Both the NY Times and the Wall Street Journal ($) have extensive articles about the results of a Bristol-Myers Squibb sponsored study that compared high doses of Pfizer‘s most powerful cholesterol-lowering drugs, Lipitor, with Bristol-Myers Squibb’s less potent drug, Pravachol. Both drugs are statins, a class of medications that block a cholesterol-synthesizing enzyme and are often prescribed for patients with heart problems.
Much to Bristol-Myers’ dismay, the study concluded that the patients taking Lipitor were significantly less likely to have heart attacks or to require bypass surgery or angioplasty than those taking Pravachol. The study is spurring discussion among cardiologists and the medical community that lowering cholesterol far beyond the levels that most doctors currently recommend can substantially reduce heart patients’ risk of suffering or dying of a heart attack. This could greatly change how doctors treat patients with heart disease and will likely result in re-evaluation of how low cholesterol levels should be even for people without heart problems.
Monthly Archives: March 2004
Remember to vote!
Today is the Texas Primary election, so remember to vote. Here is the prior post in which I provide my recommendations in the Republican primary judicial races.
Tom Hicks leaving Hicks, Muse
Thomas O. Hicks, chairman and CEO of Dallas-based private equity firm Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst, announced Monday that he would retire a year from now to focus on his personal investments. Hicks, Muse & Furst is still attempting to recover from big losses that it suffered from investments in telecommunications and Internet companies. Mr. Hicks is majority owner of the Dallas Stars NHL hockey club and the Texas Rangers MLB baseball club, both of which have their share of financial problems at this point.
Waste Management names new CEO reshuffles top management
Houston-based Waste Management named David P. Steiner to succeed A. Maurice Myers as chief executive officer. Mr. Myers will remain as chairman until November, when he will retire. Upon Mr. Myers’ retirement, board Director John Pope, a former president and chief operating officer of UAL Corp.’s United Airlines, will become the company’s nonexecutive chairman.
The company also named Lawrence O’Donnell III as president and chief operating officer. Previously, O’Donnell was executive vice president, operations support, and the chief administrative officer. Robert G. Simpson, formerly senior vice president and chief accounting officer, replaced Mr. Steiner as finance chief.
Mr. Myers was responsible for stabilizing Waste Management’s business after a 1998 accounting scandal rocked the company and foreshadowed similar scandals at Enron, WorldCom, and other companies. The 1998 scandal resulted in Waste Management declaring a $1.2 billion charge against earnings, removal of the company’s top executives, a Securities and Exchange Commission review, and dozens of shareholder lawsuits.
Reliant subsidiary and employees target of probable indictment
Houston-based Reliant Resources announced late Monday that federal prosecutors in San Francisco have informed the company that its trading unit subsidiary — Reliant Energy Services — and four former and current employees are targets of an impending grand jury indictment stemming allegations that Reliant Energy Services engaged in price manipulation on two days in June 2000 by curtailing power plant generation in California. In January 2003, Reliant Resources reached a settlement with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission regarding the same matter that is the subject of the expected indictment in which Reliant Resources agreed to pay $13.8 million without admitting or denying that the actions in question affected electricity prices in any market or violated any law or regulation.
Houston Coach McCallum reassigned
One of the nicest men in the coaching profession — Ray McCallum — was reassigned earlier today from his duties as head basketball coach at the University of Houston. With three years remaining on his contract at about $350,000 per year, McCallum was reassigned to a new UH position as a fund-raiser in the development office. His teams were 34-73 overall, 24-40 in Conference USA.
Houston’s once vaunted basketball program has become a coaches graveyard since legendary former Coach Guy V. Lewis resigned in 1986. Since Guy V., Houston has had four coaches and only one has left the program with a winning record. Coach McCallum’s downfall was his inability to recruit effective post players, a necessity in the hard-knuckled Conference USA.
Dierker back in the booth
The Houston Astros have announced that they are currently finalizing a deal with former Astros player, broadcast color man and manager Larry Dierker that will put Dierker back in the broadcast booth during the 2004 season. The Astros have arranged to have Dierker team with television play-by-play announcer Bill Brown to broadcast the Astros’ 12 Wednesday home games on Fox Sports Net. Dierker pitched for the Astros from 1964-1976, was their color man on radio for 18 years when his playing career concluded, and then left that job to become the Astros’ manager from 1997-2001.
Dierker is a marvelous talent in the broadcast booth — bright, insightful, and engaging. After managing the Astros, he wrote this book about his baseball experiences. With his addition, the Astros now have two of the best color men working their televised games in Major League Baseball today. Jim Deshaies, another former Astros’ pitcher, is the Astros’ regular color man and is also outstanding. These two men make listening to play-by-play on Astros’ televised games a highly enjoyable experience.
