Fifth Circuit Judicial Council slams Judge Porteous

balancing%20scales%20122007.gifUntil recently, it had been years since the Fifth Circuit Judicial Council had sanctioned a federal judge. As of yesterday, the Council has now sanctioned two judges in less than three months.
We already know about the case of Galveston-based U.S. District Judge Sam Kent (previous posts here) — the Council recently deferred further disciplinary action for 90 days in that case pending the outcome of a Department of Justice investigation.
And yesterday, in this strongly-worded order, the Judicial Council recommended that the U.S. Judicial Council refer New Orleans-based U.S. District Judge G. Thomas Porteous, Jr to Congress for impeachment (Peter Lattman’s WSJ Law Blog post first reported on the order). The Fifth Circuit panel’s proposed impeachment referral is based on findings that Judge Porteous engaged in the following misconduct:

Filing “numerous false statements under oath during his and his wife’s Chapter 13 bankruptcy, including filing the petition under a false name.” This copy of Judge Porteous’ chapter 13 case docket reflects that his case was ultimately administered under the name of “Gabriel T. Porteous.” However, the original petition in the case reflects that he filed the case under the name “G.T. Ortous” and then filed an amended petition about ten days after the original petition in which he corrected the name to “Gabriel T. Porteous.”
Hiding assets from his bankruptcy estate, failing to list all creditors and not scheduling in his bankruptcy case creditors holding gambling-related claims against him;
Getting short-term credit from casinos after a bankruptcy judge ordered him to obtain prior approval of the court or the chapter 13 trustee before incurring any debt;
Making unauthorized and undisclosed payments to “preferred creditors” during his chapter 13 case and engaging in fraudulent conduct with regard to the claim of Regions Bank;
Accepting “gifts and things of value” from lawyers with cases before him;
Denying a motion to recuse in a case without revealing to the parties that he had a “history of financial relationships” with at least one attorney for the movant; and
Failing to disclose gifts from attorneys on his annual judicial financial disclosure statements for 1994-2000 and failing to disclose debt that should have been on the 2000 statement.

The Council’s order was signed by Fifth Circuit Chief Judge Edith Jones, who is one of the leading bankruptcy law experts on the Fifth Circuit. The Council ordered that, for the time being, Judge Porteous will not be assigned any bankruptcy cases or appeals, or cases in which the United States is a party. He is authorized to continue handling other civil cases and administrative duties until such time as he is required to dedicate his time to the defense of any further proceedings against him.
The Judicial Council’s order is actually the culmination of at least two investigations of Judge Porteous over the past several years. The Judicial Council’s investigation was prompted by information gathered during the FBI’s “Operation Wrinkled Robe,” which was an investigation of the relationship between Jefferson Parish, Louisiana state judges and New Orleans bail bondsman, Louis Marcotte. Judge Porteous served as a Jefferson Parish state judge before President Clinton appointed him to the federal bench in 1994. Marcotte was convicted of racketeering charges as a result of the Operation Wrinkled Robe probe several years ago and is currently in prison. Judge Porteous has not been charged with a crime as a result of Operation Wrinkled Robe.
In 2003, Judge Porteous recused himself from all civil cases involving the federal government and all criminal cases after a relative of Marcotte alleged that Marcotte had paid for Judge Porteous’ car repairs and arranged other favors for the Judge. In May, 2006, Judge Porteous took a medical leave after the sudden death of his wife in December, 2005. He returned to the bench in June of this year.
Peter Henning provides this typically insightful blog post on the legal issues raised by the Judicial Council’s order.

