How America's biggest banks took part in a nationwide bid-rigging conspiracy - until they were caught on tape
June 21, 2012 11:20 AM ET
Illustration by Victor Juhasz
Someday, it will go down in history as the first
trial of the modern American mafia. Of course, you won't hear the recent
financial corruption case,
United States of America v. Carollo, Goldberg and Grimm,
called anything like that. If you heard about it at all, you're
probably either in the municipal bond business or married to an
antitrust lawyer. Even then, all you probably heard was that a threesome
of bit players on Wall Street got convicted of obscure antitrust
violations in one of the most inscrutable, jargon-packed legal
snoozefests since the government's massive case against Microsoft in the
Nineties – not exactly the thrilling courtroom drama offered by the
famed trials of old-school mobsters like Al Capone or Anthony "Tony
Ducks" Corallo.
But this just-completed trial in downtown New York against three
faceless financial executives really was historic. Over 10 years in the
making, the case allowed federal prosecutors to make public for the
first time the astonishing inner workings of the reigning American crime
syndicate, which now operates not out of Little Italy and Las Vegas,
but out of Wall Street.
The defendants in the case – Dominick Carollo, Steven Goldberg and
Peter Grimm – worked for GE Capital, the finance arm of General
Electric. Along with virtually every major bank and finance company on
Wall Street – not just GE, but J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America, UBS,
Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Wachovia and more – these three Wall
Street wiseguys spent the past decade taking part in a breathtakingly
broad scheme to skim billions of dollars from the coffers of cities and
small towns across America. The banks achieved this gigantic rip-off by
secretly colluding to rig the public bids on municipal bonds, a business
worth $3.7 trillion. By conspiring to lower the interest rates that
towns earn on these investments, the banks systematically stole from
schools, hospitals, libraries and nursing homes – from "virtually every
state, district
and territory in the United States," according to one
settlement. And they did it so cleverly that the victims never even knew
they were being cheated. No thumbs were broken, and nobody ended up in
a landfill in New Jersey, but money disappeared, lots and lots of it,
and its manner of disappearance had a familiar name:
organized crime.
In fact, stripped of all the camouflaging financial verbiage, the
crimes the defendants and their co-conspirators committed were virtually
indistinguishable from the kind of thuggery practiced for decades by
the Mafia, which has long made manipulation of public bids for things
like garbage collection and construction contracts a cornerstone of its
business. What's more, in the manner of old mob trials, Wall Street's
secret machinations were revealed during the
Carollo trial
through crackling wiretap recordings and the lurid testimony of
cooperating witnesses, who came into court with bowed heads, pointing
fingers at their accomplices. The new-age gangsters even invented an
elaborate code to hide their crimes. Like Elizabethan highway robbers
who spoke in thieves' cant, or Italian mobsters who talked about
"getting a button man to clip the capo," on tape after tape these Wall
Street crooks coughed up phrases like "pull a nickel out" or "get to the
right level" or "you're hanging out there" – all code words used to
manipulate the interest rates on municipal bonds. The only thing that
made this trial different from a typical mob trial was the scale of the
crime.
USA v. Carollo involved classic cartel activity: not just
one corrupt bank, but many, all acting in careful concert against the
public interest. In the years since the economic crash of 2008, we've
seen numerous hints that such orchestrated corruption exists. The
collapses of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, for instance, both
pointed to coordinated attacks by powerful banks and hedge funds
determined to speed the demise of those firms. In the bankruptcy of
Jefferson County, Alabama, we learned that Goldman Sachs accepted a $3
million bribe from J.P. Morgan Chase to permit Chase to serve as the
sole provider of toxic swap deals to the rubes running metropolitan
Birmingham – "an open-and-shut case of anti-competitive behavior," as
one former regulator described it.
More recently, a major international investigation has been launched
into the manipulation of Libor, the interbank lending index that is used
to calculate global interest rates for products worth more than $3
trillion
a year. If and when that case is presented to the public at trial –
there are several major civil suits in the works here in the States – we
may yet find out that the world's most powerful banks have, for years,
been fixing the prices of almost every adjustable-rate vehicle on earth,
from mortgages and credit cards to interest-rate swaps and even
currencies.
But
USA v. Carollo marks the first time we actually got
incontrovertible evidence that Wall Street has moved into this
cartel-type brand of criminality. It also offered a disgusting glimpse
into the enabling and grossly cynical role played by politicians, who
took Super Bowl tickets and bribe-stuffed envelopes to look the other
way while gangsters raided the public kitty. And though the punishments
that were ultimately handed down in the trial – minor convictions of
three bit players – felt deeply unsatisfying, it was still a watershed
moment in the ongoing story of America's gradual awakening to the
realities of financial corruption. In a post-crash era where Wall Street
trials almost never make it into court, and even the harshest
settlements end with the evidence buried by the government and the
offending banks permitted to escape with no admission of wrongdoing,
this case finally dragged the whole ugly truth of American finance out
into the open – and it was a hell of a show.