Philip Jenkins on Gay Marriage
Dr. Philip Jenkins is a prolific author and an outstanding professor of history religious studies at Penn State University. Dr. Jenkins’ 2002 book, “Hidden Gospels: How the Search for Jesus Lost Its Way“, convincingly debunks the claims that recently discovered texts such as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Mary, and the Dead Sea Scrolls undermine the historical validity of the New Testament.
In this Dallas Morning News op-ed, Professor Jenkins addresses one of the many legal issues that must be addressed in connection with the societal drift toward gay marriage — i.e., the age of consent. Interesting reading from a compelling thinker.
Grounds for Martha’s appeal
According to this Washington Post article, Martha Stewart‘s appeal is likely to challenge the trial court’s exclusion of expert evidence that her stock trade wasn’t illegal. It appears that the trial judge’s the ruling excluding the expert evidence was based on the finding that the technical legality of the trade was not relevant to the question of whether Ms. Stewart had a motive to obstruct investigations into the trade. Presumably, the judge would have allowed Ms. Stewart to testify as to her belief as to the legality of the trade, which would have been relevant on the motive issue. Alas, as we all know, Ms. Stewart elected not to testify during the trial. Nevertheless, the excluded expert testimony represented one of the only ways through which the defense could present its case on the legality of the trade issue without waiving Ms. Stewart’s right not to testify.
Meanwhile, Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz excoriates the Stewart defense team’s decision not to allow Ms. Stewart to testify in this Wall Street Journal ($) op-ed, which includes the following speculation:
One of the most intriguing aspects of the entire Stewart case was never addressed by either side: namely, that virtually every action for which Ms. Stewart was convicted took place after she had consulted with highly experienced and expensive lawyers. As legal ethics expert Stephen Gillers wrote before the trial in The American Lawyer, “defendants ordinarily retain lawyers after they commit their alleged crimes. In contrast, all the crimes charged against Stewart were allegedly committed while she was receiving the advice of excellent defense lawyers at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz — one of the nation’s best law firms. Three times, in fact, the indictment’s chronology refers gratuitously to Stewart’s lawyers [though not by name].”
The job of these lawyers was to keep their client out of any further legal difficulties. In doing this job, no lawyer should ever accept a client’s initial account, especially if it is not corroborated by hard evidence. As Mr. Gillers correctly observed, every lawyer knows that “many clients lie even when they have nothing to hide.” Even if the lawyer believes his client is being truthful, he should not allow the client to relate an uncorroborated account to law enforcement officials, unless the lawyer is absolutely certain that the account will not be subject to challenge by the government. (One would think that every lawyer would have learned that painful lesson from Bill Clinton’s lawyer, Robert Bennett, who allowed the president to be deposed about his sex life without corroborating his highly questionable account.) Yet Ms. Stewart’s original lawyers allowed her to make the statements to law enforcement officials that formed the basis of her convictions. It was these lawyers who then recommended her trial lawyer, Mr. Morvillo. (“We decided to add him to our team.”) According to several lawyers familiar with New York practice, Mr. Morvillo and Ms. Stewart’s original lawyers are part of the same “old boy” network of former New York prosecutors who sometimes refer cases to each other. It was Mr. Morvillo who made the decision not to put on any case.
If the Stewart defense team had put on a more complete case, with or without her testimony, the entire story would have become a matter of public focus, to the potential embarrassment of her original lawyers. Whether this factor entered into Mr. Morvillo’s decision not to put on a defense case will probably never be known. There were certainly other more traditional reasons for making that risky decision; but since it turned out to be the wrong one, legal and ethical experts will surely pick up on Mr. Gillers’ perceptive observation by asking whether Mr. Morvillo’s decision may have been influenced — consciously or unconsciously — by considerations other than the interests of his client, Martha Stewart.
New Harris County Flood Control Maps
As this earlier post noted, the Harris County Flood Control District released its preliminary new flood plain maps for five Houston watersheds today. Here is the site at which you can check an address against this latest flood plain information. The new flood plain maps will have a major impact on real estate development decisions and on plotting better ways to protect Houston from catastrophic flooding similar to what occurred in 2001 during Tropical Storm Allison. Within the so-called 100-year flood plain — the area with a theoretical risk of flooding once every 100 years — flood insurance is mandatory and the City of Houston imposes development requirements such as elevating buildings or digging detention ponds. These measures can substantially increase the cost of development. The information released today is a draft version of the Federal Emergency Management Agency‘s Digital Flood Insurance Rate Maps, which are expected to be released in late spring. An appeals process will follow over the next several months before those maps become final.