We can’t keep up with the Bloomberg updates. . . but we will give it one heck of try!
It wasn’t very long ago, (February 2, 2009) we did what we considered a fairly comprehensive two-parter about why we, as New Yorkers, ought to have some pretty significant concerns about the Bloomberg administration, Bloomberg’s wealth and what it is doing to the city. (The Good News IS the Bad News: Thanks A lot for Mayor Bloomberg’s “Charity”). It quickly became necessary to provide a comprehensive update. That required another two-parter to cover just the recently surfacing evidence of how much reason for concern we have. (Sunday, April 12, 2009, Bloomberg Update: Fire and Ice.)
That was barely a week and now it seems it is already time to provide still another update. We are thinking that we better post quickly if we don’t want to wind up with another two-parter. (Just when we thought we were done, Bloomberg in his inimitable Bloombergian way pulls us back in with more fascinating fodder. ) Oh well, here we go. . .
The Wall Street Journal Class: No Culpa (Maxima Non-Culpa)
The New York Times printed an extraordinary pair of stories. It seems that if you are a friend of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s then, as a presumed reader of the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg assures the rest of us that you are not the sort that commits murder or can be held responsible for destroying the economy. In medieval Europe the Church used to sell “indulgences” to the rich, absolving them from any sins they might have committed. Well, in modern day New York, Bloomberg has cut out the middleman- now the rich can get their indulgences straight from New York City’s very richest resident.
(See the Times two stories: How Bloomberg Knows Who’s Not a Killer, -Killers Don’t Read Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg Says- by Michael Barbaro, April 13, 2009 and Much Vilified, Financial Titans Find a Friend in Bloomberg, by David W. Chen, April 13, 2009.)
From the Times story on Bloomberg saying that readers of the Wall Street Journal don’t commit murder:
During a television interview about gun control on Monday, Mr. Bloomberg suggested that the titans of American capitalism who subscribe to the newspaper are simply not the homicidal kind.The pithy article goes on to provide as its conclusion a convincing contradicting list of Wall Streeters who have, in fact, committed murder.
“I don’t know how to break this to you,” he told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, “but people that go out and murder people don’t read The Wall Street Journal.”
The other Times article begins with another list of “vilified” Wall Streeters, titans like Dick (Richard S.) Fuld Jr., the former chief executive of Lehman Brothers, whom Bloomberg has vouched for. Bloomberg, famously quoted now for his “we love the rich people,” remark and his various defenses of the privileges of the Wall Street rich defends people like Fuld who have, in essence, been murdering the economy. For a good account of Fuld’s role in helping to set up the subprime crisis we suggest you watch Frontline’s Inside the Meltdown (February 17, 2009).
Mr. Bloomberg on Mr. Fuld, from the Times article:
“There’s Lehman Brothers, who I feel very sorry for,” he said during a news conference. “Dick Fuld, I’ve known for 40 years, who’s a competent guy, and people are criticizing him. They didn’t criticize him when things were going well for an awful lot of years.”The Times article does a thorough job in talking about what it refers to as Mr. Bloomberg’s “chameleon-like politics” but the gist of the extended article is:
Mr. Bloomberg has emerged as perhaps the foremost defender of the financial industry in the political world, while other elected leaders seize on the populist anger over the economy and executive compensation.Near the end of the article it offers an interesting observation preceded by a mistake:
No one would ever accuse Mr. Bloomberg, who is drawing a token salary of $1 a year, of pursuing public office for personal gain. But Eduardo Castell, who is managing City Comptroller William C. Thompson Jr.’s mayoral campaign, noted that Mr. Bloomberg had an extra incentive, perhaps, to cheer on the financial services industry, since the fortunes of his own company, Bloomberg L.P., hinge in part on other companies’ staying healthy and subscribing to the firm’s financial data terminals.The mistake is pretty much obvious from the observation offered: “No one would ever accuse Mr. Bloomberg, who is drawing a token salary of $1 a year, of pursuing public office for personal gain.” We think there are many who would “accuse Mr. Bloomberg . . . of pursuing public office for personal gain” precisely because “the fortunes of his own company, Bloomberg L.P., hinge in part on other companies’ staying healthy and subscribing to the firm’s financial data terminals.” Our prior articles have pointed out how frighteningly intertwined the health of Bloomberg’s company is with what Mr. Bloomberg does as mayor. And we have to wonder about how the skyrocketing of Mr. Bloomberg’s wealth coincided with his involvement in politics.