1. THE SCAM
This was no trial scene from popular lore, no
Inherit the Wind or
State of California v. Orenthal James Simpson.
No gallery packed with rapt spectators, no ceiling fans set whirring to
beat back the tension and the heat, no defense counsel's resting a
sympathetic hand on the defendant's shoulder as opening statements
commence. No, the setting for USA v. Carollo reflected the bizarre
alternate universe that exists on Wall Street. Like so many court cases
involving big banks, the proceeding looked more like a roomful of
expensive lawyers negotiating a major corporate merger than a public
search for justice.
The trial began on April 16th in a federal court in Lower Manhattan.
The courtroom, an aerielike setting 23 stories up, offered a panoramic
view of the city and the East River. Though the gallery was usually full
throughout the three-plus weeks of testimony, the spectators were not
average citizens come to witness how they had been robbed blind by
America's biggest banks. Instead, there were row after row of suits –
other lawyers eager to observe a long-awaited case, one that could
influence the outcome in a handful of civil suits pending across the
country. In fact, the defendants themselves, whom the trial would reveal
as easily replaceable cogs in a much larger machine of corruption, were
barely visible from the gallery, obscured by the great chattering
congress of prosecution and defense attorneys.
Only the presence of the mostly nonwhite and elderly jury, which
resembled the front pew of a Harlem church, served as a reminder that
the case had any connection to the real world. Even reporters from most
of the major news outlets didn't bother to attend. The judge in the
trial, the right honorable and amusingly cantankerous Harold Baer,
acknowledged that the case was not likely to set the public's pulse
racing. "It is unlikely, I think, that this will generate a lot of media
publicity," Baer sighed to the jury in his preliminary instructions.
Once opening statements began, it was easy to see why the press might
stay away. One of the main lines of defense for corrupt Wall Street
institutions in recent years has been the extreme complexity of the
infrastructure within which these crimes are committed. In order for
prosecutors to win convictions, they have to drag ordinary Americans,
people who watch and enjoy reality TV, up the steepest of learning
curves, coaching them into game shape with regard to obscure financial
vehicles like swaps and CDOs and, in this case, Guaranteed Investment
Contracts.
So it was no surprise that both the prosecution and the defense began
their opening remarks to the jury by apologizing for the hellishly dull
maze of "convoluted" and "boring" and "tedious" financial transactions
they were about to spend weeks hearing about. Only Wendy Waszmer, the
feisty federal prosecutor with straight brown hair and an elfin build
who presented the government's case, succeeded in cutting through the
mountainous dung heap of acronyms and obfuscations and explaining what
the case was about. "Even though some aspects of municipal bond finance
are complex, the fraud here was simple," she told the jurors. "It was
about lying and cheating cities and towns in a bidding process that was
in place to protect them."
The "simple fraud" Waszmer described centered around public
borrowing. Say your town wants to build a new elementary school. So it
goes to Wall Street, which issues a bond in your town's name to raise
$100 million, attracting cash from investors all over the globe. Once
Wall Street raises all that money, it dumps it in a tax-exempt account,
which your town then uses to pay builders, plumbers, the chalkboard
company and whoever else winds up working on the project.
But here's the catch: Most towns, when they raise all that money,
don't spend it all at once. Often it takes years to complete a
construction project, and the last contractor isn't paid until long
after the original bond is issued. While that unspent money is sitting
in the town's account, local officials go looking for a financial
company on Wall Street to invest it for them.
To do that, officials hire a middleman firm known as a
broker
to set up a public auction and invite banks to compete for the town's
business. For the $100 million you borrowed on your elementary school
bond, Bank A might offer you 5 percent interest. Bank B goes further and
offers 5.25 percent. But Bank C, the winner of the auction, offers 5.5
percent.
In most cases, towns and cities, called
issuers, are legally required to submit their bonds to a competitive auction of at least three banks, called
providers.
The scam Wall Street cooked up to beat this fair-market system was to
devise phony auctions. Instead of submitting competitive bids and
letting the highest rate win, providers like Chase, Bank of America and
GE secretly divvied up the business of all the different cities and
towns that came to Wall Street to borrow money. One company would be
allowed to "win" the bid on an elementary school, the second would be
handed a hospital, the third a hockey rink, and so on.
How did they rig the auctions? Simple: By bribing the auctioneers,
those middlemen brokers hired to ensure the town got the best possible
interest rate the market could offer. Instead of holding honest auctions
in which none of the parties knew the size of one another's bids, the
broker would tell the prearranged "winner" what the other two bids
were, allowing the bank to lower its offer and come in with an interest
rate just high enough to "beat" its supposed competitors. This simple
but effective cheat – telling the winner what its rivals had bid – was
called giving them a "last look." The winning bank would then reward the
broker by providing it with kickbacks disguised as "fees" for swap
deals that the brokers weren't even involved in.