Checking in on the oil patch

oil_well%20122107.jpgI’ve been meaning to pass along a couple of interesting items regarding oil production and prices.
First, several of the bloggers over at the Oil Drum have launched an intriguing new project — a Wikipedia project in which they and a number of other contributors are accumulating data on all the major, new oil projects around the world and contributing the data to a single database that can be used to document historical trends and attempt to forecast future trends in oil production. The contributors are focusing on basic data for all of the major projects that would add new oil production capacity, including estimates of the peak flow when such information is available. My compliments to the creators of this excellent information resource.
Meanwhile, this John Cassidy column predicts that the price of oil has peaked for the time being and that prices will begin falling to the $50 a barrel range:

. . . the experts who are predicting the worst, based on geology and geopolitics, are missing the crucial role that economic incentives play in determining the price of crude. The tripling of oil prices since the summer of 2003 has unleashed forces that within the next two or three years will bring oil prices tumbling back down to below $50 a barrel. Looking even further ahead, prices could easily fall to $30 a barrel or even lower. So before you trade in your Cadillac Escalade for a Toyota Prius, think twice: $1.50-a-gallon gas might not be gone forever.

In fact, Clear Thinkers favorite James Hamilton also thinks that oil prices have peaked.

Self-deception about calories

burning%20calories.gifThis Gina Kolata/NY Times article (previous posts here) explains how many people continue to misconstrue exercise as a primary means of weight-control by overestimating the number of calories they expend during exercise. A well-structured exercise program can assist in controlling a person’s weight over the long term, but it really doesn’t have much effect on weight over the short term.
On the other hand, my anecdotal experience is that many of the same folks who overestimate the amount of calories that they expend during exercise dramatically underestimate the amount of calories that they are consuming, particularly in regard to restaurant food.
I’m convinced that the combination of these misunderstandings — along with not having a clear understanding of the difference between exercise and recreation — has much to do with the obesity syndrome that many Americans battle throughout their lives.

Criminalizing the legal advisors

refco122007.jpgRegular readers of this blog know that the federal government’s criminalization of business since Enron has been steadily encroaching on professionals who provide advice to business interests. First, it was Arthur Andersen, then the Merrill Lynch bankers in the Nigerian Barge case, and then KPMG.
Now, Nathan Koppel of the WSJ Law Blog reports that the Department of Justice has thrown down the criminal gauntlet on legal advisors by indicting former Refco, Inc outside counsel, Joseph P. Collins, the former head of Mayer, Brown & Platt’s derivatives section. A copy of the indictment is here and my previous posts on the Refco case are here.
The indictment crosses the Rubicon in terms of the govenment’s willingness to prosecute an outside lawyer for merely advising a client in regard to structuring transactions that are not intrinsically illegal, but it nevertheless raises more questions than it answers. As is typical of most business prosecutions over the past several years that criminalize questionable business judgment rather than clear white collar criminal acts such as embezzlement, the indictment of Collins is a jumble of conclusory allegations of fraud without any specific allegations of Collins’ fraudulent conduct.
Although inartfully drafted, the government’s indictment essentially alleges that Collins assisted former Refco CEO and controlling shareholder Phillip Bennett in using Refco’s credit to reduce indebtedness to Refco of an affiliate controlled by Bennett. That’s not a crime, but the government alleges that Collins committed a crime by aiding Bennett in misleading Refco auditors and investors in not telling them about the use of Refco’s credit to reduce the affiliate’s debt to Refco. In addition, the government alleges that Collins aided Bennett in covering up from investors the dilution of Bennett’s ownership interest in Refco to BAWAG, which is characterized as “a longtime Refco customer.” Again, the government hinges its criminal case against Collins on the alleged non-disclosure of that dilution.
What’s curious about all of this is that numerous lawyers, accountants and investment bankers scrutinized and presumably profited from Refco over the past several years in connection with various investments in the firm, including its well-publicized public offering that valued the company at $4 billion five months before it disintegrated into a bankruptcy case. Not only did none of these professionals uncover the alleged fraud, but none of them other than Collins has been targeted as a criminal. Moreover, as this earlier post asks, if Bennett and Collins were orchestrating a massive fraud at Refco, then why on earth did they take it public where discovery of the fraud would likely lead to far more draconian consequences than if Refco had remained private?
Oh well, I suppose that question will be sorted out eventually. An ominous sign for both Bennett and Collins is that former Refco Capital Markets vice-president, Santo C. Maggio, pled guilty yesterday in New York to two counts of securities fraud, one count of conspiracy and one count of wire fraud under a cooperation agreement with prosecutors. In the meantime, it looks as if Collins and Bennett are not in lockstep with regard to defending their criminal cases. The initial public comments of Collins’ attorney suggest that Collins will assert that he had been duped by Refco’s fraud. Although that position can’t be pleasing to the Bennett defense, it is certainly understandable from Collins and Mayer Brown’s standpoint. It appears that Mayer Brown is underwriting Collins’ defense and probably will continue to do so as long as Collins is taking the position that any failure of his legal counsel was the result of being duped or, at worst, negligence.
Maintaining that position would appear to be extremely important to Mayer Brown, which has had been having its own business problems over the past year or so (see here, here and here). If a jury finds that Collins was engaged in criminal fraud with regard to Refco, then such a finding would likely constitute grounds for any insurer or reinsurer of Mayer Brown to deny coverage for damage claims arising from Refco-related civil litigation against the firm, as well as any legal fees generated in the defense of such litigation. In that turns out to be the case, Mayer Brown’s resulting business problems may make the ones that the firm has been dealing with over the past year look like a piece of cake in comparison.
As always, Larry Ribstein and Peter Henning have insightful thoughts on various implications of the Collins indictment.

