Investors Arthur E. Lange and Arthur C. Lange sued Tremont, its parent and its units for investing with Madoff and ignoring numerous “red flags,” according to Bloomberg. The Langes, in a complaint filed today in federal court in Manhattan, seek class-action status on behalf of other investors whom they say lost $3.1 billion. Here’s the Bloomberg report. And here’s another suit, filed by Hagens Berman’s David Nalven, on behalf of Richard Peshkin. Tremont “did not act as a reasonably prudent investor would have,” the complaint says, citing the fund’s decision to put “all of the class’s eggs in one basket.”
Bloomberg’s call to Tremont was not immediately returned. Massachusetts Mutual spokesman Jim Lacey didn’t have an immediate comment. Noel’s Greenwich Sentry fund and Fairfield Sentry fund invested $7.5 billion million with Madoff, jeopardizing investors’ interests while collecting “millions of dollars in fees,” the complaint, filed Dec. 19 in New York State Supreme Court, reportedly says. “FG defendants failed to perform even a minimum level of due diligence regarding the activities of Madoff,” the complaint says. Here’s the Bloomberg report. Noel and other defendants didn’t immediately return Bloomberg’s calls seeking comment. Fairfield Greenwich spokesman Thomas Mulligan declined to comment to Bloomberg.
Meanwhile, 61 year-old Phyllis Molchatsky, a New York woman who lost nearly $2 million investing with Madoff, is aiming her ire at the SEC. Molchatsky, reports the WSJ, sued the SEC for $1.7 million, alleging the agency was negligent in failing to detect the alleged fraud . The SEC’s “statutory purpose is to protect the public interest. We feel they fell down on the job in this instance,” said Howard Elisofon, a former SEC enforcement attorney and the lawyer representing Molchatsky. The SEC declined to comment. An administrative claim for relief, notes the Journal, is the first step in filing a lawsuit against the government. If the SEC doesn’t negotiate or respond to the claim within six months, the investor can file a lawsuit in federal court. “It’s an uphill battle to succeed with this,” Gregory Sisk, a law prof at the University of St. Thomas School of Law, told the WSJ. He said courts are reluctant to find that government agencies should act as insurance against any losses.
Posted by Dan Slater - December 23, 2008
Another shoe has dropped in the case of fallen lawyer Marc Dreier, who’s alleged to have perpetrated a massive fraud against a group of hedge funds. In a criminal complaint, prosecutors are attempting to tie a former broker, Kosta Kovachev, to the fraud. Kovachev was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The complaint alleges, among other things, that Kovachev pretended to be the controller of a realty company to effect a meeting with a hedge fund. (We’ve confirmed that the company was New York-based Solow Realty, though the name is not in the complaint.) Dreier purported to sell promissory notes on behalf of the realty company, but the notes were fictitious, according to the complaint. Federal officials have said that Solow was uninvolved.
Peter Kalikow, March 31, 2005. (AP/Richard Drew)
Dreier and Kovachev have crossed paths before. This 2004 NYT article, which details a legal skirmish between New York real estate competitors Sheldon Solow (owner of Solow Realty) and Peter Kalikow, tells the following story. Kalikow sued Solow, believing he was responsible for newspaper ads listing more than 400 creditors from Kalikow’s personal bankruptcy proceeding in 1991. The ads suggested that Kalikow had misled the bankruptcy court about the extent of his assets. But the bankruptcy had been settled years before, and there were no outstanding creditors.
Real estate mogul Sheldon Solow, Dec. 5, 2007. (AP/Evan Agostini)
A bankruptcy judge agreed that Kalikow had proved that Solow was the man behind the notices. The judge, according to the Times, said that even a man from Mars would conclude that the ads represented “an affront to the court” and a “somewhat sleazy course of conduct.” He ordered Solow to pay Kalikow’s expenses, and, according to the Times, “practically invited him to pursue claims against Mr. Solow’s law firm before ‘professional or legal tribunals that govern professional conduct.’ ”
At that time, Solow’s law firm was Dreier LLP, according to the Times. And here’s where Dreier and Kovachev come in: At the bottom of the ads was the name of a company, Evergence Capital Advisors, and a telephone number, the Times reported. An investigation revealed that Evergence was a dissolved Florida company that had been headed by Kosta Kovachev, but the phone number led to Dreier LLP. The ad reportedly generated 58 phone calls to Dreier’s firm, according to the Times. During a subsequent deposition, Dreier acknowledged that Kovachev was his client and that he had a second client involved in the case, Sheldon Solow, according to the Times. A lawyer for Kalikow, Stanley S. Arkin, criticized what he called Solow’s “irrational animus for [Kalikow],” but he reserved his sharpest jab for Dreier. “He was facilitating an angry and vicious assault on his client’s perceived enemy,” Arkin told the Times. A Solow spokesman declined to comment. Mr. Kovachev, who is expected to appear in court today, could not be reached for comment this morning.
