This certainly comes as no surprise. Where there is a financial scandal, there is usually a Bushie or some of their wealthy Arab friends or both.
These people make me sick!
Politically-Connected Firm Admits Payments of $13 Million to Indicted Middleman to Get New York State Business
By RICHARD ESPOSITO and BRIAN ROSS
May 14, 2009—
The
Carlyle Group, a giant
Wall Street firm best known for its ties to former
President George H.W. Bush and other prominent public officials, made more than
$13 million in payments to a indicted political fixer who arranged for the firm to receive business from a
New York pension
fund,
New York attorney general Andrew Cuomo said today.
Cuomo said
Carlyle had agreed to
$20 million to "resolve its role" in the
ongoing corruption investigation and agreed to a new code of conduct that prohibits the use of such middlemen.
Cuomo said the code would "help eliminate the conflicts of interest and corruption inherent in a system that allows people to buy access to those holding the pension
fund purse-strings."
Carlyle is the latest high-profile firm to be ensnared in a nationwide probe known as the "pay for play" scandal because
Wall Street firms allegedly paid politically-connected fixers to get them business from pension funds controlled by public officials.
According to
Cuomo, his corruption investigation found that in 2003,
Carlyle hired
Hank Morris,
the chief political aide to then New York state comptroller Alan Hevesi, as "a placement agent" to help obtain investments from the
New York Common Retirement Fund.
"If Boss Tweed were alive today, he would be a placement agent,"
Cuomo said.
In a statement,
Carlyle said it "was unaware of any improper conduct" and "was victimized by
Hank Morris'
alleged web of deceit."
Carlyle said it intended to file suit against
Morris and has "cooperated extensively and voluntarily" with
Cuomo.
Carlyle paid
Morris through shell companies he controlled, according to
Cuomo.
Morris allegedly shared the payments with
a hedge fund manager,
Barrett Wissman, who pleaded guilty earlier this year to securities fraud in connection with the investigation.
Until it hired
Morris, said
Cuomo,
Carlyle had "experienced limited success in obtaining investments" from the
New York state fund.
Carlyle then received more than
$730 million in
New York state pension funds for five different projects, according to
Cuomo.
Carlyle employees also made about
$78,000 in campaign contributions to
Comptroller Hevesi's campaign in 2005 and 2006, according to
Cuomo, some solicited by
Morris.
Morris was indicted in March in the "pay for play" investigation for allegedly arranging "sham placement fees" for himself and other
Hevesi "political cronies" and for extracting "millions of dollars in campaign contributions" to ensure "
the Comptroller's approval of their proposed investments."
Morris has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Hevesi has not been charged.
Politically-Connected Powerhouse Firm
Carlyle is a politically connected powerhouse whose board of
advisors has been graced by the names of numerous political luminaries from both the Democratic and Republican Parties including former
President Bush,
his Secretary of State
James Baker III, former
Secretary of State Colin Powell, former
SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt,
Britain's former
Prime Minister John Major, ex-Time
magazine media glitterati Norman Pearlstein and former Clinton
White House Chief of Staff,
Mack McLarty. The firm is currently headed by the highly regarded ex-
IBM CEO Lou Gerstner.
Carlyle is the first firm to sign the Code of Conduct, which
Cuomo first proposed in April. The Code eliminates the role of middlemen who are hired, retained or compensated for the specific purpose of obtaining pension dollars. The language is carefully worded to allow for the use of marketing department employees and marketing firms.
According to union records,
Carlyle received
$878 million in private equity investment from "the
New York State Common Retirement Fund." The
fund's
$122 billion in assets is for the retirement benefits of state and local employees in
New York. The state paid total management and incentive fees of
$37.5 million between
2005 and 2008 to
Carlyle, according to
fund records. The
fund is the third largest in the nation.
The firm has allowed only two outside partners into its ranks over the years.
The nations largest public retirement
fund-- the
California Public Employee Retirement Fund--paid
$175 million for 5.5 percent of
Carlyle: now worth a considerable amount more.
The other is
Abu Dhabi, the once high growth sheikhdom that paid about
$1.5. billion for 7.5 percent of the firm.
Cuomo's wide ranging probe has already resulting in two guilty pleas in
New York State. According to published accounts it is said to be one of 30 such probes across the nation. The
Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a related civil suit.
Unregulated Middlemen
In the closely regulated and monitored world of public employee
fund investment, the use of unregulated middlemen has been a loophole through which, in return for passing public funds to private firms, at least in some cases, public corruption has resulted,
Cuomo's office has charged. The practice is rife with the potential for quid-pro-quo, including pay-for-play political contributions, and revolving door government to private sector job hopping, his office and union officials have said.
At the end of April,
Cuomo said that practice of using unregulated middlemen to garner public pension
fund dollars results in "the worst of both worlds."
"This is the nexus of private-sector fraudulent operators meeting fraudulent government and political operators,"
Cuomo said, according to
Bloomberg News.
At the center of the storm is one time
New York Democratic Party operative Morris who is accused of steering state pension
fund business to firms that paid him millions in kickbacks.
Morris is the target of a 123 count indictment unsealed by
Cuomo's office in March. It accuses
Morris of pension
fund related activities including "enterprise corruption, securities fraud, grand larceny, bribery and money laundering."
At the time of the
indictment Cuomo's office said in a statement, "If proven, the allegations in the indictment reveal a complex criminal scheme involving numerous individuals operating at the highest political and governmental levels of the
Office of the State Comptroller. The charges entail a web of corrupt acts for both political and personal gain.
Also under scrutiny is a firm co-founded by
Steve Rattner,
President Obama's auto industry
Czar. That firm, Quadrangle, used
Morris firm and is under the spotlight for allegedly failing to disclose the relationship.
Carlyle began receiving
New York dollars when
Alan Hevesi was
state comptroller.
Hevesi pled guilty for a single felony unrelated to his
fund management.
Morris was
Hevesi's political consultant.
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