Law.com
  • News
    • Newswire
    • Large Firm
    • Corporate Counsel
    • Technology
    • Washington
    • Supreme Court
    • International
    • Legal Blog Watch
    • Video
  • Publications
    • The American Lawyer
    • Corporate Counsel
    • Law Technology News
    • The National Law Journal
    • New York Law Journal
    • New Jersey Law Journal
    • Connecticut Law Tribune
    • The Legal Intelligencer (PA)
    • Daily Business Review (FL)
    • Delaware Law Weekly
    • Daily Report (GA)
    • The Recorder (CA)
    • Texas Lawyer
    • Publication E-Alerts
    • More Publication Sites
  • Legal Research & Directories
    • Books Online
    • Smart Litigator
    • ALM Experts
    • Verdict Search
    • Court Reporters
    • Legal Dictionary
    • LegalTech® Directory
    • Newsletters
    • More Directories
  • Surveys, Lists & Rankings
    • Amlaw 100
    • NLJ 250
    • Global 100
    • The A-List
    • ALM Legal Intelligence
    • Surveys
    • More Lists & Rankings
  • lawjobs.com
    • Post a Job
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Resume
    • The Careerist Blog
    • News & Views
  • LawCatalog Store
    • Books Online
    • Best-Selling Books
    • Books
    • Directories
    • E-Newsletters
    • Magazines
    • Newspapers
    • Newsletters
    • Surveys
    • Research Services
    • Webinars
    • Events
  • CLE & Events
    • CLE Center
    • ALM Events
    • LegalTech
    • Virtual LegalTech
    • Insight Legal Events
    • Webinars
Home
 
Article
  • email
  • twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • alert
  • rss

Law.com Home > Defense Claims Refco Officials Lied to Mayer Brown Partner About Fraud

Font Size: increase font decrease font

Defense Claims Refco Officials Lied to Mayer Brown Partner About Fraud

By Mark Hamblett All Articles 

New York Law Journal

May 14, 2009

  •    
  •    
  •    
  •      
 

Related Items

  • Trial of Mayer Brown Partner Over Alleged Fraudulent Loans Is Postponed
  • Mayer Brown Partner Charged With Securities Fraud in Connection With Refco Deal

Mayer Brown partner Joseph P. Collins was kept out of the loop on hidden debt and sham transactions at Refco Inc. and should not be sitting in the defendant's chair, his attorney claimed Wednesday.

Launching a passionate defense of the man who prosecutors say helped conceal a $2.4 billion corporate fraud, William J. Schwartz of Cooley Godward Kronish said the three top Refco officials who defrauded banks and investors and ultimately destroyed the firm made a victim out of "an honest lawyer who believed he was representing an honest, trustworthy company."

The issue at the trial, said Schwartz, was "whether Joe Collins was on the inside or the outside - whether they kept him out of the loop, whether they kept him at arm's length, whether they lied to him so he could represent Refco" as an honest company.

The three principals were former chairman and chief executive officer Phillip Bennett, now serving 16 years for the fraud that landed the financial services company in bankruptcy, and two other men who have pleaded guilty in the case and are cooperating with the government by testifying against Collins: ex-finance chief Robert Trosten and former executive vice-president Santo Maggio.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher L. Garcia told the jury in the courtroom of Judge Leonard B. Sand that Collins, 59, played a key role in helping Refco engage in "massive sham loan transactions" from 2000 through 2003 to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in debt in another entity, RGHI, a holding company partially owned by Bennett.

Garcia said the attorney also helped mislead banks in order to obtain revolving lines of credit in 2001 through 2003, by concealing the existence of various "round trip" loan transactions, in which Refco parked debt at RGHI during accounting reviews and later moved it back to Refco.

Garcia said Collins played a critical role in deceiving the Austrian bank BAWAG to provide a huge loan to the company in 2002.

And Collins helped prepare or directed the preparation of documents that were "full of lies" and presented to Thomas H. Lee Partners when the firm was preparing to buy 57 percent of Refco in August 2004, the prosecutor charged.

"Why? Why did this defendant lie for Refco?" Garcia asked. "Because it was his biggest client from 1997 through the collapse of Refco. This man made more than $40 million for his firm."

Schwartz ridiculed this alleged motive in his opening statement, repeatedly reminding the jury that "not one cent" of the fraud proceeds went to Collins, who worked out of Mayer Brown's Chicago and New York offices.

The $40 million was "less than 1 percent [of what Mayer Brown] made from all of its clients" during that time period, he said, and Collins earned the money from "legitimate, by-the-hour legal work," Schwartz said, so it was "absolutely ridiculous to say that's what his motive is."

Collins, he said, is a nationally respected lawyer with an excellent reputation who was devoted first to his family and second to the practice of law, a man who was well paid for his efforts.

"Why would he give it up? Why would he risk it all?" Schwartz said. "They don't have an answer, because he didn't, because he wouldn't have."

Schwartz promised the jurors that during a trial expected to last several weeks they would "see more lawyers than you've ever seen in your life."

He said lawyers "represent clients, they do not investigate clients," and they "are not accountants, they don't check the books of companies and they don't add up the figures and subtract the figures."

HIDDEN DEBT

Schwartz also said there were some differences among lawyers over how to view the debt transferred between Refco and RGHI, and the "critical distinction" in the case was between the "kind of debt that is hidden and the kind of debt that is disclosed."

Here, he said, Bennett and the two cooperators stuck massive amounts of debt "into a hole and pulled a rug over it," keeping it "hidden from Joe Collins."