Madoff Litigation Mounts: Largest Feeder Funds (and SEC) Get Sued
Posted by Dan Slater - December 23, 2008
If you put your ear to the ground you can almost hear it. Almost. The trickle of Madoff-related lawsuits is turning into a stream. Among the latest defendants: the two largest institutional investors in the Madoff fund — Tremont Group Holdings Inc., a hedge-fund owned by Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.; and Fairfield Greenwich Group, Walter Noel’s hedge-fund.
Investors Arthur E. Lange and Arthur C. Lange sued Tremont, its parent and its units for investing with Madoff and ignoring numerous “red flags,” according to Bloomberg. The Langes, in a complaint filed today in federal court in Manhattan, seek class-action status on behalf of other investors whom they say lost $3.1 billion. Here’s the Bloomberg report. And here’s another suit, filed by Hagens Berman’s David Nalven, on behalf of Richard Peshkin. Tremont “did not act as a reasonably prudent investor would have,” the complaint says, citing the fund’s decision to put “all of the class’s eggs in one basket.”
Bloomberg’s call to Tremont was not immediately returned. Massachusetts Mutual spokesman Jim Lacey didn’t have an immediate comment. Noel’s Greenwich Sentry fund and Fairfield Sentry fund invested $7.5 billion million with Madoff, jeopardizing investors’ interests while collecting “millions of dollars in fees,” the complaint, filed Dec. 19 in New York State Supreme Court, reportedly says. “FG defendants failed to perform even a minimum level of due diligence regarding the activities of Madoff,” the complaint says. Here’s the Bloomberg report. Noel and other defendants didn’t immediately return Bloomberg’s calls seeking comment. Fairfield Greenwich spokesman Thomas Mulligan declined to comment to Bloomberg.
Meanwhile, 61 year-old Phyllis Molchatsky, a New York woman who lost nearly $2 million investing with Madoff, is aiming her ire at the SEC. Molchatsky, reports the WSJ, sued the SEC for $1.7 million, alleging the agency was negligent in failing to detect the alleged fraud . The SEC’s “statutory purpose is to protect the public interest. We feel they fell down on the job in this instance,” said Howard Elisofon, a former SEC enforcement attorney and the lawyer representing Molchatsky. The SEC declined to comment. An administrative claim for relief, notes the Journal, is the first step in filing a lawsuit against the government. If the SEC doesn’t negotiate or respond to the claim within six months, the investor can file a lawsuit in federal court. “It’s an uphill battle to succeed with this,” Gregory Sisk, a law prof at the University of St. Thomas School of Law, told the WSJ. He said courts are reluctant to find that government agencies should act as insurance against any losses.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Another Arrest in Dreier Scam
Ex-Broker Who Helped Dreier In Hedge Fund Scams Is Arrested
The New York Law Journal by Mark Hamblett - December 24, 2008
A broker who allegedly helped disgraced attorney Marc Dreier market millions of dollars in bogus promissory notes to hedge funds was arrested Monday night. According to a criminal complaint unsealed yesterday in the Southern District, Kosta Kovachev posed as the comptroller of the real estate developer Solow Realty when Mr. Dreier attempted to sell a New York City hedge fund $115 million in notes that purportedly were issued by Solow. Mr. Kovachev, 57, was charged with a single count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §371. He was ordered held at his initial appearance before Magistrate Judge Frank Maas late yesterday. Meanwhile yesterday, a panel of the Appellate Division, First Department, suspended Mr. Dreier from the practice of law, effective immediately, "on the basis of uncontroverted evidence of serious professional misconduct." (The First Department opinion is on page 6 of the print edition of today's Law Journal). There may be more charges to come in the Dreier case, as the criminal complaint states that Mr. Kovachev joined the conspiracy with Mr. Dreier and "others known and unknown."
