Bush Fraud Probes Jail Corporate Criminals Less Than Two Years
By David Voreacos and Bob Van Voris
Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Sixty-one percent of defendants
sentenced in the Bush administration's crackdown on corporate
fraud spent no more than two years in jail, escaping the stiff
penalties given WorldCom Inc. and Enron Corp. executives.
In the past five years, 28 percent of those sentenced got
no prison time and 6 percent received 10 years or more,
according to a review of 1,236 white-collar convictions. Former
WorldCom Chief Executive Officer Bernard Ebbers is serving 25
years and ex-Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling 24.
``Sentencing white-collar defendants to two years or less
does not send a strong deterrent message,'' says Joshua
Hochberg, who ran the U.S. Justice Department's criminal fraud
section from 1998 to 2005. ``On the other hand, convicting a lot
of defendants sends the message that you will be caught and
there are consequences.''
A wave of corporate corruption marked by Enron's collapse
in 2001 and an accounting scandal at WorldCom led Congress to
enact harsher penalties. President George W. Bush signed the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act to reform governance and named a Corporate
Fraud Task Force to push ``significant'' prosecutions.
``This broad effort is sending a clear warning and a clear
message to every dishonest corporate leader: You will be exposed
and you will be punished,'' Bush told hundreds of prosecutors
and agents in a speech on Sept. 26, 2002. ``We will deter
corporate crimes by enforcing tough penalties.''
Lighter Sentences
Defendants got reduced jail time when they helped
prosecutors investigate frauds, served as low- or mid-level
executives, or committed crimes that were less sophisticated
than complex accounting conspiracies, the review by Bloomberg
News found. The list includes embezzlers such as a credit union
teller who stole less than $20,000.
Of the 1,236 convictions from 2002 to 2007 in the review,
1,133 defendants were sentenced. Forty-seven percent of those
got a year or less in prison.
Direct comparisons of sentences before and after 2002 can't
be made because the Justice Department added a corporate fraud
category in 2003 and the U.S. Sentencing Commission stiffened
advisory guidelines.
Median sentences for white-collar crime changed little in
the 1990s, holding in a range of 12 to 13 months, commission
data shows. That number increased to 15 months in 2001 and
reached 18 months last year, reflecting the new guidelines.
No Conviction List
The Justice Department claimed credit for 1,236 convictions
in the crackdown on corruption. The department says it doesn't
have a comprehensive list. Bloomberg assembled a comparable list
based on more than 350 cases from task force annual reports,
lists of executives, and press releases on the department's Web
site.
The review includes 981 cases coded by prosecutors as
corporate frauds and obtained electronically under the Freedom
of Information Act by Syracuse University's Transactional
Records Access Clearinghouse, a nonprofit research center that
analyzes government data. Some of the 981 cases overlapped with
the 350 convictions compiled from Justice Department documents.
The sentences include the 6 1/2 years imposed on Conrad
Black, the former Hollinger International Inc. chairman
convicted of mail fraud and obstructing justice, on Dec. 10.
Steven Dodge, a former Converse Inc. executive, got 18
months probation for misleading auditors after helping
prosecutors investigate an athletic-shoe retailer. Anu Saad,
former CEO of Impath Inc., a provider of cancer diagnostic
services, was sentenced to three months for lying about her pay,
after more serious charges were dropped.
`Very Strong Deterrent'
``Anything under two years is not significant, unless
somebody is a cooperator,'' says Kirby Behre, a former
prosecutor and co-author of ``Federal Sentencing for Business
Crimes,'' published by LexisNexis in 2002.
Joan Meyer, who oversees the task force as senior counsel
to the deputy attorney general, argues that any prison sentence
can serve as a deterrent.
``Every case can't be an Enron,'' Meyer says. ``The
question is, do we give a pass to white-collar defendants
because their crimes are non-violent and result in lesser
sentences? That would be an abdication of our
responsibilities.''
Prosecutors who built the cases involving Enron, WorldCom,
HealthSouth Corp., Computer Associates International Inc. and
Homestore Inc. recommend to judges that defendants get lighter
terms for providing evidence against colleagues.
U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in New York says cooperators
are a ``necessary evil'' in tying frauds to top executives.
``The great majority of judges give very substantial weight
to cooperation, and that usually translates to very substantial
reductions in sentences,'' Rakoff says.
`They Were Minions'
Sixteen HealthSouth employees pleaded guilty and helped
prosecutors unravel a $2.7 billion accounting fraud that
surfaced in 2003. Eleven got no time in prison. Former
HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy was acquitted of accounting
fraud charges.