The Madoff Economy Point of View
For a point of view contrary to Mr. Bloomberg’s respecting how the conduct of those in the Wall Street oligarchy has been bad for the nation’s economic health, listen to the recent Terry Gross Fresh Air segment, (April 15, 2009), Fighting America's 'Financial Oligarchy.' In it you can hear
Former International Monetary Fund chief economist Simon Johnson predict an inevitable showdown between Wall Street and our federal government if the government properly insists upon representing the public. Mr. Johnson thinks the “U.S. suffers from "financial oligarchies" — government officials and elite members of the financial sector that run the country like a profit-seeking company” and “explains that the close connections between government officials and financial leaders are a major part of the U.S.'s economic problems.” From the program’s website page on the segment:
"We face at least two major, interrelated problems," Johnson writes. "The first is a desperately ill banking sector that threatens to choke off any incipient recovery that the fiscal stimulus might generate. The second is a political balance of power that gives the financial sector a veto over public policy, even as that sector loses popular support."This just in on Simon Johnson: Atlantic Yards Report has a post today observing how quotes from Mr. Johnson’s article in the May issue of The Atlantic, headlined The Quiet Coup, adapt to superbly discribe the fix Bloomberg and cohorts have gotten us into with Atlantic Yards:
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Unless the U.S. breaks up its financial oligarchy, Johnson warns that America could face a crisis that "could, in fact, be worse than the Great Depression — because the world is now so much more interconnected and because the banking sector is now so big."
Local banks, sometimes pressured by the government, become too willing to extend credit to the elite and to those who depend on them. . . .See Mr. Oder’s analysis and the more extended Simon Johnson quotes he extracted at: From “public-private partnerships” to “crony capitalism" (Sunday, April 19, 2009).
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Enormous companies teeter on the brink of default, and the local banks that have lent to them collapse. Yesterday’s “public-private partnerships” are relabeled “crony capitalism.”
For more thinking about the fallacy of trusting Bloomberg’s recommendations to trust those on Wall Street who have been responsible for what New York Times columnist and economic Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman has dubbed the “Madoff Economy” see our: Run, Mike, Run With What You Made Off With (Monday, December 22, 2008). Mr. Krugman writings frequently provide trenchant academic analysis of the pitfalls of “crony capitalism.”
Stark III, Reporting Who’s In The Ball Park
In our last update, we were writing about the ethics problems of New York City Finance Commissioner Martha E. Stark. Ms. Stark ought to be most famous for the role she had in coming up with the bizarrely inflated real estate tax assessment figures that were used to issue more tax-exempt bonds for Yankee Stadium than should actually be permitted (under the IRS loophole theory being used by the Bloomberg administration). She apparently did this at the behest of the mayor (or someone at the pinnacle of his administration representing him) and it remains to be seen whether someone is ultimately going to be charged with illegal acts as a result.
That is what Ms. Stark should be most famous for. When last we wrote her notoriety was predicated on two recent ethics scandals. First Ms. Stark was forced to resign from a “moonlighting” position on a real estate company’s board. Then it turned out that her chief deputy was improperly paying her spouse for work based on time sheets certifying work he was not present to perform. . . .
. . Now it turns out Ms. Stark is involved in her third new scandal surfacing in a relatively short period of time. This scandal gets us back into the ball park of our original Yankee Stadium discussion. Interestingly, as Norman Oder’s Atlantic Yards Report has already pointed out, most of our New York press is missing the most significant aspect of the story. The press is not only missing the most significant aspect of this incredible story, they are not even in the “right ball park.” They are not reporting about the broadening story about the squirrely manipulation of the Yankee Stadium property tax assessments. Hold onto your hats for this one and proceed to the next paragraph! (See: Tuesday, April 14, 2009, The latest cloud over Finance Commissioner Stark: a romance with the (former) assistant in the middle of the Yankee Stadium controversy.)
