Stros edge Cubs

The Rocket pitched seven stellar innings, Bidg cranked two solo yaks, and Brad Lidge hurled two innings of clutch relief as the struggling Stros rode Carlos Beltran’s ninth inning tater to a 3-2 win over the Cubs at Wrigley on Wednesday afternoon.
Clemens was his usual pit bulldog self, giving up only a run on five hits with five walks in his seven innings. Lidge bailed the Stros out of another relief pitcher mess that Miceli produced in the eighth, and then mowed the Cubs down in order in the ninth. Although it does not show up in the box score, Everett made at least three difficult plays in the field that kept the Cubs from gaining any momentum.
The mismatch of the season takes place in the rubber game as the Stros’ Pete Munro takes on the Cubs’ Astro-killer, Mark Prior on Thursday afternoon. The Stros return to the Juice Box for a weekend series with the Rangers before visiting the Padres and the Dodgers in the following week leading up to the All-Star game on July 13th at the Juice Box.

The tale of a tax shelter lawyer

This NY Times article reports on the interesting story of tax shelter lawyer Raymond J. Ruble, a former Manhattan-based partner with Sidley Austin Brown & Wood. Mr. Ruble was well-known at Sidley, Austin for his aggressive work on tax strategies for investors, and was one of the biggest earners for the firm.
However, Mr Ruble is at the center of a government investigation into Sidley, Austin’s promotion of abusive tax shelters. In October, Mr. Ruble was dismissed, a highly unusual move by such a prestigious law firm. Days earlier, government investigators told the firm that millions of dollars from a San Francisco-based seller of tax shelters had gone – apparently unknown to the law firm – into a Delaware trust created by Mr. Ruble.
At least four civil lawsuits name Mr. Ruble and his former employer as defendants. Some of the lawsuits contend that he also worked with Ernst & Young and Deutsche Bank, among others, to promote a variety of abusive tax shelters.
The entire article is interesting reading, and includes the following tidbit on Mr. Ruble’s promotion of tax shelters in a continuing education publication:

In any case, in an article, “The Professional Responsibilities of a Tax Lawyer in the Context of Corporate Tax Shelters,” published by the Practicing Law Institute in its course handbook series for lawyers, Mr. Ruble argued that tax lawyers had a first duty not to the tax system but to their clients.
He began the article by quoting from the Gospel of Matthew: “No man can serve two masters.”

Stros fall to Cubs

Bidg‘s drop of a fly ball in the seventh resulted in two unearned Cub runs and a 7-5 Cub victory over the Stros in the first game of their key three game series at Wrigley.
Neither Kirk Bullinger nor David Weathers could hold Stros’ leads after Andy Pettitte muddled through five innings without good command. Pettitte ended up giving three runs on four hits with three walks and seven K’s. Miceli looked to have bailed Weathers out, but Biggio’s error sealed the win for the Cubs.
Carlos Beltran belted his first yak for the Stros and JK and Ensberg both had extra base hits to generate most of the Stros’ runs. However, Kent injured his hamstring on his double and appears headed to the disabled list, and Bidg and Bags continue to scruff. Despite their long and heralded service to the ballclub, the Stros are clearly suffering at the plate from their first baseman and leftfielder’s lack of production. Meanwhile, Jason Lane inexplicably has not been seen in the past four games.
Just to make sure that the evening was a complete downer, the Stros announced that Wade Miller — 7-7 with a 3.35 ERA — was being placed on the disabled list because of an a sore shoulder. Miller has been inconsistent this season, and has suffered from a lack of command. He is one of the league leaders in walks, which means he is at risk of throwing more pitches in fewer innings than other pitchers. Newly-acquired Jeremy Griffiths (acquired as a throw-in in the Hidalgo trade) was called up from AAA New Orleans to replace Miller in the rotation, a move that does not say much about the quality of the Stros’ AAA pitching prospects. The Stros did make at least one positive move on Tuesday in that they replaced Tim Redding in the rotation with Pete Munro, a move that they should have made weeks ago.
The Rocket takes the hill for the Stros in Wednesday afternoon’s game against the Cubs’ Matt Clement. That game may be the first must win game for the Stros in this once promising, but now quickly fading, season.