The end result of this (at least) decade-long conspiracy was that
towns and cities systematically lost, while banks and brokers won big.
By shaving tiny fractions of a percent off their winning bids, the banks
pocketed fantastic sums over the life of these multimillion-dollar bond
deals. Lowering a bid by just one-100th of a percent, called a
basis point, could cheat a town out of tens of thousands of dollars it would otherwise have earned on its bond deposits.
That doesn't sound like much. But when added to the other fractions
of a percent stolen from basically every other town in America on every
other bond issued by Wall Street in the past 10 to 15 years, it starts
to turn into an enormous sum of money. In short, this was like the scam
in Office Space, multiplied by a factor of about 10 gazillion: Banks
stole pennies at a time from towns all over America, only they did it a
few hundred bazillion times.
Given the complexities of bond investments, it's impossible to know
exactly how much the total take was. But consider this: Four banks that
took part in the scam (UBS, Bank of America, Chase and Wells Fargo) paid
$673 million in restitution after agreeing to cooperate in the
government's case. (Bank of America even entered the Justice
Department's leniency program, which is tantamount to admitting that it
committed felonies.) Since that settlement involves only four of the
firms implicated in the scam (a list that includes Goldman, Transamerica
and AIG, as well as banks in Scotland, France, Germany and the
Netherlands), and since settlements in Wall Street cases tend to
represent only a tiny fraction of the actual damages (Chase paid just
$75 million for its role in the bribe-and-payola scandal that saddled
Jefferson County, Alabama, with more than $3 billion in sewer debt),
it's safe to assume that Wall Street skimmed untold billions in the
bid-rigging scam. The UBS settlement alone, for instance, involved 100
different bond deals, worth a total of $16 billion, over four years.
Contracting corruption has been around since the construction of the
Appian Way. The difference here is the almost unimaginable scope of the
crime – and the fact that it's mobsters from Wall Street who are getting
in on the action. Until recently, such activity has traditionally been
the almostexclusive domain of the Mafia. "When I think of bid rigging, I
think of the convergence of organized crime and the government," says
Eliot Spitzer, who prosecuted two bid-rigging cases in his career as a
New York prosecutor, one involving garbage collection, the other a
Garment District case involving the Gambino family. The Mafia moved into
bid rigging, he says, because it observed over time that monopolizing
public contracts offers a far more lucrative business model than
legbreaking. "Organized crime learned their lessons from John D.
Rockefeller," Spitzer explains. "It's much more efficient to control a
market and boost the price 10 percent than it is to run a loan-sharking
business on the street, where you actually have to use a baseball bat
and collect every week."
What Spitzer saw was gangsters moving in the direction of big
business. When I ask him if he is surprised by the current bid-rigging
case, which looks more like big business moving in the direction of
gangsters, he laughs. "The urge to become a monopolist," he says, "is as
old as capitalism."
2. THE TAPES
The defendants in the case –
Dominick Carollo, Steven Goldberg and Peter Grimm – worked together at
GE, which was competing for bond business against banks like Chase,
Wells Fargo and Bank of America. Carollo was the boss of Goldberg and
Grimm, who handled the grunt work, submitting bids. Between August 1999
and November 2006, the three executives participated in countless rigged
bids by telephone, conspiring with middleman brokers like Chambers,
Dunhill and Rubin. We know this because prior to the start of the Carollo
trial, 12 other individuals, including several brokers from CDR, had
already pleaded guilty in a wide-ranging federal investigation.
How did the government manage to make a case against so many Wall
Street scam artists? Hubris. As was the case in Jefferson County,
Alabama, where Chase executives blabbed criminal conspiracies on the
telephone even though they knew they were being recorded by their own
company, the trio of defendants in Carollo wantonly fixed bond auctions
despite the fact that their own firm was taping the conversations.
Defense counsel even made an issue of this at trial, implying to the
jury that nobody would be dumb enough to commit a crime by phone when
"there was a big sticker on the phones that said all calls are being
recorded," as Grimm's counsel, Mark Racanelli, put it. In fact,
Racanelli argued, the conversations on the tapes hardly suggested a
secret conspiracy, because "no one was whispering."
But the reason no one was whispering isn't that their actions weren't
illegal – it's because the bid rigging was so incredibly common the
defendants simply forgot to be ashamed of it. "The tapes illustrate the
cavalier attitude which the financial community brought toward this
behavior," says Michael Hausfeld, a renowned class-action attorney whose
firm is leading a major civil suit against Bank of America, Wells
Fargo, Chase and others for this same bid-rigging scam. "It became the
predominant mode of transacting business."