Ms. Stark’s third scandal involves hiring and/or remunerating a number of family members or extended family members. What is drawing the most press attention is the escalating salary she paid to her lover, Dara Ottley-Brown. (The superb visual of these pay increases at the side cribbed from Atlantic yards Report is, ironically, originally from Bloomberg, LP.) Here is what is truly astounding and the part of the story that only Atlantic Yards Report is covering: Ms Stark’s lover, Ms. Ottley-Brown was very much involved as a key player at the center of events when the real property tax assessments were being manipulated. When this was first reported (but not Ms. Ottley-Brown’s recently discovered concurrent personal relationship to Ms. Stark) by Daily News columnist Juan Gonzalez he was calling for an investigation. ("That's why it's time for some prosecutor to step in, subpoena every document and figure out if the Bloomberg administration manipulated land assessments for the Yankees.") Talk about being in the “right ball park!”
How integrally was the Tax Commissioner’s lover involved in the questionable activities? The Daily News story about what has been referred to as the “smoking gun” tells itself quite nicely if you just refer to the paragraphs that talk about Ms. Ottley-Brown (the non-Ottley-Brown paragraphs are bracketed):
The e-mails show that City Attorney Joseph Gunn notified Stark's former assistant commissioner, Dara Ottley-Brown, on July 15, 2005, that "the Yankees have an interest in seeing that the assessed valuation will be high enough to generate as much PILOT for tax-exempt debt as is lawful and appropriate."(See: E-mails reveal how city went to bat for Yankee to inflate value of stadium land, Tuesday, by Juan Gonzalez, December 16th 2008.)
[They also show Stark's staff met at least three times with the Yankees and other city officials to discuss the department's assessment method.]
On March 21, 2006, a few weeks before City Council's vote on the Yankees project, Maurice Kellman, the city's chief assessor, sent Ottley-Brown the stadium assessment report. It estimated the value of the land under the stadium at $26.8 million.
[Finance Department spokesman Sam Miller said Tuesday that a "senior assessment team" decided Kellman's estimate was too low compared with the construction cost of the new stadium.]
After a series of frantic phone calls and e-mails on March 21 and 22 between a half-dozen city officials and the Yankees, Ottley-Brown ordered Kellman to produce a new report.
Lawyering Up (With the “Mastro”) After Stark III
We have previously wondered what individuals might be lawyering up “to represent them in any prosecutorial proceedings such as those called for by the Daily News article.” (See: Saturday, December 20, 2008, Legal Notice! A Hearing May or May not Be held! (It Depends, Call Us!)
According to the Times, Ms. Stark’s attorney handling question about Ms. Ottley-Brown, (or at least one of the layers speaking for her) is former Deputy Mayor (under Guiliani) Randy Mastro. That is an interesting choice in that Mr. Mastro, with the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutchor, has been involved in legally challenging the term limits extension, fighting alongside attorney (and candidate for Public Advocate) Norman Siegel. His firm profile mentions that he also: “recently led the litigation effort to defeat the City's controversial West Side Stadium project, among other high-profile matters.” Mr. Mastro’s name has been mentioned as a possible candidate to replace retiring District Attorney Robert Morgenthau.
We wonder in what capacities Ms. Stark may have hired personal attorneys. Gibson, Dunn & Crutchor does have a white collar defense practice, but Mr. Mastro is not listed as practicing in that area though he is a litigator and was once a federal prosecutor in the Southern District of New York so he should be considered to have qualifications in that area. His firm profile starts out saying: “Randy M. Mastro is Co-Chair of the Firm's Litigation Practice and Crisis Management Groups.” Mr. Mastro should also know his way around investigations of illegal quid-pro-quo exchanges in return for the manipulation of government subsidies: His firm profile says that “he served as Associate Counsel on the Independent Counsel investigation of HUD Secretary Samuel Pierce.” (Though Mr. Mastro’s time with the investigation was limited the investigation is distinguished, among other things for its length.) Mr. Mastro’s client list includes impressive names plus one that always catches our eye: Forest City Ratner.
Commissioner Stark may, of course, may have more than one lawyer. We do not know who, if anyone, might be giving legal advice at this time to Dara Ottley-Brown. Nor do we know who else may be hiring personal counsel.
Stark III, Who’s Out? Is That the Ball Game?
Others have told us that they are wondering whether Commissioner Stark will continue in her job for very long: A sort of “three Stark-Scandals and you’re out” approach. We ourselves are not so sure Ms. Stark won’t continue in office.