Mitchell Report redux

Mitchell Report cover.jpgFollowing on my post on the Mitchell Report, the following are a few interesting observations from the past several days:

Art DeVany agrees with me that MLB didn’t get it’s money’s worth and provides a rather interesting and simple test to evaluate whether a player was likely to have used steroids;
Malcolm Gladwell asks “So what, exactly, is wrong with an athlete–someone who makes a living with their body–taking medication to speed their recovery from injury?”
The New York Times Murray Chass picks up on one of the observations from my post — that is, there is not much original work product in the Mitchell Report.
Former Florida Marlins and Cincinnati Reds trainer Larry Starr, who was a trainer in the big leagues for 30 years, describes how MLB management and the MLB Players’ Association soft-pedaled the PED problem even after being advised in 1988 that use of PED’s was becoming commonplace among players.

Finally, Richard Landau and Louis H. Philipson, who are both Professors of Medicine at the University of Chicago Medical School, wrote the following letter to the Wall Street Journal explaining why the risks of taking human growth hormone in an effort to improve athletic performance and endurance, or recover from a non-live threatening injury, is a quintessential example of taking a flyer with too much downside risk:

While some stories noted the many negative effects of androgenic steroids, we have not seen any explanation as to why taking “natural” human growth hormone is also a really bad idea. While growth hormone is necessary for children in particular, athletes are tempted to take growth hormone without a demonstrated positive result on performance. They should note what happens in the disease called acromegaly, a condition of too much growth hormone. In this disease, excess growth hormone causes growth of hands, lips, tongue, feet, nose, chin, forehead and liver. In short, most tissues and organs in the body will enlarge, including the heart, sometimes to the point of heart failure. Diabetes, decreased interest and ability in sex, fatigue, excessive sweating, and disordered sleep are also part of this syndrome.
The only important FDA-approved indications for giving growth hormone are failure to grow due to lack of growth hormone and the HIV-associated wasting syndrome. Despite the relative rarity of these problems, there are nine formulations of growth hormone on the market today, and all list diabetes, leukemia, muscle aches and pain, headache, weakness, stiffness and swelling of male breasts as potential side effects, as well as insomnia, nausea, hypothyroidism and increased blood fats. Also mentioned are pancreatitis and fatigue. Every manufacturer recommends periodic safety monitoring of blood sugar, thyroid blood tests, skin and heart exams. We could easily name quite a few drugs that have been withdrawn from the market with less potential for harm than growth hormone.
Not a single clinical trial has effectively demonstrated that the metabolic effects of growth hormone, even including a temporary increase in lean body mass, have resulted in improved performance. The view of some athletes that a few injections of the hormone might have beneficial effects on sore arms has never been rigorously tested, but is very unlikely to be effective. The risks clearly outweigh the benefits. Our young athletes need to be warned that large muscles are not good muscles, and that these problems are not rare “side effects” but the natural consequence of excess growth hormone, a hormone that affects almost every tissue, not just muscles — and usually not for the better. Taking any form of growth hormone in the hope of improved athletic performance is misinformed at best, and any mention of this practice should explain why.