Promising new approach to treating Alzheimer’s

This Wall Street Journal ($) article reports on a significant advancement for the next generation of Alzheimer’s treatments, Neurochem Inc says it will begin recruiting patients for a large efficacy trial of its drug Alzhemed in the next few weeks.
Unlike current drugs that generally treat the symptoms of Alzheimer’s, the new drugs target the underlying illness itself. The goal of these new these new medicines are to halt the devastating progression of the disease or prevent it entirely. Alchemed is at the cutting edge of the new medicines that offer hope to the 4.5 million Americans struck with the memory-robbing illness.
Alzhemed, which helps prevent the formation of the plaques many scientists believe are the culprit in Alzheimer’s disease, could be on the market within four years. The new study will enroll 950 patients over 18 months at 70 sites in the U.S. and Canada.
For a long time, Alzheimer’s research was a depressing area that simply was not producing any insights to a possible cure for the disease. That is changing, as the clinical trials described in this article appear quite promising.

Big law firms’ numbers up

This Wall Street Journal ($) article reports on the annual American Lawyer review of law firm finances, which found that America’s richest law firms got even richer last year.
New York City based Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz topped the list with average profits per partner of $2.58 million. Other New York firms, helped by the Wall Street recovery, dominated — claiming 13 of the top 15 spots.
Strong revenue growth generated a 9.8% increase in average profit per equity partner to $930,700. Nonequity partners made an average $357,597 per partner.

Lay and lawyers in D.C. to try and meet with Enron Task Force

On the heels of an extraordinary front page NY Sunday Times interview, the Chronicle reports that former Enron CEO Ken Lay is in Washington, D.C. this week to lobby for a meeting between the Lay’s lawyers and the prosecutors working on the Enron Task Force.
I expect that Lay will be indicted soon, maybe even before the July 4th weekend.

United, this is getting monotonous

The federal Air Transportation Stabilization Board announced today that it was not going to change its its June 17 decision to deny United Airlines government backing for a government credit enhancement that was the central component of United’s reorganization plan in its pending chapter 11 case. United will now be forced to retool its reorganization plan based upon the higher financing costs that it will incur in the private market.
Hurt by a slowing economy and the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, United initially applied for $1.8 billion in loan guarantees in June 2002, just before the deadline for airline applications. The company’s request was the largest of the 16 carriers that applied to the panel that was created after the September 11 attacks to help airlines lower the cost of new capital.
The loan board initially denied United in December 2002, which resulted in United filing its chapter 11 case. United has reduced costs and shrunk its operations in chapter 11, but the company’s operations still are not particularly competitive with the emerging low-cost airlines that have expanded their market share dramatically over the past two years.
As noted here earlier, the ATSB’s decision is the correct one. The creditors and employees with stakes in United’s survival should share the full economic risk of reorganizing the company. The risk of loss and threat of failure are much better and more powerful inducements to reorganizing a big company correctly than government largesse that often covers up and delays changes that need to be made.

SCOTUS sentencing decision reviewed

In this article, the Wall Street Journal ($) does a good job of summarizing the initial reactions to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last week in Blakely v. Washington, a decision that could have major implications for the federal sentencing guidelines and, for at least eight states, holds that judges cannot increase a defendant’s sentence based on facts and behavior that were not presented to a jury. Though the decision involved just one state’s sentencing system, legal specialists on guidelines say that the decision could affect the guidelines under the federal system.
The federal sentencing guidelines evolved from the Sentencing Reform Act passed by Congress in 1984. Congress created a commission to set guideline ranges that specify sentences for each class of convicted person. Courts generally select sentences from within the range based on the consideration of acts or behavior of the defendant that often was not the subject of the criminal charges. Legal sentencing guideline specialists say the Supreme Court’s ruling in Blakely could invalidate everything within that range except for the lowest level.
In Blakely, the majority said all facts essential to the sentence must be tried before a jury. Federal and many state sentencing guidelines currently involve finding facts during the non-jury sentencing phase that may increase a convict’s time served. Blakely would appear to hold that all such facts would have to be charged and tried before a jury, or those facts are formally waived for sentencing purposes.
Yesterday’s decision is the second in a week questioning the validity of sentencing laws. Last Friday, U.S. District Judge William Young ruled that federal sentencing laws were unconstitutional because they gave prosecutors too much power.
Moreover, the Journal article speculates that another sentencing appeal that will be closely watched as a result of Blakely is the sad case of Jamie Olis, the midlevel executive of Dynegy Corp. who was recently convicted and sentenced to 24 years based partly on an expert’s estimate of the amount of market value that was lost as a result of the fraud in which Mr. Olis participated. The Journal article states that the government expert’s estimate was not presented to the jury. However, my recollection is that the government expert’s testimony on that subject was presented to the jury, but not rebutted by the defense during trial, and that U.S. District Judge Sim Lake concluded that he could not consider the defense expert’s estimate post-trial if it was not presented during trial.
Look for Professor Ribstein to comment on these developments upon his return from vacation.