How and when the government got hold of those tapes is still unclear;
the prosecution is not commenting on the case, which remains an open
investigation. But we do know that in November 2006, federal agents
raided the offices of CDR, the broker firm that was working with
Carollo, Goldberg and Grimm. Caught redhanded, many of the firm's top
executives agreed to turn state's witness. One after another, these
hangdog, pasty-faced men were led up to the stand by prosecutors and
forced to recount how they'd been snatched up in the raid, separated and
blitz-interviewed by FBI agents, and plunged into years of nut-crushing
negotiations, which resulted in almost all of them pleading guilty.
Prosecutors would eventually accumulate 570,000 recorded phone
conversations, and to decipher them they worked these cooperating
witnesses like sled dogs, driving them in for dozens of meetings and
grilling them about the details of the scam.
The state's first witness, confusingly, was a CDR broker named Doug
Goldberg (no relation to the defendant Steven Goldberg). Almost every
executive involved in the trial was absurdly young; many were just out
of college when the bid-rigging scam started in the late Nineties. Doug
Goldberg graduated from USC in 1993, and his fellow CDR executive Evan
Zarefsky still looks to be about 15 years old, suggesting a suit-and-tie
version of Napoleon Dynamite. The extreme youth of some of the
conspirators was an obvious subtext of the trial, underscoring the fact
that far more senior executives from bigger banks like Chase and Bank of
America had been permitted by the government to evade testifying.
Right off the bat, in fact, Doug Goldberg explained that while at
CDR, he had routinely helped the cream of Wall Street rig bids on
municipal bonds by letting them take a peek at other bids:
Q: Who were some of the providers you gave last looks to?
A:
There was a whole host of them, but GE Capital, FSA, J.P. Morgan, Bank
of America, Société Générale, Lehman Brothers, Bear. There were others.
Goldberg went on to testify that he repeatedly rigged auctions with
the three defendants. Sometimes he gave them "last looks" so they could
shave basis points off their winning bids; other times he asked them to
intentionally submit losing offers – called cover bids – to
allow other firms to win. He told the court he knew he was being
recorded by GE. When asked how he knew that, he drew one of the trial's
rare laughs by answering, "Either they told me or some of them, like
Société Générale, you can hear the beeping."
Because of the recordings, he went on, he and the defendants used "guarded language."
"I might tell him, if I'm looking for an intentionally losing bid, 'I need a bid,' or something like that," he said.
Q: With whom specifically did you use this guarded type of language?
A: With Steve Goldberg and others.
Q:
In your dealings with Steve Goldberg, what, if any, language or other
signal did he use that you understood as a request for a last look?
A:
He might ask me where I "saw the market," or he might ask me for, as I
mentioned, an "indication of where the market is," an "idea of the
market."
The broker went on to detail how he had worked with the GE executives
to manipulate a number of auctions. In several cases, he was pushed to
make deals with GE by his boss at CDR, Stewart Wolmark, who seemed
smitten with GE's Steve Goldberg; jurors listening to the tapes couldn't
miss the pair's nauseatingly tight, cash-fueled bromance. In December
2000, for instance, Wolmark helped Goldberg win a rigged bid for a bond
in Onondaga County, New York. After the auction, he calls his buddy
Steve:
WOLMARK: Hey, congratulations. You got another one.
GOLDBERG: Yeah. Yeah, thank you. Thank you.
WOLMARK: You're hot!
GOLDBERG: I'm hot? Hot with your help, sir.
Later on, Wolmark basically tells Goldberg he owes a service to his
fellow gangster. "I deserve the big lunch now," Wolmark chirps.
"Yeah," says Goldberg. "I owe you something, huh?"
A few months later, in March 2001, Wolmark and Goldberg do another
deal, this time for a $219 million construction bond for the Port
Authority of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. Wolmark rings up his payola
paramour and scolds him for not calling him during a recent trip to
Vegas, where Goldberg doubtless spent a nice chunk of the money Wolmark
had helped him steal from places like Onondaga County.
"Good time in Vegas, you can't even call me back?" Wolmark laments.
"I don't have time to sleep in Vegas," Goldberg says suggestively.
"There's sleeping," Stewart Wolmark chides, "and there's Stewart."
From there, the clothes just start flying off as the pair jump into a
steamy negotiation over the monster Allegheny deal. "I'm all set with
$200 million," Goldberg says. "Everything's ready to go."
Then Wolmark asks if GE is ready to pay CDR its bribe. "You got some swaps coming up?"
Goldberg assures him they do. Wolmark then passes the deal off to his own Goldberg, Doug, who handles the actual auction.