The defense lawyer conceded that Collins did not disclose the debt situation to Thomas H. Lee Partners, but was merely refraining from disclosure out of a lawyer's obligation to be "discreet."

But Garcia said Collins and Bennett told Thomas H. Lee there was only $100 million in debt and, when Thomas H. Lee representatives said "get rid of it" as a condition of the sale, the two men agreed.

These were "complete lies," Garcia said, because both men knew there was $1 billion in debt.

Collins also kept some agreements with BAWAG "separate even from the lawyers at his own firm" and told lawyers with the bank "to deal only with him," Garcia said.

And not only was Thomas H. Lee "tricked" into buying the company on false pretenses, Garcia said, but the following year, in August 2005, Refco went public and "the public paid $500 million for a company that was in shambles."

Collins, who is on leave from Mayer Brown, joined the firm in 1994 and headed its derivatives group. He is charged in a superseding indictment with one count of conspiracy, two counts of securities fraud, two counts of making a false filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, four counts of wire fraud and five counts of bank fraud.

 



Subscribe to New York Law Journal

You must be signed in to comment on an article

Find similar content

Firms mentioned

    
  • Cooley Godward Kronish
  • Mayer Brown
  • Schwartz

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • Refco Inc.
  • BAWAG
  • Thomas H. Lee Partners
  • Securities and Exchange Commission

Key categories

    
  • White Collar Crime

Most viewed stories

    
  1. Court Officials Seek to Reform Process of Naming Acting Justices
    •      
  2. Donovan Criticizes Secret Payoff to Lopez Victims
    •      
  3. Prolific ADA Plaintiff Faces Nemesis in Harassment Suit
    •      
  4. Real Estate Lawyers Target Closing Vendors
    •      
  5. The 2013 Am Law 100
    •      
lawjobs.com

TOP JOBS

MORE JOBS

POST A JOB

From the Law.com Network

Taking the Reins of Legal Department Operations

In-House Law: Now in 3-D!

Simpson Helps Yahoo, Tumblr Connect for $1 Billion Deal

Kasowitz Benson Launches in Los Angeles

Contrite Companies Can Win Forgiveness in Bribery Cases
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Plaintiffs Want to See Toyota's 'Crown Jewels'
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Collaboration Is Key to Defending Cyberattacks

Stanford Law Builds on Role as Legal Tech Incubator

Prolific ADA Plaintiff Faces Nemesis in Harassment Suit

Ullyot Exit Closes Chapter for Facebook

Rothstein Bankruptcy Trustee Files New Reorganization Plan
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Fla. Bar Wants Disbarment for Former Judge
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Appellate Division To Roll Out Electronic Case Filing System

Court Limits Liability for Injury Or Death of One Invited To Help
  •      
    • Subscription Required

The Affordable State-Specific Practice Solution
Available in NY, NJ, PA and CT editions - research, draft and prepare even the most complex cases with ease.

Judge Declines to Block Act-of-War Defense in 9/11 Case
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Panel Finds 'Excessive' City Fine for Poaching Antenna From Trash
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Lawsuit Testing Federal Porn Regulation Allowed to Survive

Ex-College QB Can Press Claim Over EA's Video Game
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Law Schools Are Looking Beyond LSATs, Says Mich. Dean

Is Freezing Your Eggs the Solution?

Water Warriors: Local Governments Bring Pollution Suits
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Sanction Reversed; Filing of Sexually Explicit Chat OKd
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Brooks Looks To Political Ally For Criminal Defense

Attorney Fee Hearing in Waffle House Sex Case Heats Up
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Corporate Bribery Case Part Of National Trend
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Court Continues To Grant Lawyers Fraud Immunity
  •      
    • Subscription Required

The Law.com Network
  • ADVERTISE

law.com

  • Tour the New Site
  • Newswire
  • Special Reports
  • International News
  • Lists, Surveys & Rankings
  • Legal Blogs
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Site Map

alm national

  • The American Lawyer
  • The Am Law Litigation Daily
  • Corporate Counsel
  • Law Technology News
  • The National Law Journal

alm regional

  • Connecticut Law Tribune
  • Daily Business Review (FL)
  • Delaware Law Weekly
  • Daily Report (GA)
  • The Legal Intelligencer (PA)
  • New Jersey Law Journal
  • New York Law Journal
  • GC New York
  • The Recorder (CA)
  • Texas Lawyer
  • The Asian Lawyer
  • Focus Europe

directories

  • ALM Experts
  • LegalTech® Directory
  • In-House Law Departments at the Top 500 Companies
  • Top Rated Lawyers
  • The American Lawyer Top Rated Lawyers
  • The American Lawyer Legal Recruiter's Directory
  • Corporate Counsel Top Rated Lawyers
  • The National Law Journal Leadership Profiles
  • National Directory of Minority Attorneys
  • Go-To Law firms of the Top 500 Companies

books & newsletters

  • Best-Selling Books
  • Publication E-Alerts
  • Law Journal Newsletters
  • LawCatalog Store
  • Law Journal Press Online

research

  • ALM Legal Intelligence
  • Court Reporters
  • MA 3000
  • Verdict Search
  • ALM Experts
  • Legal Dictionary
  • Smart Litigator

events & conferences

  • ALM Events
  • LegalTech®
  • Virtual LegalTech®
  • Virtual Events
  • Webinars & Online Events
  • Insight Information

reprints

  • Reprints

online cle

  • CLE Center

career

  • Lawjobs
About ALM  |  About Law.com  |  Customer Support  |  Reprints  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms & Conditions |  ALM User License Agreement