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  • NY Fed’s Stephen Friedman resigns over ties to Goldman

    His nickname at Goldman Sachs was “Mr. Inside,” and for decades, Stephen Friedman’s extensive contacts and expertise made him a go-to player on Wall Street.

    But it was precisely that web of connections that raised conflict-of-interest issues in his latest job as non-executive chairman of the powerful Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

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    Friedman, 71, resigned from the post Thursday amid questions about his continuing ties to Goldman Sachs, which were first raised in a Wall Street Journal story Monday.

    “Although I have been in compliance with the rules, my public service motivated continuation on the Reserve Bank Board is being mischaracterized as improper,” he wrote in a letter to New York Fed President William Dudley. “The Federal Reserve System has important work to do and does not need this distraction.”

    In its story, the Journal had disclosed that Friedman was allowed to lead the New York Fed and remain a Goldman director and shareholder, in violation of Fed policy because of Goldman’s new status as a bank holding company. The New York Fed sought a one-year waiver of that rule, which was granted by the Federal Reserve board in Washington in January.

    While the waiver was under consideration, in December, Friedman bought 37,300 more Goldman shares, the paper reported. He also bought more shares the day after the waiver came through. The purchases, which gave him a $3 million paper gain, were disclosed in Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

    Friedman originally told the Journal that his role at the New York Fed wasn’t a policy-making one and that he saw “no conflict whatsoever in owning shares” of Goldman.

    He noted that when he became an economic adviser to former President George W. Bush, he had had to sell nearly all his investments, in a process he described as “very costly and a difficult thing to manage.”

    A longtime star of the financial world, Friedman had worked as an investment banker, a private-equity executive and an economic adviser to the president.

    The bulk of his career, however, was spent at Goldman Sachs, where he held numerous executive roles. He was the company’s co-chief operating officer from 1987 to 1990, co-chairman, along with his longtime friend Robert E. Rubin, from 1990 to 1992, and the sole chairman from 1992 to 1994; he still serves as a director.

    Admired for his intelligence and low-key style, Friedman has a welter of relationships in the philanthropic world as well. He is chairman emeritus of the board of Columbia University, where he attended law school, chairman emeritus of the executive committee of the Brookings Institution, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

    Out of work, he is said to be an avid chess player and wrestler. A wrestling center at his alma mater, Cornell University, bears his name. His son David Benioff, wrote the screenplay for The Kite Runner and X-Men Origins: Wolverine and is married to actress Amanda Peet. His brother, Richard, is a constitutional law scholar at the University of Michigan.

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    • Dave Bing, political neophyte, will be Detroit’s oldest mayor

      May 10, 2009 at 12:42pm

      When pro basketball hall-of-famer Dave Bing was elected May 5 as Detroit’s third mayor in less than a year, a voter turnout of just 14 percent showed they’d prefer a duke to an emperor, and age to outrage.

    • Judge rejects hardship plea from ex-Detroit mayor

      Convicted felon and former Detroit mayor Kwame M. Kilpatrick today lost a hardship bid to reduce $6,000 in monthly restitution payments to the city for his crimes.

      As part of a plea deal last year to end criminal prosecution in a sex and obstruction-of-justice scandal, the ex-mayor agreed to repay Detroit taxpayers $1 million, resign his office, serve four months in jail, forfeit his law license and refrain from running for elected office for five years.

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      After his release from jail, Kilpatrick moved his family to a Dallas suburb where he lives in a 2,800-square-foot home, drives a Cadillac Escalade, and earns a base salary of more than $100,000 with income potential of as much as $360,000 a year as a software salesman for Covisint, a subsidiary of Detroit-based Compuware Corp.

      Chairman and CEO Peter Karmanos, who moved Compuware headquarters to downtown Detroit in a political deal with Kilpatrick, said when he hired the confessed perjurer that he is “on a short leash,” and will be fired if an ongoing federal investigation of corruption in Detroit leads to new charges against him.

      Kilpatrick claimed hardship in the terms of his restitution, saying that after all monthly living expenses, only $6 remained to repay the city.

