Milberg Weiss continues to reel

mwlerach.gifIn a development that drips with irony, this NY Times article (see also here) reports that David Bershad and Steven Schulman — two of the top partners in the class action plaintiffs firm, Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman LLP — have left the firm as a part of a strategy to persuade the Justice Department not to go Arthur Andersen on the firm over its involvement in an alleged kickback scheme relating to cases that the firm pursued. Previous posts on the longstanding investigation of Milberg Weiss are here.
As the previous posts note, the investigation has focused on whether some of the class representatives in securities class-action cases that Milberg Weiss pursued were paid illegal kickbacks by the firm in addition to whatever damages they received as members of the class. Last month, a retired New Jersey mortgage broker named Howard Vogel — who, along with his wife, was a class representative in about 40 Milberg Weiss class action cases — pled guilty to accepting kickbacks from the firm in some of those cases. In pleadings in Vogel’s case, prosecutors contend that Schulman and Bershad — described in the pleadings as “partner D” and “partner C” — assisted Vogel in taking $1.2 million in kickbacks for initiating securities-fraud class actions against Oxford Health Plans Inc. and Baan Co., both of which were were settled in 2003.
The irony in this situation is that Milberg Weiss is squarely in the crosshairs of a criminal investigation that is strikingly similar to the criminalization of agency costs that Milberg Weiss has profited from in connection with a large number of the firm’s class action securities fraud cases over the years. Although an indictment and resulting meltdown of the Milberg Weiss firm will not have close to the negative economic impact of the Justice Department’s similar destruction of Arthur Andersen, an indictment and resulting demolition of the firm — particularly before even one of the courts in any of the firm’s class action cases has determined that the firm did anything wrong in connection with its financial arrangements with class representatives — would be a gross injustice. Milberg Weiss is simply a product of the rather confused theoretical basis of our system for handling class action securities fraud cases; prosecuting that firm out of business will not result in any meaningful reform in that system.
Update: Peter Lattman passes along Bershad’s farewell memo to Milberg Weiss employees.

4 thoughts on “Milberg Weiss continues to reel

  1. I am interested in your opinion as to what the government should do to deal with the issues related to Enron, Andersen, Milberg and others. What is worthy of prosecution? What should the government be doing?

  2. Mike, that’s a pretty broad question, but you can find my answer in perusing my posts relating to such matters, most of which are categorized under “Legal-Criminalizing Business” or “Legal-Lay-Skilling” in the category column to the right.
    However, with regard to the Milberg Weiss situation specifically, I say first allow the court that supposedly was misled by the firm evaluate the allegation that the class representative was provided undisclosed compensation by the firm. That judge has the power to refer the matter to the DOJ if he believes that criminal conduct has occurred. Apart the enormous cost, by criminalizing the matter before such a review, the targets become polarized in an effort to protect themselves from criminal liability and we are far less likely to find out what really happened.

  3. Thank you. Your postings have been quite informative. I suppose what prompted my question is that, in reading this blog, it doesnt seem like there are too many instances where an executive or corporation is doing anything wrong but the government always seems to be in error. I wonder, if the government followed your contentions, would an executive/corporation have any fear of prosecution at all? Side note: The government doesnt seem to be too zealous in its handling of the SOX claims. Most of these seem to be getting tossed out. See here: http://www.oalj.dol.gov/PUBLIC/WHISTLEBLOWER/REFERENCES/CASELISTS/SOX2LIST.HTM

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