In 2006 and 2007, Mr. Dreier allegedly sold to a New York City hedge fund promissory notes with a face value of $115 million purportedly issued by Solow Realty. But in 2008, when the notes were not repaid in time, a hedge fund employee sought reassurance from Mr. Dreier and asked to meet with representatives of the developer at Solow's offices. Mr. Dreier agreed and arranged a meeting at Solow for Oct. 15, 2008, without the knowledge of the real estate firm. At that meeting, the criminal complaint alleges, Mr. Kovachev pretended to be Solow's comptroller and answered questions about the company's finances. Later that month, Mr. Kovachev, this time as himself, contacted the founder of another hedge fund for whom he had worked as a broker. Mr. Kovachev allegedly told the founder about the Solow notes and put him in touch with Mr. Dreier, who then sold the fund a $25 million note for the bargain price of $13 million. Finally, when an employee of a third hedge fund wanted to speak with Solow's chief executive officer in connection with the purchase of $100 million in notes, Mr. Kovachev got on the phone and impersonated the executive. Federal officials said Solow was uninvolved in any of the transactions.
Mr. Dreier had access to the offices of Solow Realty because he had done extensive legal work for the company. "The company never authorized Mr. Dreier to negotiate any financing or issue any promissory notes on its behalf," a spokesman for Solow Realty said in a statement yesterday. The spokesman added that "as soon as the company learned that fraudulent and forged instruments purporting to be obligations of Solow Realty were circulating, the company reported the facts to the U.S. Attorney's Office and we have been cooperating fully with the investigation." In the criminal complaint against Mr. Kovachev signed on Dec. 18 by Southern District Magistrate Judge Theodore Katz, Criminal Investigator Jordan Goodman of the Southern District U.S Attorney's Office said he interviewed Solow's chief executive, who assured him, "The developer did not issue any of the notes described above and has no note program." It was that same executive who told Mr. Goodman that the signatures appearing on the notes were forgeries. Financial statements provided by Mr. Dreier to the hedge fund, Mr. Goodman said in the complaint, "were entirely fabricated."
Mr. Kovachev, the investigator said, had an electronic pass that gave him access to Dreier LLP and also had access to computers and offices at the law firm. At yesterday's hearing before Magistrate Judge Mass, Southern District Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Streeter convinced the court that Mr. Kovachev was a risk of flight and should be held until he can post a $300,000 personal recognizance bond guaranteed by three financially responsible parties and put up $100,000 in cash or property. Magistrate Judge Maas said it was "a close call" but he was persuaded by two factors. The first was that Mr. Kovachev had traveled extensively to countries from where it would be more difficult to extradite him should he choose to flee. The second was Mr. Streeter's statement that " . . . we know from our investigation that Mr. Dreier paid people up to $100,00 to engage in impersonation in a single phone call." But Andrew Rendeiro of Flamhaft Levy Hirsch & Rendeiro in Brooklyn, who represents Mr. Kovachev, said he was confident his client could meet the bail conditions within a few days.
Mr. Rendeiro said, "Eventually, when the money trail is chased you will see hundreds of millions [went to] Mr. Dreier, 99.9 percent of it" and only a small percentage to his client. Mr. Rendeiro said his client, the father of five, had already been linked to Mr. Dreier and, had he been prone to flee, would have done so in the immediate aftermath of Mr. Dreier's arrest. Mr. Kovachev lost his broker's license in 2006 when he was implicated in a $28 million Ponzi scheme in which he and 11 others defrauded some 600 investors through the sale of unregistered securities structured as hotel timeshare rental interests. He was not criminally charged in the matter and denied any wrongdoing in a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in which he paid $358,148 in disgorgement and penalties. The New York Times reported in July 2004 that Mr. Dreier said Mr. Kovachev, then head of a dissolved Florida company called Evergence Capital Partners, was a client of his law firm. In a dispute between Solow Realty and developer Peter Kalikow, Mr. Solow and Mr. Dreier hired Evergence to place newspaper ads listing ex-creditors of Mr. Kalikow, the Times reported.