      Wayne County Circuit Judge David Groner, who had ordered those terms as part of Kilpatrick’s plea deal, said Kilpatrick will have to reconsider the “lifestyle in which he has grown accustomed.”

      “In other words,” Groner ruled, the ex-mayor “may not be able to sustain an upper-middle-class existence while he still owes a debt to society and a substantial financial debt to the citizens of Detroit.”

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      • Dave Bing, political neophyte, will be Detroit’s oldest mayor

        May 10, 2009 at 12:42pm

        When pro basketball hall-of-famer Dave Bing was elected May 5 as Detroit’s third mayor in less than a year, a voter turnout of just 14 percent showed they’d prefer a duke to an emperor, and age to outrage.

      • SEC sues money-fund manager Bruce Bent

        A man who fundamentally changed the nature of investing in this country has been accused of misleading investors last year.

        Bruce R. Bent Sr., 71, the co-founder of the first money market mutual fund, is the object of a civil lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission that was filed Tuesday in federal court in Manhattan.

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        His son, Bruce Bent II, 43, the co-CEO of the fund known as the Reserve Primary Fund, is also cited in the complaint.

        Another Bent company, Reserve Management Company Inc., the fund’s manager, and Reserve Partners Inc., a broker-dealer run by Reserve Management, are also named as defendants.

        The suit charges the Bents with the “knowing dissemination of false information” about the impact of the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last September upon the Reserve Fund.

        According to the complaint, the Reserve Fund held $785 million in Lehman debt securities, securities that had become worthless.

        The SEC alleges that the Bents falsely assured shareholders and the fund’s trustees that, despite the Lehman loses, Reserve Management had enough capital or available credit to keep the fund’s net asset value above $1 a share.

        This proved not to be the case, and eventually the Bents acknowledged that the fund had “broken the buck” and the net asset value was below $1 a share.

        This prompted a run on the fund and a call for tougher regulation of money market funds in general.

        The Reserve Fund, which had been valued at $62.5 billion, is now in liquidation, with about 90 percent of its assets returned to investors.

        Reserve Management has held back about $3.5 billion pending the outcome of about 29 civil lawsuits. The SEC is asking that this money be released and distributed to investors in the fund.

        In a statement, the elder Bent said, “We remain confident that we acted in the best interest of our shareholders. We are hopeful that this matter can be resolved quickly.”

        Bent was a money manager at the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association in the late 1960s.

        One day, he and his boss, Henry B. R. Brown, began chatting about strategies that would allow small investors to get higher rates on return than those offered by savings accounts.

        “I looked up at Brown and said, ‘Why not a mutual fund?’” Bent later told Fortune magazine. “He said he didn’t know anything about mutual funds. I said, ‘I don’t know anything about mutual funds either, but I think it would work.’”

        The pair went out on their own, starting the Reserve Fund in 1972. By the beginning of January 1973, they were managing $1 million.

        A story then ran that month in The New York Times, prompting interest in the fund. By the end of the year Brown and Bent were managing $100 million and mutual funds were proliferating.

        Brown, who died last August, left company management in 1985, but retained a financial interest in the business until Bent bought him out in 1999.

        In 2001, Bent ran unsuccessfully as a Republican for Nassau (NY) County executive, promising that he would serve at $1 a year and that he would improve efficiency in the government.

        This emphasis on fiscal restraint reflected Bent’s original investment principles at the Reserve Fund, which was seen as low-risk.

        But according to The Wall Street Journal, the fund’s strategies changed in 2006 and it began to invest in higher-risk financial products, including the commercial paper from Lehman Brothers that led to the fund’s demise.

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        • Dave Bing, political neophyte, will be Detroit’s oldest mayor

          May 10, 2009 at 12:42pm

          When pro basketball hall-of-famer Dave Bing was elected May 5 as Detroit’s third mayor in less than a year, a voter turnout of just 14 percent showed they’d prefer a duke to an emperor, and age to outrage.

        • Inez Tenenbaum, early Obama supporter, to head consumer safety commission

          Returning a political favor, President Barack Obama has nominated Inez Moore Tenenbaum to be the new chairman of the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

          Tenenbaum, the former state superintendent of education in South Carolina, was an early backer of Obama’s presidential race and helped him win the crucial South Carolina presidential primary.

