Challenging that entertaining form of corruption

OBannonAll the talk in the sports world these days seems to revolve around the impending lock-out of NFL players by the NFL owners.

However, this Antonio Irzarry/Sports in the Courts Blog post reports on Ed O’Bannon’s class action lawsuit against the NCAA, which might just end up being more interesting and change-provoking than anything that occurs in the current NFL labor negotiations:

As noted many times over the years, big-time college sports under the rubric of NCAA regulation is shamefully corrupt. Granted, it’s an entertaining form of corruption, but corrupt nonetheless.

There is simply no reason why gifted young football and basketball players should be prevented from earning compensation for the entertainment and wealth that they create in the same manner that young golfers and tennis players do. 

It is far past time for the NCAA member institutions to abandon the NCAA’s obsolescent regulatory system and adopt one that recognizes and rewards the risks that the players take — and the contributions that they make – in providing entertainment and creating wealth.

Let’s face it – paying indirect compensation to professional athletes in the form of academic scholarships and flashy resort facilities just doesn’t cut it anymore.

Let the market sort out the institutions that are willing to take the risk of investing in what amount to upper minor-league football and basketball teams. The top 30-50 programs will probably do so, but most institutions outside of that group will not. Why risk losing even more money than most programs are under the present system?

Who knows? Perhaps the institutions that elect not to sponsor professional teams will decide to engage in true inter-collegiate competition between real student-athletes.

And with no need for the embarrassing hyprocrisy that the NCAA represents.

Agents Prosecuting Agents

ribsteinInasmuch as I’ve been in an extremely busy period in my practice recently, I haven’t had time to blog much. But I came across something yesterday that I wanted to pass along.

Larry Ribstein — the University of Illinois law professor who has done more than anyone in the blogosphere to decry the enormous financial and human cost of the federal government’s criminalization of business lottery over the past decade – has posted on SSRN a new paper that he has been working on for some time – Agents Prosecuting Agents:

Significant questions have been raised concerning the efficiency of criminalizing agency costs and the problems of excessive prosecution of crimes committed by corporate agents. This paper provides a new perspective on these questions by analyzing them from the perspective of agency cost theory. It shows that there are close analogies between the agency costs associated with prosecutors in corporate crime cases and those of the agents being prosecuted. The important difference between the two contexts is that prosecutors are not subject to many of the standard mechanisms for dealing with corporate agency costs. An implication of this analysis is that society must decide if prosecuting corporate agents is worth incurring the agency costs of prosecutors. [.  .  .]

This paper contributes to this debate by approaching the subject from the perspective of agency theory and analogizing abuses of power by prosecutors to those of corporate agents. It shows that prosecutors’ conduct involves many of the same agency cost problems as the corporate conduct they are prosecuting. At the same time, the sort of market and institutional mechanisms that can constrain corporate agents may not be effective for prosecutorial agents. Moreover, the particular challenges of corporate criminal prosecutions exacerbate prosecutorial agency costs in this context.

This agency analysis illuminates whether and to what extent corporate agency costs should be criminalized. It shows that if the criminal justice system is to be used to punish corporate agents for harm they cause in the course of their employment, then society must be prepared to tolerate increased costs associated with delegating discretion to its own agents, those who prosecute these crimes. Prosecutorial agency costs, in turn, must be taken into account in designing and weighing the costs and benefits of criminal liability of corporate agents. [.  .  .]

The agency costs associated with prosecution of corporate crime are at least as consequential as those related to the crimes being prosecuted. This matters for at least two reasons. First, combining analyses of the two types of agency costs sheds light on how to appropriately constrain excessive or misguided corporate prosecutions. Second, prosecutorial agency costs bear on the extent to which the conduct of corporate agents should be criminalized at all given the weak constraints on prosecutorial conduct in enforcing the criminal law. The criminal laws may provide significant deterrence of corporate agents’ misconduct that other mechanisms cannot fully supply. However, we should not assume that it is socially valuable to use the criminal laws to ensure totally loyal corporate agents unless we are ready to demand similar perfection from our prosecutors.

We in Houston know all about the implications of the problem that Professor Ribstein addresses.

Old narratives die hard

PD*27270710A Russian criminal court sentenced former OAO Yukos chairman and CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky to another seven years in prison last week. As if on cue, the mainstream U.S. media reported on the event as a reflection of the capricious and arbitrary nature of the Russian legal system.

We really are better than those corrupt Russians, aren’t we?