One thing we have found ourselves wondering about is the way that all the Martha Stark scandals have piled out into the news in succession. It is impossible to say exactly what happened or why, but our experience tells us that, generally speaking, when there is an investigation of a scandal such as there was with the challenged time certifications of Ms. Stark’s deputy for her spouse, administrative steps are usually taken to make sure those in charge up the ladder know the lay of the land before the boom is lowered. Things are done like talking to coworkers and checking where the bodies are buried and what skeletons are in what closets, etc. Therefore, one can predict that there would be pretty good information available before the first move is made.
We notice that the first thing that happened was that Ms. Stark was forced to resign from the board of the real estate company of which she was director. That would have cut off a financial lifeline for her. We also wonder about the details of how that postion was obtained in the first place. Apparently the Bloomberg administration did know about it since she obtained approval from the city’s Law Department. Did the Law Department issue an approval without others in the administration knowing? Without communication? And was the discrepancy in how many board meetings a year were expected or materialized really so significant: the approved “three or four meetings a year” vs. perhaps “sixteen?”
We notice how the next two scandals dribbled out, Chinese water torture style, not the way you would expect an administration to manage things by choice. First the real estate board matter. Next, out came the investigation respecting Ms. Stark’s top deputy engaging in some questionable/objectionable nepotism. Then finally, out comes Ms. Stark’s own nepotism scandal. Overall, it looks like things had gotten out of hand in her department; people were feeling too comfortable about helping themselves to their own little pieces of the action. Word must have been getting around.
Now a very strange state of affairs has been created: two of the people now in the public eye by virtue of this scandal, a Commissioner and her lover as another public official working for her, were integrally involved in setting real property assessment values for the Yankee Stadium land, something that almost all informed individuals probably think was manipulated. Does this create something of a standoff? Whatever the story, things are very strange indeed!
We don’t want to be overly harsh about what Commissioner Stark did, except for the Yankee Stadium land valuation. The last time we wrote about these emerging scandals we noted:
The Bloomberg administration’s treatment of Ms. Stark, requiring her to resign from the real estate company’s board may seem disproportionate in light of everything else that goes on in the Bloomberg administration . . .Though we don’t think what Ms. Stark was doing was right or that there is an innocent explanation for it, we want to keep perspective. Ms. Stark may well have believed or rationalized that Ms. Ottley-Brown and members of the extended family she hired were competent valuable employees who were not overpaid. That doesn’t make it right, but we must point out that living by these rules is probably tougher for Ms. Stark than the rules Mr. Bloomberg is expected to live by.
To be entirely fair to Commissioner Stark we must mention Diana Taylor. Ms. Taylor is, to put it variously, the companion, parade-partner escort of Mr. Bloomberg or unofficial first lady. She was also the former New York State Superintendent of Banks appointed by Governor Pataki in 2003. According to the Times: “When Mr. Pataki appointed her to the banking position, there were rumblings that it was a political move prompted by her Bloomberg connection” (The Mayor's Lady, Her Own Woman, One and the Same, by Diane Cardwell, February 12, 2006). Governor Spitzer, who came next, found another position for Ms. Taylor: chairperson of the Hudson River Park Trust’s board of directors. It was speculated that Spitzer did this as a favor to Bloomberg because Spitzer was trying to manage weakening relationships after Troopergate: (See: August 15 - 25, 2007, Diana Taylor tapped to head the Hudson River Park Trust, By Lincoln Anderson.)
It is not that Ms. Taylor isn’t professionally qualified, and these appointments, even if they are in whole or in part because of Mr. Bloomberg, are not strictly nepotism in the direct sense that Ms. Stark’s escalating the pay of her lover can be considered such. (We like Hudson River Park.) But you cannot deny the intermingling of the professional position and how it is likely obtained with relationships and politics. It is hard to forget such intermingling when recalling the story of Ms. Taylor’s near ascendancy to Chief Executive Officer of the FDIC (“Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation”). That promotion was coming from George W. Bush in early 2006. We remember, of course, Bloomberg had stumped for Bush in late 2004, including going to extremes in terms of stage-managing things here in New York during the Republican Convention. Pursuit of the FDIC position for Taylor is one instance where Bloomberg’s influence didn’t prevail but worked in reverse: The nomination was shot down by the National Rifle Association because of Bloomberg’s New York City style anti-gun stance.
