Lerach Gets Two
The Wall Street Journal
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Tort baron Bill Lerach was sentenced to two years in prison
yesterday, and he can consider himself a lucky man.
His defense team had sought six months in the slammer and six
months of home confinement for admitting that he had paid
kickbacks to plaintiffs for helping him gin up securities class
actions in the 1990s. The sentencing guidelines call for a
slightly stiffer sentence, but 24 months is what the prosecution
had requested as part of the forgiving plea deal he agreed to
last year. He was also fined $250,000 on top of the $8 million
in disgorgements and penalties in the plea -- though he stands
to make as much as $50 million as part of the Enron class action
settlement.
Mr. Lerach's lawyers also contended that he had accepted
responsibility for his misdeeds. This is how he defined that
"responsibility" in an op-ed piece published in the Washington
Post last November after this newspaper declined the
submission: "I'm on my way to prison because, in my zeal to
stand up against this kind of corporate greed over the years, I
stepped over the line."
Mr. Lerach built an entire lawsuit industry and grew very rich
on the back of illegal payments. The resulting proliferation of
strike suits has reduced the returns for investors large and
small. Yet in Mr. Lerach's view, secret, illegal payments to
professional plaintiffs in trumped-up shareholder class-actions
are a foot-fault.
Mr. Lerach's op-ed mentioned the architects of the Enron fraud,
but passed over the many decades worth of prison sentences
handed out in that case and others, such as WorldCom. Instead,
he offered up the following gem: "It turns out that the legal
system is a lot tougher on shareholder lawyers than it appears
to be on Wall Street executives." We doubt WorldCom's Bernie
Ebbers, serving not two but 25 years, agrees.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120277644109660707.html
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