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          If confirmed by the Senate, Tenenbaum, a lawyer, will take over an agency that has been faulted for not protecting the public from unsafe toys and other products. She would replace Nancy A. Nord, a George W. Bush nominee.

          Tenenbaum, 58, served two elected terms as South Carolina’s education chief from 1999 to 2007. Test scores rose while she was in office, and she brought full-day kindergarten to the state.

          In 2004, she ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate, losing to Republican Jim DeMint.

          In April 2007, Tenenbaum endorsed Obama for president. At the time, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York was the favorite to win the Democratic nomination.

          During the Democratic primary, Tenenbaum served as the steering committee co-chair of Obama’s campaign in South Carolina, where the primary proved critical.

          Obama won easily, gaining his second primary victory. He also regained the momentum he established by winning in Iowa but had lost by losing in New Hampshire.

          On primary night in South Carolina, Obama’s gratitude toward Tenenbaum was obvious, wrote columnist Howard Fineman in Newsweek.

          “When he climbed down off the stage … the first person he embraced (after his wife, Michelle) was Tenenbaum,” Fineman wrote in December.

          Fineman went on to predict correctly that, even though Obama had a debt to Tenenbaum, he wouldn’t name her U.S. secretary of education, despite her background in the field.

          That proved to be the case, the post going to Arne Duncan, the CEO of Chicago public schools, as Fineman wrote it might.

          In announcing the nomination of Tenenbaum, the White House stressed that the Consumer Product Safety Commission will have a high priority in the Obama administration.

          “We must do more to protect the American public – especially our nation’s children — from being harmed by unsafe products,” Obama said in a statement.

          The president has increased the number of commissioners from three to five and he hopes to double the commission’s budget.

          Obama has also nominated Robert S. Adler, a lawyer and former adviser to the commission, to serve as a commissioner.

          Adler, who is now a professor at the University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School, served on the Obama’s presidential transition team.

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          • #1.   Tony Smith 05.07.2009

            Quoting…
            “We must do more to protect the American public – especially our nation’s children — from being harmed by unsafe products,” Obama said in a statement.

            It is interesting to see that in a time of economic crisis, we keep focusing on “expansion” of government priorities and focus. Every appointment is stressed as how “critical” it is and how much attention it will garner from the new presidency. As is relevant by the foreclosure crisis, there simply isn’t enough money to go around expanding everything…

            Tony S.

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          • Judge rejects hardship plea from ex-Detroit mayor

            May 8, 2009 at 6:36pm

            Convicted felon and former Detroit mayor Kwame M. Kilpatrick today lost a hardship bid to reduce $6,000 in monthly restitution payments to the city for his crimes.

          • Do ties between Apple, Google pose antitrust issues?

            The Federal Trade Commission is looking into the relationships between technology stars Apple and Google to see if they might violate antitrust laws.

            The boards of Apple and Google share two directors – Eric E. Schmidt, chief executive of Google, and Arthur Levinson, former chief executive of Genentech. Former Vice President Al Gore, who is a director for Apple, is also a senior adviser for Google.

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            The Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 prohibits a person’s presence on the board of two rival companies when it would reduce competition between them.

            Eric E. Schmidt
            Eric E. Schmidt

            But the FTC’s interest in the matter is unlikely to amount to much unless the agency uncovers substantial market impact, according to Information Week. While the two companies have been allies in certain areas, they compete increasingly in the cellphone and operating systems markets.

            Schmidt joined Apple’s board about five months before it unveiled the iPhone, in 2006. Google announced its plans for Android, its mobile phone operating system, nearly a year later; Schmidt now recuses himself when Apple’s board discusses mobile phones.

            The members of the company’s boards are interrelated in other endeavors as well. For instance, Google director L. John Doer is a partner in Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a venture capital group that invests in green technology and innovation. Other partners are Apple director Gore, former Apple EVP E. Floyd Kvamme and former Apple senior counsel Randy Komisar.