When
prosecutors tried to explain these telephone auctions at trial,
projecting the transcripts of the calls on a huge movie screen set up
across the courtroom from the jury, you could see the sheer bewilderment
on the jurors' faces. The men on the tapes seemed to be speaking a
language from another planet – an insanely dry and boring planet, where
there's no color and no adverbs, maybe, and babies are made by rubbing
two calculators together. One of the jurors, an older white man, spent
the first few days of the trial yawning repeatedly, fighting a heroic
battle to stay awake in the face of all the mind-numbing jargon about
Guaranteed Investment Contracts. "Who needs Lunesta," joked one lawyer
who attended the proceedings, "when you can hear a lawyer talk about
GICs right out of the gate?"
The language of the auctions was a kind of intellectual camouflage.
If you didn't listen closely, you'd have thought the two Goldbergs were a
couple of airmen exchanging weather balloon data, rather than two Wall
Street executives plotting a crime to rip off the good citizens of
Allegheny County. In that deal, Steve Goldberg of GE originally bid
"503, 4" on the $219 million bond, only to be guided downward by Doug
Goldberg of CDR. The broker explained in court:
Q: Can you explain what you understood Mr. Goldberg to say when he was saying 503, 4? What was he bidding?
A: That was the rate he was willing to bid on this investment agreement.
Q: How much was it?
A: 5.04 percent.
Q: What did you do as a response to his bid of 5.04 percent?
A: I brought his bid down to 5.00 percent.
In other words, even though GE was willing to pay an interest rate of
5.04 percent, Allegheny County ended up earning just 5.00 percent on
its $219 million bond. How much money that amounted to is difficult to
calculate, given the way the bond account diminished each year as the
county used it to pay contractors; even Doug Goldberg couldn't put a
number on the scam. But if the account was full at the start of the
deal, GE may have cheated the county out of as much as $87,600 a year to
start.
In any case, GE certainly chiseled the Pennsylvanians out of a
sizable sum, because soon after, the company paid CDR a kickback of
$57,400 in the form of "fees" on a swap deal. The whole deal pleased
CDR's higher-ups. "I went to Stewart Wolmark and told him that not only
did Steve Goldberg win but that I was able to reduce his rate down four
basis points," said Doug Goldberg. "Stewart was very happy and excited."
Over and over again, jurors heard cooperating witnesses translate the
damning audiotapes. In one lurid sequence, the bat-eared, bespectacled
CDR broker Evan Zarefsky explained how he helped the GE defendant Peter
Grimm win a bid for a bond put out by the Utah Housing Authority. The
pair had apparently reamed Utah so many times that it had become a sort
of inside joke between the two of them. From a call in August 2001:
GRIMM: Utah, let's see, how we look on that?
ZAREFSKY: Good old Utah!
Grimm complains about how much he'll have to pay to win the deal. "These levels are really shitty," he says.
Zarefsky comforts him. "Well, I can probably save you a couple of bucks here," he says.
From there, Grimm rattles off numbers, ultimately settling on a bid
of 351 – 3.51 percent. Zarefsky, in almost motherly fashion, guides the
manic Grimm downward, telling him, in code, that his bid is 10 basis
points too high. "You actually got like a dime in there," Zarefsky says.
"You want to come down a dime?"
So Grimm comes back with a bid of 3.41 percent, which turned out to
be the winning bid. Utah lost out on 10 basis points, GE bilked the
state out of untold sums, and CDR got another nice kickback.
This, basically, is how a lot of the calls went. The provider would
tentatively offer a number, and the broker would guide him to a new bid.
"You have a little bit of room there," he might say, or "That's gonna
put you about a nickel short." Guiding the bidders to the lowest
possible bid was called "figuring out the level" or being "in the
market"; obtaining information about other bids was called "giving an
indicative" or "seeing the market."
The brokers and providers used a dizzying array of methods for
rigging deals. In some cases, the broker helped the "winner" by simply
excluding other bidders, who may or may not have been in on the scam. In
one hilarious sequence that sounds like something out of a wiretap of a
Little Italy social club, CDR executive Dani Naeh tells GE's Steve
Goldberg that he's not sure he can guarantee a win on a bid for a New
Jersey hospital bond. There were too many triple-A-rated companies
interested in the bond, Naeh explains, and he couldn't control their
bids the way he could those of the lesser, double-A-rated companies he
usually did business with. "It would be easier for us to contact other
providers who were rated double-A and ask them to submit an
intentionally losing bid," Naeh testified. He sounded exactly like a
mobster, talking about "our guys" and "our friends."
In some of the calls, jurors could hear the entirety of the dirty
deals negotiated, including the bribe paid back to the broker. In one
deal involving a bond for the Port of Oakland, California, Steve
Goldberg of GE starts to ask his pal Stewart Wolmark of CDR what kind of
kickback the broker wants for rigging the deal. Such conversations
about payoffs were so commonplace that Wolmark doesn't even have to wait
for Goldberg to finish the question:
GOLDBERG: What are we building in here for the...