Dreier Suspended
Mr. Dreier was arrested on Dec. 2 in Toronto on an impersonation charge and on Dec. 7 in Manhattan on securities and wire fraud charges for what prosecutors now say is a $380 million fraud. He has remained in custody without bail as his 250-member firm, Dreier LLP, has imploded and gone into bankruptcy. What is left of the firm's assets and client escrow funds is in the custody of receiver Mark Pomerantz of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, appointed by Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum in a civil suit against Mr. Dreier by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
According to defense attorney Gerald Shargel, Mr. Dreier is cooperating with Mr. Pomerantz in identifying and locating assets, an effort Mr. Shargel said he hopes will reassure a judge that Mr. Dreier has not stashed assets abroad and can be trusted to be released pending trial or a plea. According to an unsigned opinion yesterday by the First Department panel that suspended Mr. Dreier, he had asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, declining to contest the suspension due to the ongoing federal criminal case. The panel noted that Mr. Dreier had been accused of defrauding multiple investors, making a profit of at least $100 million at their expense. "The sheer magnitude of the alleged conversion in this case, and the fact that some of the acts in furtherance thereof allegedly took place while respondent was in a Canadian prison are cause for public concern," the panel observed. In addition to Mr. Streeter, the government was represented by assistant U.S. attorneys Raymond J. Lohier and Anne E. Arreola. Mark.Hamblett@incisivemedia.com
The New York Law Journal by Mark Hamblett - December 24, 2008
A broker who allegedly helped disgraced attorney Marc Dreier market millions of dollars in bogus promissory notes to hedge funds was arrested Monday night. According to a criminal complaint unsealed yesterday in the Southern District, Kosta Kovachev posed as the comptroller of the real estate developer Solow Realty when Mr. Dreier attempted to sell a New York City hedge fund $115 million in notes that purportedly were issued by Solow. Mr. Kovachev, 57, was charged with a single count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §371. He was ordered held at his initial appearance before Magistrate Judge Frank Maas late yesterday. Meanwhile yesterday, a panel of the Appellate Division, First Department, suspended Mr. Dreier from the practice of law, effective immediately, "on the basis of uncontroverted evidence of serious professional misconduct." (The First Department opinion is on page 6 of the print edition of today's Law Journal). There may be more charges to come in the Dreier case, as the criminal complaint states that Mr. Kovachev joined the conspiracy with Mr. Dreier and "others known and unknown."
In 2006 and 2007, Mr. Dreier allegedly sold to a New York City hedge fund promissory notes with a face value of $115 million purportedly issued by Solow Realty. But in 2008, when the notes were not repaid in time, a hedge fund employee sought reassurance from Mr. Dreier and asked to meet with representatives of the developer at Solow's offices. Mr. Dreier agreed and arranged a meeting at Solow for Oct. 15, 2008, without the knowledge of the real estate firm. At that meeting, the criminal complaint alleges, Mr. Kovachev pretended to be Solow's comptroller and answered questions about the company's finances. Later that month, Mr. Kovachev, this time as himself, contacted the founder of another hedge fund for whom he had worked as a broker. Mr. Kovachev allegedly told the founder about the Solow notes and put him in touch with Mr. Dreier, who then sold the fund a $25 million note for the bargain price of $13 million. Finally, when an employee of a third hedge fund wanted to speak with Solow's chief executive officer in connection with the purchase of $100 million in notes, Mr. Kovachev got on the phone and impersonated the executive. Federal officials said Solow was uninvolved in any of the transactions.
Mr. Dreier had access to the offices of Solow Realty because he had done extensive legal work for the company. "The company never authorized Mr. Dreier to negotiate any financing or issue any promissory notes on its behalf," a spokesman for Solow Realty said in a statement yesterday. The spokesman added that "as soon as the company learned that fraudulent and forged instruments purporting to be obligations of Solow Realty were circulating, the company reported the facts to the U.S. Attorney's Office and we have been cooperating fully with the investigation." In the criminal complaint against Mr. Kovachev signed on Dec. 18 by Southern District Magistrate Judge Theodore Katz, Criminal Investigator Jordan Goodman of the Southern District U.S Attorney's Office said he interviewed Solow's chief executive, who assured him, "The developer did not issue any of the notes described above and has no note program." It was that same executive who told Mr. Goodman that the signatures appearing on the notes were forgeries. Financial statements provided by Mr. Dreier to the hedge fund, Mr. Goodman said in the complaint, "were entirely fabricated."