Ms. Stark’s salary boosts to Ms. Ottley-Brown are direct and lack checks and balances, but the point is that Bloomberg has the extraordinary influence to accomplish much the same result indirectly. Does it redound to Mr. Bloomberg’s benefit politically, financially or in terms of dealing with real estate developers to have Ms. Taylor in such positions? It would be hard to believe that it does not work to Mr. Bloomberg’s advantage in many ways.
Compare this as well: There was a nepotism situation benefitting relatives of Ms. Stark’s top deputy and, similarly, we previously noted that family members of Bloomberg’s top deputy, Patricia Harris, are benefitting from Bloomberg administration appointments:
Ms. Harris’ husband, Mark D. Lebow, is a lawyer with Lebow & Sokolow LLP whose practice areas include real estate. Bloomberg appointed him to the board of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Ms. Harris’ stepson also works for the Bloomberg administration.We see distinctions but isn’t it just possible that Ms. Stark, didn’t see the difference between what she was doing and what Bloomberg was readily able to accomplish through his greater influence? She no doubt knew that Bloomberg was not considered to be breaking the rules.
A Piece of the Action When Awash in “Black Money”
Frontline did another documentary recently, Black Money, about illegal international bribery. One thing that becomes clear watching that documentary is that in situations awash with illegal cash floating around it seems as if almost everyone feels entitled to take a little bit of it for themselves. By the same token, we can see how if Commissioner Stark was a little bit lax in the nepotism department she might have problems enforcing rules against her top deputy engaging in a little bit of the same. Taking this one step further we understand how Ms. Stark herself might not have believed there was a serious qualitative difference between what she was doing and the way that Bloomberg was managing to benefit his own companion through his public position and influence. And there was also the way that his top deputy’s family members were benefitting.
Beyond this, there is something else: Did Ms. Stark and Ms Ottley-Brown, by virtue of executing the Yankee Stadium maneuvers, feel that they had insurance for a little bit of the inside privilege that was swashing about? After all, the IRS and the U.S. taxpayers were being raided for millions.
Moral relativism creates such headaches!
Updates Parked in the Strangest Places: Political Privilege for a Bloombergian “Former Government Official” in the Private Sector
Here is a bit of oddness that indicates how government officer/employee-style perks are handed out to those who, even though they are off in the private sector, are somehow still viewed as being part of a bigger interconnected family of individuals involved in an exchange-of-favors game. Go to Atlantic Yards Report’s story: How Rudy Giuliani gave Bruce Ratner and Jim Stuckey parking permits, Saturday, (April 18, 2009). It tells of how, in December 1988, the Guiliani administration was handing out city parking privileges (for 1989) to special selected political supporters who were not government officials.
Atlantic Yards Report’s story is mainly about how two such specially benefitted nongovernment -officials, "Democrats for Giuliani" developer Bruce Ratner and Forest City Ratner executive Jim Stuckey. Each of these individuals were obviously key private sector protagonists in the massive subsidy collection endeavor known as Atlantic Yards. Rather than describe these individuals as political supporters or campaign contributors the Guiliani administration memo obscures their cozy status by referring to them as “FORMER GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS.” Right, former government officials who are being treated as if they are still part of an inside club entitled to special privileges! Bruce Ratner served as city Consumer Affairs Commissioner. Out in the “private sector” Ratner hired Jim Stuckey, who had served as head of the Public Development Corporation. (Stucky’s government experience equipped him to abuse and pervert eminent domain practices to go after special windfall benefits for Ratner at Atlantic Yards.)