WOLMARK: Swap.
In his testimony, Wolmark explained that he was asking for a swap
deal in return for rigging the bid. "He wanted to know what we were
going to get paid on the back end," Wolmark explained.
In the call, Wolmark and Goldberg start haggling over the price of
CDR's kickback. Wolmark tells Goldberg he only wants what's fair.
"Listen, I'm not a
chazzer," Wolmark says.
Fans of the movie
Scarface will remember Tony Montana's inspired translation of this Yiddish term: "Thas a pig that don' fly straight."
Wolmark reassures Goldberg that as pigs go, he's a straight flier. "You see the kind of mensch I am," he says.
Negotiations ensue. Goldberg tells Wolmark that he can pay him more
on the bribe – the swap deal – if Wolmark can help GE save money on the
Port of Oakland deal. "I'd like to see if we can pull a nickel out of
that swap," Wolmark says. Translation: He wants to boost CDR's take on
the kickback by five basis points.
"If I could get to the right level," Goldberg answers, referring to
the Port of Oakland deal. Translation: Goldberg will help Wolmark get
his "nickel" on the swap deal if Wolmark can help GE "get to the right
level" on the bid.
3. THE POLITICIANS
The
Carollo case
provides far more than a detailed look at the mechanics and
pervasiveness of bid rigging; it offers a clear and unvarnished
blueprint of the architecture of American financial and political
corruption. In an attempt to discredit the CDR witnesses, defense
counsel hounded them about other revelations that surfaced in the
government's investigation, particularly those that involved bribery,
illegal campaign contributions and pay-for-play schemes.
The defense's cross-examinations were surreal. It was certainly true
that some of the government's cooperating witnesses had dubious
résumés, so it may have made sense to highlight their generally
duplicitous history of tax evasion or lying to investigators. But in
their zeal, defense counsel went far beyond simply discrediting the
witnesses, spending an inordinate amount of time eliciting even more
details about the grotesque corruption scheme their own clients had
taken part in. The result was a rare and somewhat confusing spectacle:
high-octane lawyers from Wall Street working to rip the lid off Wall
Street corruption in open court.
Defense counsel showed us, for instance, how CDR employees were
routinely directed by their boss, David Rubin, to make political
contributions to select candidates, only to be reimbursed by Rubin for
those contributions later on. This kind of corporate skirting of
campaign finance limits is something we've always suspected goes on, but
we rarely get to see direct evidence of it.
More interesting, though, were the stories about political payoffs.
In 2001, CDR hired a consultant named Ron White, a Philadelphia bond
attorney who happened to be the chief fundraiser for then-mayor John
Street. CDR gave White two tickets to the 2003 Super Bowl in San Diego
plus a limo – a gift worth $10,000. As his "guest," White took Corey
Kemp, the city treasurer for Philadelphia, who, 16 days later, awarded
CDR a $150,000 contract to advise the city on swap deals. But that
wasn't the end of the gravy train: CDR doled out those swap deals to
selected banks, who in return kicked back $515,000 to CDR for steering
city business their way.
So a mere $10,000 bribe to a politician – a couple of Super Bowl
tickets and a limo – scored CDR a total of $665,000 of the public's
money. If you want to know why Wall Street has been enjoying record
profits, here's your answer: Corruption is a business model that brings
in $66 for every dollar you invest.
Even more startling was the way that a notorious incident involving
former New Mexico governor and presidential candidate Bill Richardson
resurfaced during the trial. Barack Obama, you may recall, had nominated
Richardson to be commerce secretary – only to have the move blow up in
his face when tales of Richardson accepting bribes began to make the
rounds. Federal prosecutors never brought a case against Richardson: In
2009, an inside source told the AP that the investigation had been
"killed in Washington." Obama himself, after Richardson bowed out,
praised the former governor as an "outstanding public servant."
Now, in the
Carollo trial, defense counsel got Doug
Goldberg, the CDR broker, to admit that his boss, Stewart Wolmark, had
handed him an envelope containing a check for $25,000. The check was
payable to none other than Moving America Forward – Bill Richardson's
political action committee. Goldberg then went to a Richardson
fundraiser and handed the politician the envelope. Richardson, pleased,
told Goldberg, "Tell the big guy I'm going to hire you guys."
Goldberg admitted on the stand that he understood "the big guy" to mean Wolmark. After that came this amazing testimony:
Q: Soon after that, New Mexico hired CDR as its swap and GIC adviser on a $400 million deal, right?
A: Yes.
Q: You learned later that that check in that envelope was a check for $25,000, right?
A: Yes. I learned it later.
Q: You also learned later that CDR gave another $75,000 to Gov. Richardson, right?
A: Yes.
Q: CDR ended up making about a million dollars on this deal for those two checks?
A: Yes.