Meanwhile, the mainstream media continues to neglect — and often promotessimilar mistreatment and persecution of business executives in the U.S. I mean, really. Would R. Allen Stanford fare much worse in a Russian prison than he has in U.S. jails?

And to that the unnecessary and shameful criminalization of large segments of American society in other respects and you start wondering whether those writing for the mainstream media have any idea of what is going on in their own backyards?

Yeah, Russian criminal justice system is corrupt. The U.S. system is far superior.

Old narratives die hard.

Protecting the Children

Mcdonalds11No, really. this is not from The Onion:

The Center for Science in the Public Interest has filed a lawsuit against McDonald’s Corp., claiming that the company’s meals with toys unfairly entice children into eating food that can do them harm.

The Washington advocacy group warned McDonald’s in June that it would sue if the company did not stop providing toys with children’s meals that have high amounts of sugar, calories, fat and salt. The suit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court, seeks class-action status.[.  .  .]

The lead plaintiff in the suit is Monica Parham, a mother of two from Sacramento who said the company "uses toys as bait to induce her kids to clamor to go to McDonald’s," the organization said.

Ms. Parham has to sue McDonald’s rather than simply telling her children “no”? Walter Olson chronicles here.

Judge Kozinski on the criminalization of business lottery

Business crime croppedLarry Ribstein — the law professor who has done more than anyone in the blogosphere to decry the enormous financial and human cost of the federal government’s criminalization of business lottery over the past decade – highlights  in this blog post Ninth Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski’s lucid concurrence in the Ninth Circuit’s reversal of the business fraud conviction of former Network Associates CFO, Prabhat Goyal:

This case has consumed an inordinate amount of taxpayer resources, and has no doubt devastated the defendant’s personal and professional life. The defendant’s former employer also paid a price, footing a multimillion dollar bill for the defense. And, in the end, the government couldn’t prove that the defendant engaged in any criminal conduct. This is just one of a string of recent cases in which courts have found that federal prosecutors overreached by trying to stretch criminal law beyond its proper bounds. See Arthur Andersen LLP v.United States, 544 U.S. 696, 705-08 (2005); United States v. Reyes, 577 F.3d 1069, 1078 (9th Cir. 2009); United States v. Brown, 459 F.3d 509, 523-25 (5th Cir. 2006); cf. United States v. Moore, 612 F.3d 698, 703 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (breadth of 18 U.S.C. ¬ß 1001 creates risk of prosecutorial abuse).

This is not the way criminal law is supposed to work. Civil law often covers conduct that falls in a gray area of arguable legality. But criminal law should clearly separate conduct that is criminal from conduct that is legal. This is not only because of the dire consequences of a conviction-including disenfranchisement, incarceration and even deportation-but also because criminal law represents the community’s sense of the type of behavior that merits the moral condemnation of society. See United States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 348 (1971) (“[C]riminal punishment usually represents the moral condemnation of the community . . . .”); see also Wade v. United States, 426 F.2d 64, 69 (9th Cir. 1970) (“[T]he declaration that a person is criminally responsible for his actions is a moral judgment of the community . . . .”). When prosecutors have to stretch the law or the evidence to secure a conviction, as they did here, it can hardly be said that such moral judgment is warranted.

Mr. Goyal had the benefit of exceptionally fine advocacy on appeal, so he is spared the punishment for a crime he didn’t commit. But not everyone is so lucky. The government shouldn’t have brought charges unless it had clear evidence of wrongdoing, and the trial judge should have dismissed the case when the prosecution rested and it was clear the evidence could not support a conviction. Although we now vindicate Mr. Goyal, much damage has been done. One can only hope that he and his family will recover from the ordeal. And, perhaps, that the government will be more cautious in the future.

As Professor Ribstein has been saying for years, the problem with this policy is that the government is prosecuting agency costs, such as KPMG pushing the edge of the envelope on tax shelters or Andersen not using very good sense in carrying out its document retention policy.

There is a big difference between prosecuting agency costs and prosecuting clear-cut crimes, such as embezzlement. The difference relates primarily to the nature of the evidence involved, the relevance of contracts, and the subtleties of dividing responsibility between corporate actors.

Professor Ribstein has put it this way. Suppose somebody mugs you on the street. There is no question that is a crime.

However, what if the mugger asks you first if he can borrow your wallet, you loan it to him, and then he doesn’t give it back in time? What if the mugger asks your employee who’s running the store for you whether he can borrow some money, the employee allows it and then the mugger doesn’t pay it back? What if the "thief" is another employee who says the manager gave him the money as bonus compensation?