Here is the Bloombergian part of the story not pointed out by Atlantic Yards Report: Also on the list of “FORMER GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS” treated to these special high-level privileges was Bloomberg LP’s Patti Harris (picture above) who had worked for the Koch administration. (See the image supplied by Atlantic Yards Report where we have added one extra circle around Ms. Harris name. Click to enlarge.) At the time Ms. Harris, working in the private sector for Bloomberg, was overseeing its Philanthropy, Public Relations, and Governmental Affairs divisions. It is ironic that Ms. Harris, who apparently knew about and got in on this high-level special benefit (and felt entitled to it!) is, as we have already noted in other pieces, one of Mayor Bloomberg’s chief political gatekeepers when it comes to handing out Bloombergian benefits, both from his privately controlled charities and also what issues from City Hall. Yes, Ms. Harris is the one who calls up recipients of Bloomberg’s private “charity” to make them uncomfortable when they contribute to Bloomberg’s political opposition. (See: Tuesday, February 3, 2009, The Good News IS the Bad News: Thanks A lot for Mayor Bloomberg’s “Charity” (Part II) and Sunday, April 12, 2009, Bloomberg Update: Fire and Ice.)
The Hevesi Pay-to-Play Pension Fund Investment Scandal: How Now, Mr. Bloomberg?
Another update concerns a rather big emerging scandal involving the intersection of Wall Street and government. Are we surprised or not that Bloomberg’s name came up in this ever-expanding Hevesi play-to-pay investment scandal? Consider how that factors into concerns about quid pro quoing in the Bloomberg administration.
According to inside sources, documents in the investigation say that Steven Rattner, co-founder of the Quadrangle Group, the prominent private equity firm, arranged for his investment firm to pay $1.1 million to obtain New York State pension business. Right now, Mr. Rattner is receiving a lot of focus because he is, as the New Times puts it: “The man leading the Obama administration’s efforts to restructure the auto industry.” In other words, he was selected as Obama’s new “car czar.” We focus here on the fact that Rattner’s Quadrangle Asset Management (focused on investing in media and communications companies) is the firm named “to manage the personal and family foundation assets of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.” Rattner is apparently a former Times reporter, so watching what kind of coverage this gets from the Times will be interesting.
This brings us back to where we started: Bloomberg is once more offering praise for a Wall Street guy for his “competence.” According to Crains and other sources:
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg considers Mr. Rattner a friend and praised him earlier this month as a "phenomenally competent guy." The billionaire mayor's investments are handled by Quadrangle Asset Management, which is part of the Quadrangle Group.NPR’s Report (and others) adds more Bloombergian praise:
"He's very philanthropic, he's been a great New Yorker," Bloomberg said on April 2.(See: Obama auto adviser embroiled in pay to play probe, from The Associated Press.)
According to multiple reports, Crains and NPR included, Bloomberg’s personal relationship with Rattner was very close, close enough so that he conferred with Rattner about the Obama position:
Bloomberg said he and Mr. Rattner had discussed whether Mr. Rattner should take on the Obama administration job.(See: April 17, 2009, White House stands by auto adviser Rattner President Obama’s press secretary says administration was aware of allegations that former private-equity executive paid more than $1 million to secure business with New York’s employee pension fund.)
"We did have conversations about whether he should do it," Mr. Bloomberg said. The mayor, who was a businessman before he entered politics, said he warned Mr. Rattner there was a lot to think about before going into public service, including "the disclosure issues."
The integrity of relationship of individuals handling Mr. Bloomberg’s personal and foundation assets is very important because Bloomberg is officially supposed to be subject to restrictions on the way that his private funds are invested and what he is allowed to know or have communicated to him about them. (See: Ruling Allows Wider Investment Options for Bloomberg and His Foundation, by Ray Rivera, December 27, 2007.)
The current set of restrictions are a new, more relaxed set of restrictions, As we wrote before:
The new Conflicts of Interest Board requirements were new because they were requirements that were being relaxed from what was previously required. At the same time, long into Bloomberg’’s second term, it was being reported that Bloomberg had not complied with requirements to avoid conflicts that the Conflicts of Interest Board imposed upon him at the beginning of his first term.And we wrote about the new requirements:
Specifically this was spelled out as the arrangements with which the mayor (Ms. Harris too?) was theoretically expected to comply:We asked before whether this was only meant to sound good to the public. In that vein we must now ask whether Mr. Rattner’s integrity, when he handles Mr. Bloomberg’s investments, is up to such rigorous standards. If people like Rattner can’t be trusted in this regard it could provide a contributing explanation for Bloomberg’s amazing skyrocketing wealth.Under the arrangement, the mayor will select one or more investment firms to oversee his personal and charitable foundation’s investment strategies, and then recuse himself from any city business involving those firms.