Mr. Kovachev, the investigator said, had an electronic pass that gave him access to Dreier LLP and also had access to computers and offices at the law firm. At yesterday's hearing before Magistrate Judge Mass, Southern District Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Streeter convinced the court that Mr. Kovachev was a risk of flight and should be held until he can post a $300,000 personal recognizance bond guaranteed by three financially responsible parties and put up $100,000 in cash or property. Magistrate Judge Maas said it was "a close call" but he was persuaded by two factors. The first was that Mr. Kovachev had traveled extensively to countries from where it would be more difficult to extradite him should he choose to flee. The second was Mr. Streeter's statement that " . . . we know from our investigation that Mr. Dreier paid people up to $100,00 to engage in impersonation in a single phone call." But Andrew Rendeiro of Flamhaft Levy Hirsch & Rendeiro in Brooklyn, who represents Mr. Kovachev, said he was confident his client could meet the bail conditions within a few days.
Mr. Rendeiro said, "Eventually, when the money trail is chased you will see hundreds of millions [went to] Mr. Dreier, 99.9 percent of it" and only a small percentage to his client. Mr. Rendeiro said his client, the father of five, had already been linked to Mr. Dreier and, had he been prone to flee, would have done so in the immediate aftermath of Mr. Dreier's arrest. Mr. Kovachev lost his broker's license in 2006 when he was implicated in a $28 million Ponzi scheme in which he and 11 others defrauded some 600 investors through the sale of unregistered securities structured as hotel timeshare rental interests. He was not criminally charged in the matter and denied any wrongdoing in a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in which he paid $358,148 in disgorgement and penalties. The New York Times reported in July 2004 that Mr. Dreier said Mr. Kovachev, then head of a dissolved Florida company called Evergence Capital Partners, was a client of his law firm. In a dispute between Solow Realty and developer Peter Kalikow, Mr. Solow and Mr. Dreier hired Evergence to place newspaper ads listing ex-creditors of Mr. Kalikow, the Times reported.
Dreier Suspended
Mr. Dreier was arrested on Dec. 2 in Toronto on an impersonation charge and on Dec. 7 in Manhattan on securities and wire fraud charges for what prosecutors now say is a $380 million fraud. He has remained in custody without bail as his 250-member firm, Dreier LLP, has imploded and gone into bankruptcy. What is left of the firm's assets and client escrow funds is in the custody of receiver Mark Pomerantz of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, appointed by Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum in a civil suit against Mr. Dreier by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
According to defense attorney Gerald Shargel, Mr. Dreier is cooperating with Mr. Pomerantz in identifying and locating assets, an effort Mr. Shargel said he hopes will reassure a judge that Mr. Dreier has not stashed assets abroad and can be trusted to be released pending trial or a plea. According to an unsigned opinion yesterday by the First Department panel that suspended Mr. Dreier, he had asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, declining to contest the suspension due to the ongoing federal criminal case. The panel noted that Mr. Dreier had been accused of defrauding multiple investors, making a profit of at least $100 million at their expense. "The sheer magnitude of the alleged conversion in this case, and the fact that some of the acts in furtherance thereof allegedly took place while respondent was in a Canadian prison are cause for public concern," the panel observed. In addition to Mr. Streeter, the government was represented by assistant U.S. attorneys Raymond J. Lohier and Anne E. Arreola. Mark.Hamblett@incisivemedia.com
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Marc Dreier Law License Suspended
Matter of Dreier
2008 NY Slip Op 10062
Decided on December 23, 2008
Appellate Division, First Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 23, 2008
SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION
First Judicial Department
Peter Tom,Justice Presiding,
Luis A. Gonzalez
John T. Buckley
John W. Sweeny, Jr.
James M. Catterson, Justices.
M5942
[*1]In the Matter of Marc S. Dreier (admitted as Marc Stuart Dreier), an attorney and counselor-at-law: Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department, Petitioner, Marc S. Dreier, Respondent.
Disciplinary proceedings instituted by the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department. Respondent, Marc S. Dreier, was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York at a Term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court for the Second Judicial Department on May 5, 1976.