``There's going to be a certain number that will get very
little time or no time because they were minions within the
relative scheme, or they were cooperating,'' says former federal
prosecutor William Mateja, who directed the task force's daily
operations in 2003 and 2004.
At least 129 defendants cooperated with prosecutors, court
records show. The number may be higher, lawyers say, because
public files don't always reflect whether a judge credited a
defendant for helping the government.
Randi Collotta, a former Morgan Stanley compliance officer,
received 60 days in custody on nights and weekends, six months
of home confinement and four years probation for leaking inside
information. Former Aspen Technology Inc. CEO David McQuillin,
who pleaded guilty to securities fraud, got four weeks in a
halfway house.
`A Nice Kid'
Gertie Boswell, 61 when she pleaded guilty in 2006, got one
year in prison for embezzling $259,856 from her Michigan
business, the Virginia Farrell Beauty Schools. Sarah Matanich,
who her lawyer says was a teller, spent a day in jail for
embezzling $19,669 from St. Cloud Federal Credit Union in
Minnesota.
``She was a nice kid who got a little underwater with her
bills, and she took some money she shouldn't have,'' says
Matanich's attorney, Paul Engh.
Judges weigh a crime's nature, the amount of financial loss
and a defendant's circumstances in sentencing. Offenders who
plead guilty tend to get less time than those who go to trial.
Defendants are penalized for not accepting responsibility for
their crime, while those convicted at trial may be held
accountable for the full loss in a fraud. Of 193 defendants
convicted at trial, 38 got 10 years or more.
`A Conscious Decision'
``The idea that somebody who goes to trial and gets
hammered while people who plead guilty get far less time smacks
of the Inquisition,'' says defense attorney John Keker of Keker
& Van Nest in San Francisco. ``I think it's a disgrace. The
going-to-trial penalty should be an embarrassment to judges
everywhere.''
Keker represented Frank Quattrone, the former Credit Suisse
Group banker whose obstruction-of-justice conviction was
reversed, and Andrew Fastow, the ex-Enron finance chief serving
six years after pleading guilty and testifying against Skilling.
The Justice Department widened its net after Enron,
charging more corporate defendants who may have previously faced
only civil sanctions, says Andrew Hruska, a former prosecutor
who helped run the fraud task force in 2002 and 2003.
Prosecutors also filed cases faster.
``There was a conscious decision to speed up the tempo of
these investigations,'' Hruska says. ``We tried to work up the
chain within a company.''
`A Hammer'
Mateja, while acknowledging he was in regular contact with
the White House, says he felt no political pressure.
The task force ``was a kind of a hammer to make sure these
cases got made or declined quickly, to make sure people were
doing their job,'' he says.
Mateja and Hruska say the task force closely tracked cases,
advising on tactics and sending Justice Department prosecutors
from Washington to help U.S. attorneys nationwide. The effort
reached beyond offices of U.S. attorneys in Manhattan, Brooklyn,
Chicago, Miami and Los Angeles to less common places like
Detroit and Birmingham, Alabama.
The task force claimed 250 convictions by March 2004, and
500 five months later. It touted 700 convictions in August 2005,
and 1,000 a year later.
Gonzales Announcement
On July 17, the task force's five-year anniversary, then-
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales announced that the department
had obtained 1,236 corporate fraud convictions. That included
214 CEOs and presidents, 129 vice presidents, 53 chief financial
officers and 23 corporate counsels, Gonzales said.
The department won't identify those convicted because it
compiled nationwide statistics without gathering names, Meyer
says. The department's count included cases that the 93 U.S.
attorneys had coded as corporate frauds, she says. The task
force also canvassed prosecutors by e-mail or phone to collect
statistics.
Prosecutors were told to count four types of corporate
fraud: falsifying financial information; self-dealing, such as
insider trading or embezzlement; mutual fund or hedge fund
fraud; and perjury or obstructing investigations.
Without a centralized database for all cases, generating a
list of names of corporate fraud defendants would be ``an
incredible task,'' Meyer says.
Some districts coded embezzlements as corporate frauds that
may not have been counted as such elsewhere.
``What constitutes a major fraud in one district may not be
a big deal in another,'' says Leslie Caldwell, a former
prosecutor and supervisor of the Enron Task Force.
To contact the reporters on this story:
David Voreacos in Newark, New Jersey, at
dvoreacos@bloomberg.net;
Bob Van Voris in New York at
rvanvoris@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: December 13, 2007 00:12 EST