            And Google is an investor in the venture capital group.

            The antitrust inquiry suggests that despite the company’s closeness to the Obama administration, Google will not escape scrutiny from regulators. Another antitrust examination involving Google’s plan to digitalize books is also underway.

            Christine A. Varney, who was recently confirmed as the head of the antitrust division of the Justice Department, has singled out Google as a probable source of future antitrust concerns because of its near monopoly on Internet search and advertising.

            On the other hand, antitrust experts told the New York Times that the provision against “interlocking directorates” is rarely enforced.

            Schmidt has been an outspoken supporter of Obama. As we have reported before, Schmidt not only backed Obama, but he joined him on the campaign trail, while his employees were among Obama’s most generous contributors.

            After the campaign, Schmidt served on the Obama-Biden transition team, advising on issues involving technology.

            Schmidt was also recently appointed to the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology – along with E. Floyd Kvamme, Apple’s EVP and Craig J. Mundie, chief research and strategy officer of Microsoft.

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            • Judge rejects hardship plea from ex-Detroit mayor

              May 8, 2009 at 6:36pm

              Convicted felon and former Detroit mayor Kwame M. Kilpatrick today lost a hardship bid to reduce $6,000 in monthly restitution payments to the city for his crimes.

            • Court-appointed trustee goes after Madoff family’s wealth

              It looks like court-appointed Madoff trustee Irving Picard is going after the whole shebang: Not just Bernard Madoff’s Manhattan penthouse and home in the Hamptons, but also a good chunk of the wealth accumulated by his wife, brother and sons.

              In his latest filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, Picard argues that the convicted swindler used his firm, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities (BLMIS), “as his personal piggy bank” to support “a lavish lifestyle” for himself and his wife, as well as for his brother and other members of his family.

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              “Madoff used BLMIS to siphon funds which were, in reality, other people’s money, for his personal use and the benefit of his inner circle,” Picard says in the filing submitted Tuesday evening. “Plain and simple, he stole it.”

              Picard, who is charged with returning as much money as possible to burned investors, contends that Madoff used money stolen from investors, for instance, to buy country club memberships for himself, his wife and one of his sons.

              He also loaned $9 million to his brother, the firm’s chief compliance officer, in 2007, from one of the firm’s accounts, according to the papers. Picard said there is no evidence the loan was ever repaid. Peter Madoff’s wife, Marion, was also listed on the firm’s payroll with a salary of $163,500 in 2008, although there is no indication she did any work.

              The firm also gave money to ventures begun by Madoff family members, including $1.7 million to Madoff Energy Holdings LLC, owned by Madoff’s sons Andrew and Mark, and his niece, Shana Madoff, the filing said.

              The firm paid out $4.5 million to support Ruth Madoff’s real-estate-related investments through various entities under the name “Sterling,” with no benefit to Madoff’s firm or his customers, according to the papers.

              Madoff placed his boat captain, his maid and his house-sitter in Florida on the firm’s payroll, and used the firm to provided corporate credit cards to his son’s wife and brother’s wife, even though they didn’t work for him, according to the filing.

              More than $11.5 million was used to buy two yachts for the Madoff family, the filing said. Another $4.4 million appears to have been used by Andrew Madoff last October to purchase an Upper East Side apartment, while $6.5 million was loaned to Mark Madoff and his wife, Stephanie, last spring to purchase property on Nantucket, again with no evidence that any money was repaid.

              Bernard Madoff, 71, was arrested Dec. 11 and pleaded guilty March 12 to running a $65-billion Ponzi scheme in which early investors were paid with the money of new clients. He is in jail, awaiting sentencing, and faces as much as 150 years in prison for various counts of securities fraud and other crimes.

              Picard made the allegations in connection with his attempt to consolidate the bankruptcy proceedings of Madoff’s companies with those filed against Madoff by a group of investors.

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              • Judge rejects hardship plea from ex-Detroit mayor

                May 8, 2009 at 6:36pm

                Convicted felon and former Detroit mayor Kwame M. Kilpatrick today lost a hardship bid to reduce $6,000 in monthly restitution payments to the city for his crimes.

