U.S. Prosecutors Say New Limits May Help Future Enrons Go Free
By Robert Schmidt
Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. businesses, with the help of
civil libertarians, are on the verge of outmaneuvering federal
prosecutors and persuading Congress to limit the government's
power to pursue corporate fraud.
Lawmakers are considering a measure that would, among other
things, bar the government from demanding that companies reveal
confidential talks with their lawyers in order to win leniency
in plea deals. It would also prohibit federal agencies,
including the Securities and Exchange Commission, from demanding
that companies fire or cut off legal support for employees under
investigation.
Such tools were crucial in helping prosecutors pry loose
valuable information in hard-to-prove cases against WorldCom
Inc. and Enron Corp. Curtailing them may mean fewer such
investigations in the future, putting investors more at risk.
``Pre-Enron, U.S. attorneys never brought these cases, and
after this bill is passed, they will quit bringing them again,''
says Lynn Turner, a former SEC accounting chief. ``This is a
very clear message from Congress: Don't touch white-collar
criminals.''
The Justice Department's guidelines for corporate cases
were crafted as it and the SEC sought to cope with the explosion
of financial scandals early this decade by offering companies
leniency in exchange for cooperation.
That typically means a company reports potential
illegality, conducts its own internal probe and waives the
attorney-client privilege. Prosecutors say they need such
confidential information to ensure against cover-ups and, if
necessary, help them freeze assets that might otherwise be
hidden or squandered.
No Secret
``It's no secret that cooperation from defendants of all
types is a very effective tool we need to use in getting the bad
guys,'' says Karin Immergut, U.S. attorney in Oregon and head of
a Justice Department white-collar crime committee.
Immergut says the waiving of attorney-client privilege
played a vital role in the prosecution of former Chief Executive
Officer Bernard Ebbers for the $11 billion WorldCom fraud --he's
now serving a 25-year prison term -- and helped the government
locate and seize $80 million in cash from financier Martin
Armstrong, who pleaded guilty in an investor fraud.
Company documents aided accounting probes at Enron and
Adelphia Communications Corp., and helped convict 11 former
executives in connection with a $67 million fraud at online
real-estate seller Homestore Inc., the Justice Department says.
Risking an Indictment
Waivers aren't mandatory, but companies say their only
alternative is often to risk an indictment that could destroy
their business. ``That's not how the prosecutorial system is
supposed to work,'' says Susan Hackett of the Association of
Corporate Counsel, a group in Washington that represents company
attorneys.
The effort to narrow limit such investigative tactics got a
boost last year from U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan of New
York. Kaplan ruled that prosecutors violated the rights of
indicted former KPMG LLP executives by pressuring the accounting
firm to stop paying their legal fees. As a result, he threw out
charges against 13 employees, a decision the government has
appealed.
Emboldened by the victory, business groups including the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable and Hackett's
group launched a drive in Congress to force the Justice
Department to scale back its tactics. They've been aided by the
American Bar Association and the American Civil Liberties Union,
which sees the issue as one of preserving the rights of accused
individuals.
Winning Over Conyers
The alliance has helped win over such key Democrats as
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers of Michigan,
whose panel approved legislation without opposition in August.
That bill is now awaiting action by the full House; meanwhile,
the sponsor of similar legislation in the Senate, Republican
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, is pushing for a vote by year-
end.
While the Bush administration's Justice Department opposes
the legislation, it has been sidetracked by the scandal over
last year's firings of nine federal prosecutors and the
resignation of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
An exodus of top officials has left few in position to make
a forceful case against the congressional proposals. Senate
Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat,
has said he will ask attorney general nominee Michael Mukasey
about the issue when he testifies at confirmation hearings later
this month.
Mobilizing
In the absence of an all-out defense by the department,
prosecutors on the front lines are mobilizing to fight the
legislation. ``This bill would certainly make it harder for
prosecutors to protect victims and the investing public,'' says
Immergut. Pointing out that drug defendants are routinely asked
to waive their rights if they want leniency, she asks why
executives deserve special treatment.
``I frankly find it kind of baffling that people are
proposing legislation that protects corporations and corporate
officers like CEOs more than other individuals,'' she says.
SEC spokesman John Nester says his agency hasn't taken a
position on the legislation. At least one commissioner,
Republican Paul Atkins, supports proposed changes: He says
internal company investigations are jeopardized now ``because
people are afraid to come clean'' without assurances that
attorney-client talks will remain confidential.
Meanwhile, proponents of the legislation have lined up
support from former Attorneys General Griffin Bell, a Democrat,
and Richard Thornburgh, a Republican, as well as Andrew
Weissmann, former head of the department's Enron prosecution
team.
Claims of Coercion
They have also submitted a report written by former
Delaware Supreme Court Chief Justice Norman Veasey charging that
abuses are continuing even after the department moved to tighten
its guidelines following the Kaplan ruling. The study recounts
stories by 12 anonymous lawyers who say prosecutors coerced
their clients to waive their rights; Justice officials say the
allegations are vague and lack credibility.
Pete Lawson, director of congressional and public affairs
for the Chamber of Commerce, says opponents of the pending
legislation are exaggerating its impact.
The Justice Department ``hasn't been able to identify one
case'' that couldn't have been prosecuted without waiver of the
attorney-client privilege, he says. ``And there is nothing in
this bill that redefines who they can pursue, prosecute or
indict.''
The argument isn't convincing, say opponents. ``Federal
agencies have stepped up to the plate over the last few years in
a way that was entirely appropriate,'' says former Massachusetts
Attorney General Scott Harshbarger. ``They were doing the job
Congress asked them to. And the reward they're getting is that
they're being punished for success.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Robert Schmidt in Washington at
rschmidt5@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: September 30, 2007 19:11 EDT