What is Reyes Being Sentenced for Again?

The illusory nature of the financial damages attributed to former Brocade CEO Greg Reyes’ backdating of stock options, the W$J’s Holman Jenkins — who has been the most lucid mainstream media voice condemning the witch hunt mentality that permeated the criminal prosecutions involving backdated stock options — pens this column on the Reyes sentencing, in which he concludes:

Punishment should fit the crime; dozens of executives have lost jobs over backdating; a few have been asked to disgorge money and sign regulatory settlements that don’t require acknowledgment of wrongdoing. Even the trial lawyers have been unable to make a meal out of this scandal, thanks to an absence of demonstrable shareholder harm.

The great flaw in the Reyes prosecution, which was the first of its kind, was the prosecution’s attempt to fulfill the media image of backdating, rather than focusing on the venial offense it was. The government has suggested Mr. Reyes should face 10-20 years. Judge Charles Breyer, in a recommendation recently unsealed, proposed 15-21 months. Some law bloggers think it not impossible Mr. Reyes will receive a suspended sentence.

Let’s hope so. Because unless we plan to send Steve Jobs and a hundred other executives to jail for backdating, it would be grossly disproportionate to inflict jail on Mr. Reyes.

Read the entire column. By the way, the Reyes sentencing has been postponed indefinitely.

The remarkable story of Kevin Everett

Kevin_everett.jpgThree months ago, Kevin Everett, a tight end for the Buffalo Bills who was born and raised in Port Arthur just east of Houston, suffered a serious spinal cord injury during an NFL game. At the time of the injury, there was grave doubt whether Everett would ever walk again.
As this Sports Illustrated article recounts, Everett’s recovery from his serious injury has been nothing short of amazing. One of the interesting aspects of Everett’s recovery is that it may have been fueled by the gutsy call of a 45 year-old orthopedic surgeon on the scene in Buffalo, but it was certainly facilitated by the remarkable rehabilitation services of the Texas Medical Center’s Institute for Rehabilitation and Research (known as “TIRR”) and the inspiring resolve of the 25 year old patient. TIRR is regularly ranked as one of the finest rehabilitation institutions in the U.S. and is one of the many reasons that Houston is among the world’s finest medical centers.

The pixie dust theory

ethano%20121907l.jpgIt has something to do with subsidies for ethanol.

An appropriate sentence in an inappropriate case

innocent%20man.jpgThis earlier post reported on the troubling case of Connecticut criminal defense lawyer Phillip Russell, who pled guilty to assisting the commission of a felony by failing to report it while representing a church in connection with a child pornography/child predator investigation. Yesterday, Russell was sentenced to six months of home confinement, a $25,000 fine and 240 hours of community service. Russell has voluntarily agreed to a suspension of his law license and will likely be disbarred.

That governmental Ponzi scheme

social%20security.gifAt the end of this common sense post that mostly points out that no useful public policy is served by the government denying grandparents the right to establish Health Savings Accounts for the benefit of their grandchildren, the always entertaining Art DeVany makes the following observation about a common topic on this blog — Social Security reform (previous posts are here):

By the way, there is no such thing as social security. There are only people who are more or less secure against contingencies. They might pool their risks against these contingencies, but there is no effective way for a society to avoid risk. As a program for risk pooling, Social Security is very ineffective. It is not insurance, it is redistribution among generations. It is a Ponzi scheme because the risk pool is allocated from one generation to another. And, it is fraught with demographic risk and political risk. It will eventually go under or have to be modified substantially by disavowing the contract between generations because it is not sustainable.