Who is liable in these situations turns on the contracts among the various parties. Proof depends on who said what to whom. Can we rely on what the witnesses say about this? What if the prosecutor tells the employee who’s minding the store that he’ll not face prosecution for conspiracy if he spills the beans on the other employee who says that the manager gave him bonus compensation?

Society needs to have appropriate punishment and accounting for clear-cut crimes. But in cases such as Enron or Lehman Brothers, the civil lawsuits — unlike the criminal prosecution – included all the people involved, including the directors who approved wrongful corporate conduct and accountants and lawyers who may have facilitated it. That is a much more rational and effective way in which to deal with agency costs than attempting to make them appear to be clear-cut crimes, which they simply are not.

Finally, criminal prosecutions over merely questionable business judgment obscure the true nature of risk and fuel the myth that investment loss results primarily from criminal misconduct. Taking business risk is what leads to valuable innovation and wealth creation. Throwing creative and productive business executives such as Michael Milken and Jeff Skilling in prison does nothing to educate investors about the true nature of risk and the importance of diversification.

The supposed payoff to criminal prosecutions of agency costs is deterrence. But some businesspeople will keep on pulling these shenanigans regardless of the prosecutions, while the legitimate risk-takers who create jobs and wealth for the community sorts will be the ones who are deterred.

I’m not suggesting that the Bernie Madoffs of the world should be encouraged. But the cases against businesspeople such as Milken, Skilling, Hank Greenberg, Jamie Olis, the NatWest Three and the Merrill Lynch bankers are fundamentally different than Madoff’s scam, and I am not comfortable that politically ambitious prosecutors can tell the difference. As Professor Ribstein notes in another article, “prosecutors turn up the fire [in mounting dubious business prosecutions] and then sell extinguishers.

The End of the Backdating Lottery?

backdatingLarry Ribstein from the blogosphere and Holman Jenkins from the financial media have been leaders over the past several years in exposing the Department of Justice’s disingenuous campaign to criminalize the corporate compensation technique commonly known as backdating stock options.

Now, with Judge Wright’s sentencing decision last week in the criminal case of former KB Home executive Bruce E. Karatz, Ribstein and Jenkins’ insight has finally been judicially adopted. The real crime in the backdating scandal was that prosecutors and the mainstream media once again jumped to create a witch hunt targeting wealthy businesspeople even though it was far from clear that backdating was actionable from a civil standpoint, much less a criminal one.

So, what drives this damaging syndrome? We use myths – such as that wealthy businesspeople must have cheated to make so much money — to distract us from our innate vulnerability. We rationalize that a wealthy and powerful person did bad things that we would never do if placed in the same position even though we really have no idea how we would react to the incentives that the object of scorn faced. As a result, we ridicule the rich and powerful as we attempt to purge collectively that which is too shameful for us to confront individually.

Beyond the shattered careers, lives and families that lay in the wake of this syndrome, it is incredibly damaging to our society in other important respects.

For example, business prosecutions over merely questionable business judgment obscure the true nature of risk and fuel the myth that investment loss results primarily from criminal misconduct rather than market forces. In reality, business risk is what leads to valuable innovation and wealth creation. Throwing creative and productive business executives such as Michael Milken and Jeff Skilling in prison does nothing to educate investors about the true nature of risk and the importance of such investment strategies as diversification.

Moreover, ignorance about business risk has led in part to the criminalization of business lottery that is arguably best reflected in the selective prosecutions of the backdating cases. That lottery simply breeds even more cynicism for the rule of law.

So, isn’t it about time that we put such an obviously damaging syndrome to rest for good?

 

What is the greater corruption?

Cam NewtonThis?

Or the FBI using its resources to investigate this?

The FBI shouldn’t be involved in such matters at all. But if the G-Men insist on investigating, they should be investigating why some institutions of higher education are getting away with making great wealth from their football programs while colluding to restrict the compensation paid to the predominantly black professional athletes who take enormous risk to life and limb to generate that wealth.

If Cam Newton received money to play for Auburn, I’m glad he got it and that he didn’t take the discounted payment from Mississippi State. He deserves every dime that he was paid.

Guilty Until Proven Innocent

R. Allen Stanford is not a popular person to defend.

But one does not have to defend what Stanford allegedly did in building his financial empire to decry the treatment that he has received from the federal government since his indictment in early 2009.