The firms will then choose managers who will carry out the investment decisions, but their identities will not be shared with the mayor, the board said.
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. . . the mayor could advise the investment firms about categories of investments and could hire or fire managers based on reports about their performance. But the mayor must receive no information about the specific holdings in his or the foundation’s accounts, and must not know the identities of the managers, the board said.
Hevesi Investigation Continues Heavily
The investigation, which the Times describes as “sprawling,” is being conducted by both Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo’s office and then the Securities and Exchange Commission:
In 2007, Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo’s office and then the Securities and Exchange Commission took over the inquiry, which has ballooned into a sprawling investigation involving some of the most prominent players in New York’s political and financial worlds.Whatever confidence is currently being expressed, we are still in suspense about where the investigation will lead:
Hundreds of investment firms have been subpoenaed. Three people have been criminally charged and another has pleaded guilty to a felony. And the scandal has grabbed the attention of Wall Street, as members of the investment establishment’s top tier now face scrutiny.
Mr. Cuomo emphasized this week that more developments were to come. “We do expect additional charges because we have other cases that are being worked up as we speak,” he said. “The investigation is continuing.”(See: In State Pension Inquiry, a Scandal Snowballs, by Danny Hakim and Mary Williams Walsh, April 17, 2009.)
If more aspects of the investigation concerning Mr. Bloomberg surface, dynamics could prove quite interesting as Mr. Cuomo and Mr. Bloomberg could be running against each other for governor in 2010, even if Bloomberg wins the mayoralty in 2009. (In terms of political step-ups, Bloomberg might also be take his defense of Wall Street show on the road with another run for the presidency, taking on Obama, whom he did not support, in the 2012 race.)
BTW: We have previously made the point (in the context of inspector generals for Atlantic Yards) that when multiple prosecutorial agencies are involved, investigations are often more vigorous. (See: Wednesday, April 15, 2009, Permission to Speak Frankly: How We Know More and Less From Breakfast Interviews With Marisa Lago.)
The Bloombergain Endorsement Juggernaut: Will the Unwary Be Besmirched?
We will conclude this set of updates with the latest on Mr. Bloomberg’s continuing accumulation of endorsements which we think he is garnering from the unperspicacious. Newark mayor Cory Booker has endorsed Bloomberg. (See: Newark Mayor Cory Booker agrees to endorse N.Y.C. Mayor Michael Bloomberg for re-election, by The Star-Ledger Continuous News Desk, April 17, 2009.) Booker, the mayor of New Jersey’s largest city, is a rising star, and until we hear something that convinces us otherwise we are quite impressed by him. Still, it is a symptom of current misalignments that Mr. Booker is endorsing Bloomberg at this juncture without having to wonder whether doing so will ultimately besmirch his own name. The New York Times print edition ran the story of Booker’s endorsement (also mentioning the prior day’s endorsement by Jerramiah T. Healy, the mayor of Jersey City) in the middle of a sea of surrounding print covering a story they gave much more attention to: Bloomberg’s insensitive treatment of a disabled journalist at a press conference. (See: April 17, 2009, Backing for Bloomberg, From Newark, by David W. Chen and A Bloomberg Apology (Sort Of) Is Accepted (Sort Of), by Julie Bosman, April 17, 2009.)
This kind of coverage (click image below to enlarge) doesn’t look auspicious for Mr. Booker or for future endorsers of Mr. Bloomberg. Bloomberg buyers beware! If you wonder more will emerge, just note: All of the above represent just one week’s worth of reported updates about Mr. Bloomberg.
Your blog wondered about the connection of Tarragon Realty (Martha's real estate company board job) and her other official duties. It is pretty obvious that Carl Weisbrod, President of Trinty Land Management Company, also served on Tarragon and who also served on the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC) with Martha Stark. Also serving both the LMDC and Tarragon were representatives of Brookfield Properties, the largest office landlord in Manhattan.
ReplyDeleteIt is sad how no one really brought up the fact that Martha Stark also vetted and approved the contracts for John Galt to tear down the Deutsche Bank building that ultimately killed two firefighters.
Martha Stark and the Mayor have had a strange relationship. Here is a piece of the puzzle that I know about:
ReplyDeleteMartha Stark and City Hall