Confessions of a “rich” businessman

Howard Blake is the pen name of a small businessman from the Midwest, who has written this AEI Online article that is brilliant in its simplicity. By Democratic Party standards, Mr. Blake and his wife are wealthy and should be taxed more. However, Mr. Blakes points out that appearances can be deceiving, particularly in economic matters:

From that $71,000 of actual cash flow, subtract our federal tax payments of $24,539 and our state income taxes of around $4,000, and you find that our cash available for living expenses is actually around $43,000. Sufficient for our needs. But clearly a good deal short of true wealth.
I suppose my wife and I do what we do because we like to. We must, because if you divide our $43,000 of spendable income last year by the 6,000 hours of labor, much of it manual, that the two of us put into our business (we kept track), our time works out to be compensated at around $7.50 an hour. Just the same, incentives do matter. And it is a concrete fact that cash alone fuels our growth. With more cash, our business will grow faster; we’re a small player in a big industry, and the market is there for additional growth. We’re constrained only by the availability of investment capital, and that has to be generated by our business.
My wife and I have a passion for our little enterprise. It’s been our life for 20 years, demanding whatever creative abilities we have, consuming most of our waking moments, focusing our energies on producing the best products we can, and beckoning us to work seven days a week to ensure good service for our customers.
Then every four years the Democratic nominee for President informs us we don’t pay enough taxes. We are called greedy and self-serving special interests. We’re told that we are “rich,” and that we have wealth only because we are lucky.
I have described my financial situation in some detail in the hope that this snapshot will help people understand who most of the top 5 percent of taxpayers really are, and how taxes affect the folks who make America work. I know I’m fortunate, but I certainly don’t feel rich. I have fond hopes of some day becoming wealthy (a goal I share with most of my fellow citizens), and a tax policy that encourages my efforts toward that end would not only benefit me, but the rest of society as well. But the reality is that my wife and I have to work extremely hard every day just to hold our current position.
We’ve been managing our finances with care, investing in our business with the kind of concentration that comes from spending our own money, and providing jobs for dozens of our neighbors. I dare say that the country benefits from our stewardship–and that of hundreds of thousands of other “rich” people just like us–more than it would from any of John Kerry’s plans for our money.

In representing business people over the past 25 years, I have learned that non-business people often grossly underestimate how hard it is to run a business profitably and well. Also overlooked or underappreciated is the great benefit that communities derive from the employment that is generated through small businesspeople’s willingness to undertake the risk of their enterprise. Mr. Blake’s article explains a big part of the reason why running a business is such a formidable task, made even more so in this current climate in which many normal business practices are being criminalized. Hat tip to Newmark’s Door for the link to Mr. Blake’s piece.

The Selling of the Expos

In the first of a three part series, this Washington Post article by Steve Fainaru examines the tactics that Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig is using in auctioning the Montreal Expos off to the highest bidder among several investor groups and American cities. The article provides an excellent background on how Selig and Major League Baseball owners have used baseball’s anti-trust exemption and public financing of stadiums to increase the value immensely of MLB franchises, an approach that several expert commentators — particularly Professor Sauer over at the Sports Economist — have criticized on economic and political grounds.
The entire article is well worth reading, and includes nuggets of information such as the following about Jeffrey Loria, the former majority owner of the Expos who ended up owning the Florida Marlins after Selig engineered a swap of franchises when MLB bought the Expos several years ago. Loria’s handling of the Expos is the subject of litigation brought by Loria’s limited partners, who were pursuing that litigation even as New Yorker Loria’s new team was playing in last season’s World Series. You certainly did not hear about the following on the MLB broadcast as the World Series Trophy was being handed to Loria and the Marlins:

On their way out of Montreal, Loria and Samson stripped the franchise. With them went computers containing scouting reports on every Expos player, dozens of signed home run balls, even life-size cutouts of the team’s former superstar right fielder, Vladimir Guerrero. The Expos’ limited partners, meantime, became unwitting owners of 6 percent of the Marlins. In July 2002, they filed a racketeering suit in U.S. District Court in Miami. It charged Loria, Samson, Selig, DuPuy and the Office of the Commissioner of Baseball of illegally conspiring in what the suit called an “Expos Elimination Enterprise.”
The ongoing suit could complicate baseball’s plans for the Expos. The limited partners have 90 days to seek an injunction if baseball tries to move the team.
Last October, Loria’s Marlins miraculously found themselves in the World Series against the New York Yankees. “Can you imagine?” anguished one of the limited partners. “I’m sitting here. I’m an owner of the Florida Marlins. I’m rooting for the Yankees!”
And then, of course, the Marlins won.
This spring, nearly all the limited partners received World Series rings, even as they continued to sue Loria and Major League Baseball for racketeering in U.S. District Court.

Read the entire article.