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The Stockman Dismissal: What Really Happened?

Posted on Monday, January 12, 2009 at 10:00AM by Registered CommenterJ. Robert Brown | Comments4 Comments

The decision of the government to drop the case came as a surprise. We can only speculate on the reasons for the decision but we present some of our thoughts on the matter.

The criminal case against David Stockman had been ongoing for almost two years (the indictment was filed in March 2007).  The case at its core was a fraud suit alleging that the defendants had inflated operating income by improperly recognizing certain supplier rebates.  According to the complaint, C&A improperly accounted for rebate payments from suppliers.  Some of the rebates allegedly came with secret promises of repayment while others were alleged to have been booked prematurely.

The government, therefore, confronted what looked like a relatively complicated accounting case, not the best thing to put before a jury.  Moreover, the case was extraordinary in its volume, encompassing more than 15 million documents.  Logistics and case management would be a chore.  At the same time, defense counsel was putting on a vigorous defense despite exhaustion of the D&O insurance policy. 

Finally, a decision needed to be made quickly.  The trial was looming, with the date set in May.  While there was a possibility some of the defendants would seek a continuance, Paul Barnaba had a motion to sever pending (filed by his counsel Solomon Wisenberg) and, consistent with his position throughout, was seeking a trial date as quickly as possible.  Even if a continuance had been granted, the trial judge would have been hesitant to delay Barnaba's trial beyond May.  One way or another there was likely to be a trial in May.

In addition, decision may have been influenced by a series of high profile losses for the US Attorneys Office in the Southern District in securities/while collar cases, including a recent acquittal of a stock trader who worked for a NYSE specialist and a mixed verdit in the KPMG case (after most defendants had been dismissed).  Add in that the Stockman trial was eating up resources just as the Southern District was gearing up to handle the Madoff case, another matter likely to involve considerable attorney/investigator time.

All of this was taking place just as the new administration was coming into office, with a pending decision on the new US Attorney for the Southern District.  The existing US Attorney, Michael Garcia, stepped down in December, replaced by Acting USA, Lev Dassin.  This is, as a result, a good time to get rid of problematic cases, both to clear the docket of the new US Attorney and to avoid the potential for another embarrassing loss.

For documents filed in this case including many of the status hearings before the trial judge, go to the DU Corporate Governance web site.

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Reader Comments (4)

I'm just a casual reader of your blog and do enjoy it. This particular posting caught my attention because of what it did not say. Unless I missed it, none of your "thoughts on the matter" addressed the possibility that the defendants were actually innocent. That surprised me so I thought I would mention it.
January 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJust a casual reader
Appropriate point that ought to have been mentioned in the post. Frankly, from what I knew about David Stockman, securities fraud struck me as unlikely. Thanks for pointing out the omission.
January 12, 2009 | Registered CommenterJ. Robert Brown
No comment on Stockman's "innocence", but one of the defendant's in that case was innocent. He was the collateral damage of a flawed system.
How about being the family of the innocent defendant? How about the divorced, broken hearted young children, shunned by some members of the community who believed what they read, because it was from “the government”, instead of what they’ve should have known about us… All for NOTHING. A story of a four year ordeal brought by an overzealous young prosecutor trying to get the “big fish” and it didn’t matter what other fish were in the net, a government that is not always fair, a love story that came to an ugly end under all the pressure, the innocent children who’ve suffered terribly , the greedy lawyers (even those that practiced “unethical” conduct in this case- although in the end, there was one, who knew the true meaning of “humanity” vs greed), and the true lessons in life that you learn about people, (most were not always “pretty” , but some “inspiring” and worthy of great thanks.) A story of survival… emotionally, spiritually, financially, in the depths of a troubled auto industry and an even more troubled government. What happened to "the
presumption of innocence until proven guilty?" I'd like to ask that to the members of our community who pretended they didn't see us, hid in stores where we shopped, wouldn't let their kids play.

Anyone interested in the rights to this story ?? Let me know. A fascinating read or movie, and it is all true. It is my life. Finally, one miserable chapter closed.
January 14, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterpatcri
One of the lessons from this case is that -- contrary to conventional wisdom -- generous record retention at a corporation can play to the favor of management. See analysis at http://legal-beagle.typepad.com/wrights_legal_beagle/2009/01/exculpatory-electronic-mail.html --Ben
June 30, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBenjamin Wright

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