Q: In fact, New Mexico not only hired CDR, they hired another firm to do the actual work that they needed done?
A: For the fixed-income stuff, yes.
What we get from this is that CDR paid Bill Richardson $100,000 in
contributions and got $1.5 million in public money in return. And not
just $1.5 million, but $1.5 million for work they didn't even do – the
state still had to hire another firm to do the actual job. Nice
non-work, if you can get it.
To grasp the full insanity of these revelations, one must step back
and consider all this information together: the bribes, yes, but also
the industrywide, anti-competitive bid-rigging scheme. It turns into a
kind of unbroken Möbius strip of corruption – the banks pay middlemen to
rig auctions, the middlemen bribe politicians to win business, then the
politicians choose the middlemen to run the auctions, leading right
back to the banks bribing the middlemen to rig the bids.
When we allow Wall Street to continually raid the public cookie jar,
we're not just enriching a bunch of petty executives (Wolmark's income
in 2008, two years after he was busted in the FBI raid, was
$2,464,210.18) – we're effectively creating an alternate government, one
in which money lifted from the taxpayer's pocket through mob-style
schemes turns into a kind of permanent shadow tax, used to maintain the
corruption and keep the thieves in place. And that cuts right to the
heart of what this case is all about. Wall Street is tired of making
money by competing for business and weathering the vagaries of the
market. What it wants instead is something more like the deal the
government has – regularly collecting guaranteed taxes. What's crazy is
that in order to justify that dream of regular, monopolistic tribute,
they've begun to see themselves as a type of shadow government, watching
out for the rest of us. Amazingly enough, this even became a defense at
trial.
4. THE DEFENSE
There were times, sitting in the courtroom, when I wondered,
How did this case even go to trial?
What defense attorney would look at the thousands of recorded phone
calls, the parade of cooperating witnesses, the stacks of falsified
documents, and conclude that airing all of this in court was a smart
play? Listening to tape after damning tape played in open court while
the defendants cringed in a corner seemed increasingly like a gratuitous
ass-kicking, one that any smart defense lawyer would have made a deal
to avoid.
But as the weeks passed, I started to get a feel for the defense
strategy, which made a kind of demented sense. The lawyers for Carollo,
Goldberg and Grimm didn't even bother trying to argue the facts of the
case. Instead, in one cross-examination after another, they kept hitting
the same theme. Despite the fact that the rigged bids resulted in lower
returns, wasn't it true that the cities and towns still received,
technically speaking, the highest bid? If a town received a 5.00 percent
return on a $219 million bond instead of 5.04 percent, who's to say
that wasn't a good price?
John Siffert, the gray-faced and unlikable attorney for Steve
Goldberg, put it this way in his cross-examination of CDR executive
Stewart Wolmark. Asking about the Allegheny deal, he boomed: "Isn't it
fair to say that you believed that by lowering... Steve's bid to 5
percent, Steve's bid was still a fair price to pay?"
Wolmark's answer was both quick and sensible: "I don't determine the
fair price," he replied. "The market does." GE was supposed to pay the
highest price the market would pay. It wasn't a competitive auction, as required by law.
But Siffert had made his point, and his rhetoric got right to the
heart of the defense, which was going to center around the definition of
the word "fair." The men and women who run these corrupt banks and
brokerages genuinely believe that their relentless lying and cheating,
and even their anti-competitive cartelstyle scheming, are all
legitimate market processes that lead to legitimate price discovery. In
this lunatic worldview, the bidrigging scheme was a system that created
fair returns for everyone. If a bunch of Pennsylvanians got a 5.00
percent return on their money instead of 5.04 percent, and GE and CDR
just happened to split the extra .04 percent, that was a fair outcome,
because that's what the parties negotiated. True, the Pennsylvanians had
no idea about the extra .04 percent, and true, they had hired CDR
precisely to make sure they got that extra 0.4 percent. But hey, it's
not like they were complaining: Until someone told them they were being
brazenly cheated, they were happy with their bond service. And besides,
it's not like ordinary people understand this stuff anyway. So how is it
the place of some busybody federal prosecutor to waltz in here and say
what's a fair price?
Walter Timpone, who represented Carollo, tried to lay this outrageous
load of balls on the jury using a faux-folksy analogy. "When your
refrigerator breaks down, if you're not mechanically inclined, you're at
the mercy of that repair person," he told the jury. "And if he repairs
the refrigerator, makes it work well, charges you a fair price, you're
likely to call on him again when the stove breaks." What he was
essentially telling jurors was: This shit is complicated, so best just
to leave it to the experts. Whether they're fixing a fridge or fixing a
bond rate, they get to set the price, because we're all morons who are
dependent on them to make our world work. Timpone, in his lawyerly way,
was actually telling us an essential economic truth:
You're at the mercy of that repair person.