Alan W. Friedberg, Chief Counsel, Departmental
Disciplinary Committee, New York
(Vitaly Lipkansky, of counsel), for petitioner.
Gerald L. Shargel, for respondent.
M-5942 - December 19, 2007
IN THE MATTER OF MARC S. DREIER, AN ATTORNEY
PER CURIAM [*2]
Respondent Marc S. Dreier was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York by the Second Judicial Department on May 5, 1976, under the name Marc Stuart Dreier. At all times relevant to this motion, respondent has maintained an office for the practice of law within the First Judicial Department.
The Departmental Disciplinary Committee (Committee) seeks an order, pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii), immediately suspending respondent from the practice of law on the basis of uncontroverted evidence of serious professional misconduct.
Respondent was the founder, and sole-equity partner of Dreier LLP, a 250-attorney national law firm. According to the Committee, he was also the sole authorized signatory on the Dreier LLP escrow accounts; only he was authorized to direct the movement of funds in and out of these accounts.
The uncontested evidence presented by the Committee to satisfy 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii) includes: (1) a detailed civil complaint and an application for preliminary injunctive relief filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), alleging that respondent defrauded multiple investors by marketing and selling fictitious promissory notes to hedge funds and other investment funds, making a profit of at least $100 million at the expense of unwitting investors; (2) a sealed criminal complaint by the United States Attorney's Office; (3) sworn declarations from a number of attorneys at, and affiliated with, Dreier LLP attesting to the fact that the firm's escrow accounts, to which respondent was the sole signatory, had repeated shortfalls amounting to tens of millions of dollars; and (4) alleged admissions by respondent to third parties, as to, inter alia, at least two purported attempts to have funds from the Dreier LLP escrow accounts transferred to one of respondent's personal accounts.
Respondent was arrested in Canada on December 2, 2008 for criminal impersonation. He was released on bail in Canada. He then returned to New York, and was arrested on the federal criminal complaint. A December 11, 2008 application for bail in New York was denied. The federal court appointed a temporary receiver for all of respondent's assets and for the firm's escrow accounts. Dreier LLP has also filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. Respondent has declined to oppose this motion, because of the ongoing federal criminal case. His attorney states that respondent "will at this time, assert his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination". Thus, no facts are presented to controvert the Committee's submissions (see Matter of Boter, 46 AD3d 1,7 [2007]; Matter of Berman, 45 AD3d 219, 222 [2007]; Matter of Muraskin, 286 AD2d 186 [2001]; Matter of Rodwin, 253 AD2d 67, 68-69 [1999]).
In view of the foregoing, we find that the Committee has met its burden on the motion (see 22 NYCRR 603.4[e][1][iii]). The evidence gathered by the SEC and the United States Attorney's Office, and the sworn declarations annexed to the Committee's motion, none of which are controverted, relate that respondent was engaged in a fraudulent scheme to sell investors fictitious promissory notes, for a profit of over $100 million; and converted tens of millions of dollars from the Dreier LLP escrow accounts.
This Court has consistently held that an attorney who converts funds should be immediately suspended, prior to the conclusion of the disciplinary proceeding (Matter of Berman, 45 AD3d 219 [2007]; Matter of Newman, 35 AD3d 23 [2006]; Matter of Wallman, 260 AD2d 148 [1999]). The sheer magnitude of the alleged conversion in this case, and the fact that some of the acts in furtherance thereof allegedly took place while respondent was in a Canadian prison are cause for great public concern. [*3]
Accordingly, the Committee's motion should be granted and respondent should be immediately suspended pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii).
All concur.
Order filed. [December 23, 2008]
Tom, J.P., Gonzalez, Buckley, Jr., and Catterson, JJ.
Respondent suspended from the practice of law in the State of New York, effective the date hereof, until such time as disciplinary matters pending before the Committee have been concluded and until further order of this Court. Opinion Per Curiam. All concur.
2008 NY Slip Op 10062
Decided on December 23, 2008
Appellate Division, First Department
Per Curiam
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.
Decided on December 23, 2008
SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION
First Judicial Department
Peter Tom,Justice Presiding,
Luis A. Gonzalez
John T. Buckley
John W. Sweeny, Jr.
James M. Catterson, Justices.
M5942
[*1]In the Matter of Marc S. Dreier (admitted as Marc Stuart Dreier), an attorney and counselor-at-law: Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department, Petitioner, Marc S. Dreier, Respondent.
