Dispensing justice
By Steven Syre, Globe Columnist, 3/25/2004
Someone told me that the Globe Is not like the Times, but I will see... the story is your links will break after a month, but we'll see. In case that happens, I have copied the story below.. I have been watching the fund scandles and this article provides an interesting look at the situation. No mention of ken lay, and the other enron folks...
Dispensing justice
By Steven Syre, Globe Columnist, 3/25/2004
Punishment, like everything else, is relative. Or at least it should be.
At the moment, there is a lot of punishment being meted out, or contemplated, in cases of business misconduct and crime. Virtually all of these stories involve rich people behaving badly, even scandalously, and not one of them deserves your sympathy.
But what do they deserve? The outrage factor and sheer volume of offenses on trial make it easy to lose sight of the fact that justice is punishment that fits the crime.
The fines paid or time served should make sense relative to the facts of individual cases and to the punishment handed out in other, comparable situations. The important factors should be actual damage done, the intent of the actors, and the degree of malevolence. Real contrition and cooperation are mitigating factors rarely in evidence. Consider how those points might affect two pairs of parallel cases in the news.
One involves the negotiation over how much Putnam Investments should cough up for its mutual-fund scandal and the combined $675 million Bank of America Corp. and FleetBoston Financial Corp. agreed to pay in fines, restitution, and reduced fees last week to make their problems with regulators go away.
Putnam is arguing with the Securities and Exchange Commission over how much the Boston fund company should be required to pay for civil fraud charges it has already settled in part. The Putnam charges focused on six money managers and their frequent personal trading of company funds.
The settlement negotiations are progressing while the ink dries on the gigantic Bank of America/Fleet pact with New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. The settlement, struck while the two banks were trying to close their merger, established Spitzer as one of the great bank holdup men of our time. Bank of America chief Ken "Higher Standards" Lewis must have swallowed hard, but he made the deal.
Spitzer had enormous leverage because of the pending merger, but evidence against both banks was piling up. At Fleet's investment subsidiary, trading activity in a few thousand customer accounts was scrutinized. Bank of America had offered hedge fund Canary Capital Partners LLC an opportunity to market-time funds or conduct more serious late trading.
The second pair of cases involves former Tyco International Ltd. chief executive L. Dennis Kozlowski, who began this morning with his future in the hands of a criminal jury, and convicted domestic diva Martha Stewart.
Kozlowski and Stewart were both marquee defendants demonized at trial beyond the specifics of the charges. Videotape evidence and underling testimony could lead jurors to conclude Kozlowski was a pig, Stewart a shrew. The prosecution message: Both were bad people who knew no bounds, and they were caught abusing their positions for money.
Equals? Hardly.
Stewart was convicted of lying about a stock tip that saved her about $50,000, and she will probably go to jail. Kozlowski, facing fraud and larceny counts, is charged along with another former Tyco executive of looting hundreds of millions of dollars from the company. He might do a lot of time. Or not.
Look at these four cases and decide how relative punishment should really work.
Putnam didn't cause as much damage and its offenses were bad, but not as bad, or as widespread, as those at Bank of America/Fleet. Putnam, which has already suffered a huge loss of business, shouldn't and won't face new fines on the scale of the bank settlement.
As for Stewart, there was plenty of evidence at trial that she did as the government charged. It was also abundantly clear that her conduct and financial gain paled in comparison to Tyco's compensation excesses, no matter what the verdict, and so should her punishment.
Steven Syre is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at syre@globe.com.
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