              • Chesapeake Energy accused of giving CEO ‘personal’ bailout

                Furious shareholders are demanding to know why directors of Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy Corp. paid CEO Aubrey McClendon $112 million last year, purchased his personal art collection and co-sponsored his basketball team, even as the company’s stock price tumbled.

                The directors, who include former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating and former Oklahoma Sen. Don Nickles, paid McClendon more than four times what he had earned the year before. In fact, the package was one of the most generous paid to any corporate executive last year.

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                McClendon, 49, who had built Chesapeake into a hugely successful natural gas company until the firm hit the skids in 2008, received a one-time $75 million bonus on top of a $975,000 base salary and $20 million in stock awards, according to the company’s proxy statement.

                Chesapeake also disclosed a deal to buy McClendon’s collection of historical maps of the American Southwest, together with books, watercolors and photographs, for $12.1 million. It also paid $3.5 million to sponsor the Oklahoma City Thunder, a basketball team in which McClendon has a 20-percent stake, and spent close to $200,000 with a catering company part-owned by him, according to the proxy statement.

                “I have never seen a more shameful document than the Chesapeake proxy statement,” investor Jeffrey Bronchick wrote in a letter to Chesapeake’s board, according to the Wall Street Journal. “If I could reduce it to one page, I would frame and hang it on my office wall as a near perfect illustration of the complete collapse of appropriate corporate governance.”

                In the proxy and other filings, the company said McClendon’s new five-year contract and bonus were intended to reward him for negotiating a series of multibillion-dollar asset sales and to keep him from pursuing “other entrepreneurial opportunities.”

                But investors expressed concern that “the bonus was less a reward for outstanding service than an effort to bail Mr. McClendon out of his personal financial difficulties,” wrote Marc Gross, an attorney for the Louisiana Police Employment Retirement System, a major shareholder.

                Gross has asked an Oklahoma judge to force the company to turn over records about its deliberations over McClendon’s compensation. The filing is a first step toward a possible lawsuit accusing the board of breaching its fiduciary responsibility to shareholders.

                McClendon, a famous risk-taker, co-founded Chesapeake in 1989 with only ten employees and $50,000 in capital.

                Once, he was Chesapeake’s largest stockholder. But in October, the company’s sinking stock price forced him to sell 31.5 million shares, or 94% of his holdings at a time when the firm’s share price was at its lowest point in four years, to meet a margin call related to loans he had taken to buy the stock.

                Two months later, he and the board had negotiated a new contract. Whereas his 2007 contract had stated that he had to hold Chesapeake stock worth five times his annual salary and bonus, the new agreement lowered that requirement to only twice his salary and bonus.

                McClendon is accustomed to controversy. Last year, he donated to the presidential campaigns of both Barack Obama and John McCain. But in 2004, he was one of the largest donors to Swift Boat Vets and POWs for Truth, an organization set up in 2004 to attack the military record of Senator John Kerry, the Democratic presidential candidate.

                Bronchick, whose firm, Reed, Conner & Birdwell LLC, owns 1.18 million Chesapeake shares, said he would vote against the three Chesapeake directors who are up for election at the firm’s annual meeting in June – Richard K. Davidson, former chairman of Union Pacific, V. Burns Hargis, the president of Oklahoma State University which receives donations from Chesapeake, and Charles T. Maxwell, a senior energy analyst with Weeden & Co. a Ct-based brokerage firm.

                Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist Mitchell Schnurman suggests the directors might have had a self-interested agenda to sign off on the new compensation package.

                “Maybe it’s a coincidence, but directors got a big pay raise last year, too,” he wrote. “Four of the eight members earned more than $700,000 each, including cash, stock, private jet flights and the ‘gross-up’ payments to cover taxes on the perks. … At those pay rates, it must be easy to hold your tongue.”

                Chesapeake’s shares are down 71% from their high last July, a bigger drop than those of other large independent energy companies such as Devon Energy Corp., Anadarko Petroleum Corp. and XTO Energy Inc. But its share price has rebounded 25.4% since the start of the year, more than many of its competitors’ shares.

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