Disciplinary proceedings instituted by the Departmental Disciplinary Committee for the First Judicial Department. Respondent, Marc S. Dreier, was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York at a Term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court for the Second Judicial Department on May 5, 1976.
Alan W. Friedberg, Chief Counsel, Departmental
Disciplinary Committee, New York
(Vitaly Lipkansky, of counsel), for petitioner.
Gerald L. Shargel, for respondent.
M-5942 - December 19, 2007
IN THE MATTER OF MARC S. DREIER, AN ATTORNEY
PER CURIAM [*2]
Respondent Marc S. Dreier was admitted to the practice of law in the State of New York by the Second Judicial Department on May 5, 1976, under the name Marc Stuart Dreier. At all times relevant to this motion, respondent has maintained an office for the practice of law within the First Judicial Department.
The Departmental Disciplinary Committee (Committee) seeks an order, pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii), immediately suspending respondent from the practice of law on the basis of uncontroverted evidence of serious professional misconduct.
Respondent was the founder, and sole-equity partner of Dreier LLP, a 250-attorney national law firm. According to the Committee, he was also the sole authorized signatory on the Dreier LLP escrow accounts; only he was authorized to direct the movement of funds in and out of these accounts.
The uncontested evidence presented by the Committee to satisfy 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii) includes: (1) a detailed civil complaint and an application for preliminary injunctive relief filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), alleging that respondent defrauded multiple investors by marketing and selling fictitious promissory notes to hedge funds and other investment funds, making a profit of at least $100 million at the expense of unwitting investors; (2) a sealed criminal complaint by the United States Attorney's Office; (3) sworn declarations from a number of attorneys at, and affiliated with, Dreier LLP attesting to the fact that the firm's escrow accounts, to which respondent was the sole signatory, had repeated shortfalls amounting to tens of millions of dollars; and (4) alleged admissions by respondent to third parties, as to, inter alia, at least two purported attempts to have funds from the Dreier LLP escrow accounts transferred to one of respondent's personal accounts.
Respondent was arrested in Canada on December 2, 2008 for criminal impersonation. He was released on bail in Canada. He then returned to New York, and was arrested on the federal criminal complaint. A December 11, 2008 application for bail in New York was denied. The federal court appointed a temporary receiver for all of respondent's assets and for the firm's escrow accounts. Dreier LLP has also filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. Respondent has declined to oppose this motion, because of the ongoing federal criminal case. His attorney states that respondent "will at this time, assert his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination". Thus, no facts are presented to controvert the Committee's submissions (see Matter of Boter, 46 AD3d 1,7 [2007]; Matter of Berman, 45 AD3d 219, 222 [2007]; Matter of Muraskin, 286 AD2d 186 [2001]; Matter of Rodwin, 253 AD2d 67, 68-69 [1999]).
In view of the foregoing, we find that the Committee has met its burden on the motion (see 22 NYCRR 603.4[e][1][iii]). The evidence gathered by the SEC and the United States Attorney's Office, and the sworn declarations annexed to the Committee's motion, none of which are controverted, relate that respondent was engaged in a fraudulent scheme to sell investors fictitious promissory notes, for a profit of over $100 million; and converted tens of millions of dollars from the Dreier LLP escrow accounts.
This Court has consistently held that an attorney who converts funds should be immediately suspended, prior to the conclusion of the disciplinary proceeding (Matter of Berman, 45 AD3d 219 [2007]; Matter of Newman, 35 AD3d 23 [2006]; Matter of Wallman, 260 AD2d 148 [1999]). The sheer magnitude of the alleged conversion in this case, and the fact that some of the acts in furtherance thereof allegedly took place while respondent was in a Canadian prison are cause for great public concern. [*3]
Accordingly, the Committee's motion should be granted and respondent should be immediately suspended pursuant to 22 NYCRR 603.4(e)(1)(iii).
All concur.
Order filed. [December 23, 2008]
Tom, J.P., Gonzalez, Buckley, Jr., and Catterson, JJ.
Respondent suspended from the practice of law in the State of New York, effective the date hereof, until such time as disciplinary matters pending before the Committee have been concluded and until further order of this Court. Opinion Per Curiam. All concur.