This incredible defense, which the attorneys for all three defendants
led with, perfectly expresses the awesome arrogance of the modern-day
aristocrats who run our financial services sector. Corrupt or not, they
built this financial infrastructure, and it's producing the prices they
genuinely think are fair for us – and for them. And fair to them is the
customer getting the absolute bare minimum, while they get instant
millions for work they didn't do. Moreover – and this is the most
important part – they believe they should get permanent protection from
the ravages of the market, i.e., from one another's competition. Imagine
Jack Nicholson on the witness stand, dressed in a repairman's uniform
and tool belt.
Who's gonna fix those refrigerators? You? You, Lieutenant Weinberg? You can't handle the truth!
That, ultimately, is what this case was about. Capitalism is a system
for determining objective value. What these Wall Street criminals have
created is an opposite system of value by fiat. Prices are not
objectively determined by collisions of price information from all over
the market, but instead are collectively negotiated in secret, then
dictated from above.
"One of the biggest lies in capitalism," says Eliot Spitzer, "is that
companies like competition. They don't. Nobody likes competition."
To the great credit of the jurors in the
Carollo case, they
didn't buy Wall Street's ludicrous defense. On May 11th, nearly a month
after the trial began, they handed down convictions to all three
defendants. Carollo, Goldberg and Grimm, who will be sentenced in
October, face as many as five years in jail.
There are some who think that the government is limited in how many
corruption cases it can bring against Wall Street, because juries can't
understand the complexity of the financial schemes involved. But in
USA v. Carollo,
that turned out not to be true. "This verdict is proof of that," says
Hausfeld, the antitrust attorney. "Juries can and do understand this
material."
In
the end, though, the conviction of a few bit players seems like far too
puny a punishment, given that the bid rigging exposed in
Carollo involved an entrenched system that affected major bond issues in every state in the nation. You find yourself thinking,
America's biggest banks ripped off the entire country, virtually every day, for more than a decade!
A truly commensurate penalty would be something like televised stonings
of the top 10 executives of every guilty bank, or maybe the forcible
resettlement of every banker and broker in Lower Manhattan to some
uninhabited Andean wasteland... anything to address the systemic nature
of the crime.
No such luck. Instead of anything resembling real censure, a few
young executives got spanked, while the offending banks got off with
slap-on-the-wrist fines and were allowed to retain their pre-eminent
positions in the municipal bond market. Last year, the two leading
recipients of public bond business, clocking in with more than $35
billion in bond issues apiece, were Chase and Bank of America – who
combined had just paid more than $365 million in fines for their role in
the mass bid rigging. Get busted for welfare fraud even once in
America, and good luck getting so much as a food stamp ever again. Get
caught rigging interest rates in 50 states, and the government goes
right on handing you billions of dollars in public contracts.
Over the years, many in the public have become numb to news of
financial corruption, partly because too many of these stories involve
banker-on-banker crime. The notorious Abacus deal involving Goldman
Sachs, for instance, involved a hedge-fund billionaire ripping off a
couple of European banks – who cares? But the bid-rigging scandal laid
bare in
USA v. Carollo is a totally different animal. This is
the world's biggest banks stealing money that would otherwise have gone
toward textbooks and medicine and housing for ordinary Americans, and
turning the cash into sports cars and bonuses for the already rich. It's
the equivalent of robbing a charity or a church fund to pay for lap
dances.
Who ultimately loses in these deals? Well, to take just one example,
the New Jersey Health Care Facilities Finance Authority, the agency that
issues bonds for the state's hospitals, had their interest rates rigged
by the
Carollo defendants on $17 million in bonds. Since then,
more than a dozen New Jersey hospitals have closed, mostly in poor
neighborhoods.
As
Carollo showed us, in open court, this is what Wall
Street learned from the Mafia: how to reach into the penny jars of dying
hospitals and schools and transform their desperation and civic panic
into fat year-end bonuses and the occasional "big lunch." Unlike the
Mafia, though, they were smart enough to do their dirt without anyone
noticing for a very long time, which is what defense counsel in this
case were talking about when they argued that towns and cities "were not
harmed" by the rigged bids. No harm, to them, means no
visible
harm, i.e., that what taxpayers didn't know couldn't hurt them. This is
logical thinking, to the sociopath – like saying it's not infidelity if
your wife never finds out. But we did find out, and the scale of
betrayal unveiled in
Carollo was epic. It was like finding out
your husband didn't just cheat, but had a frequent-flier account with
every brothel in North America for the past 10 years. At least now we
know how bad it was. The trick is to find a way to make the cheaters
pay.
Editor's Note: Due to a mislabeling in the court transcript, we
misidentified the attorney who used the refrigerator analogy in his
opening statement. The online version of the story has been corrected.
This story is from the July 5th, 2012 issue of Rolling Stone.
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