Earlier posts on this blog pointed out the federal government’s unusually brutal treatment of Stanford pending his trial on business fraud charges that will probably take place sometime next year. The U.S. Department of “Justice” routinely responded to Stanford’s mistreatment by contending that nothing unusual had occurred with regard to Stanford and that he was being treated the same as any other defendant who was being held in prison pending trial.

Well, that contention appears to be bullshit, to put it mildly.

The Daily Mail Online finally obtained photos of Stanford after he had been attacked in prison (H/T Henry Blodget) and they depict injuries that are even worse than those described in Stanford’s court pleadings.

For years, we allowed an out-of-control federal task force – egged on by a vacuous mainstream media – to ride roughshod over local citizens’ Constitutional rights.

Now, before our eyes, the presumption of innocence has been eviscerated in the Stanford case with nary a peep of protest other than from Stanford’s attorneys and a few bloggers.

When the last law was down, and the Devil turned ’round on you, where would you hide, the laws all being flat?”

“[D]o you really thing you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then?”

There is more than one way to skin a cat

legal-drugs At least that’s the case when it comes to getting around dubious drug prohibition policies. Check out this WSJ article:

When the housing market crashed in 2008, David Llewellyn’s construction business went with it. Casting around for a new gig, he decided to commercialize something he’d long done as a hobby: making drugs.

But the 49-year-old Scotsman didn’t go into the illegal drug trade. Instead, he entered the so-called "legal high" business-a burgeoning industry producing new psychoactive powders and pills that are marketed as "not for human consumption."

Mr. Llewellyn, a self-described former crack addict, started out making mephedrone, a stimulant also known as Meow Meow that was already popular with the European clubbing set. Once governments began banning it earlier this year, Mr. Llewellyn and a chemistry-savvy partner started selling something they dubbed Nopaine-a stimulant they concocted by tweaking the molecular structure of the attention-deficit drug Ritalin. [.  .  .]

Mr. Llewellyn is part of a wave of laboratory-adept European entrepreneurs who see gold in the gray zone between legal and illegal drugs. They pose a stiff challenge for European law-enforcement, which is struggling to keep up with all the new concoctions. Last year, 24 new "psychoactive substances" were identified in Europe, almost double the number reported in 2008,  .  .  .

Particularly interesting is Mr. Llewellyn’s “foolproof” safety testing method for new drugs:

[Mr. Llewellyn] boasts that his safety testing method is foolproof: He and several colleagues sit in a room and take a new product "almost to overdose levels" to see what happens. "We’ll all sit with a pen and a pad, some good music on, and one person who’s straight who’s watching everything," he says.

Will justice be done in Jeff Skilling’s case?

skilling Oral argument before a Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals panel in Houston occurs today on the U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal and remand of former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling’s appeal of his criminal conviction.

Although the Supreme Court did not overturn all counts of Skilling’s conviction, it remanded the remaining counts to the Fifth Circuit to determine whether any of them should stand given the Supreme Court’s reversal of the other counts based on the invalid “honest services” wire fraud charges.

In essence, Skilling is arguing on remand that the government relied on the amorphous nature of that invalid theory of criminality in obtaining a conviction against him on numerous different charges. Having relied on that invalid theory of criminality, Skilling contends that the government cannot now prove that the jury didn’t rely on it in convicting Skilling on the other charges, too. Although results rarely occur as they should in misdirected criminal prosecutions, Skilling really should win his release and a re-trial.

Meanwhile, rather than address the merits of Skilling’s important case, the Wall Street Journal – which already has a dubious record of coverage in Enron-related criminal prosecutions – serves up the following characterization of the Enron-related prosecutions in this recent article on another miscarriage of justice related to the demise of Enron:

The U.S. government’s Enron Task Force criminally charged about 30 individuals, including Mr. Brown, but said there were more than 100 other unindicted co-conspirators. The task force got guilty pleas from more than a dozen people and won a 2006 fraud conviction against former Enron President Jeffrey Skilling.

Some of the group’s courtroom victories have been upended on appeal. Mr. Skilling’s conviction and 24-year sentence are under appeals-court review following a Supreme Court decision invalidating part of his case.

Some of the [Enron Task Force’s] courtroom victories have been upended on appeal“? In reality, not any of the criminal convictions that the Enron Task Force obtained after a trial have been upheld on appeal. Not one.

Seems like something that the nation’s leading business newspaper would get right, don’t you think?