petters

Victims of the $3.6 billion financial fraud by Minnesota businessman Tom Petters are justifiably angry about the federal victim-restitution process that began after his 2008 arrest. The feds used hardball tactics to install well-connected cronies in key positions, which should trouble anyone who fears the precedent if their own finances get trapped in such a dispute nationally. Most remarkable was that the federal judge supervising the case named the prominent local attorney Douglas Kelley to be court receiver and U.S. trustee. This was even though Petters, above as shown shortly after his arrest in 2008, had previously hired Kelley to defend his companies. Victims are so disturbed at such decision-making and what they regard as excessive legal fees by Kelley and his team that some of them financed The Second Fraud , a documentary about their case that premieres Aug. 25 at the Uptown Theater in Minneapolis for a one-night showing. On behalf of the Justice Integrity Project , I’m on a seven-person panel assembling there to discuss the case after the movie. Kelley and at least four other representatives of the government or Petters defense were invited, but none have confirmed. Here’s a look at the discussion about this fascinating case: For more than a decade, Tom Petters masterminded the first multi-billion dollar U.S. “Ponzi scheme” ever discovered. Authorities raided his companies on Sept. 24, 2008 after a tip from his former receptionist-lover, who’d received $8 million in bonuses during her ascendancy into his executive ranks. Petters, a college drop-out now aged 53, received 50-year prison term in April. This ended his huge donations to leading politicians in both major parties, his swank lifestyle, and his control of such well-known companies as Polaroid and Sun Country Airlines. But Second Fraud filmmaker Ryan Frost says: Ultimately we discovered a tangled web of local professionals: judges, politicians and lawyers, some of which may have knowingly or unknowingly allowed the Petters fraud to perpetuate in the first place. Now these groups are left in charge to clean up the mess. As hundreds of years of legal precedent are blatantly ignored, creditors and victims are crying foul from the sidelines as they are swindled a second time by the very system that is in place to protect them. On Friday, I published a column as part of my legal reform group’s research on such situations nationally. During the post-film panel, I’ll be among those arguing that Petters oversight so far fails to provide the legal checks-and-balances among various litigants we need to protect the victims of such cases. First-hand accounts will come from Chicago hedge fund manager Thane Ritchie and New Jersey liquidator William Procida, who was elected by creditors such as Richie to be receiver via a process in Illinois promptly after the fraud was discovered. Procida, who says he’s handled the liquidation of billions of dollars of assets, will describe how Kelley used his twin roles as Petters attorney and as a former prosecutor to consolidate power in unusual ways. Among them was the decision by U.S. District Judge Ann Montgomery to issue an order that empowered Kelley, her former law school classmate and colleague at the Justice Department. The order also granted Kelley judge-like immunity, thereby limiting the ability of various parties to force oversight. Count me among those who don’t understand the fascination with handing off complex problems in this way, even to well-credentialed private attorneys. To be sure, a special master is a longstanding concept. But this kind of vast power potentially has life-or-death consequences for companies and people alike, with too few due process rights. Kelley essentially runs the show in Minnesota for victims nationwide. Kelley is subject largely to post-decision review by the judge, who named him ex parte in a private meeting. Creditors claim the Petters assets are being chewed up in legal fees, forfeitures to federal government and other controversial transactions. In response, Kelley argues in his occasional public remarks that his decision-making balances the best interests of all to obtain optimal returns. Neither Kelley nor the judge has responded to my invitations for comment. Others on the post-film panel with its creator Frost will be law professor Richard Painter, bankruptcy expert Garrett Vail and longtime journalist James Merriner, author of the spiked ad campaign decrying court oversight of the Petters case. The moderator is Bill Hillsman, founder of the ad agency that created Minnesota’s campaign victories for underdog Senate Democratic candidate Paul Wellstone in 1992 and third-party gubernatorial candidate Jesse Ventura in 1998. Nationally, some take the problem of excessive bankruptcy fees as a big problem. The American Bankruptcy Institute published a report in July entitled, “When a Pig Becomes a Hog….” Without mincing words, the report quotes a Texas judge as saying last year: “At some time [the] Court must draw the line as to what is reasonable and what is not.” The judge concluded, “When a pig becomes a hog it is slaughtered.” That’s Texas talk, and perhaps a little rough for sensibilities elsewhere. But $3 billion in missing assets with only lawyers to help can be worse than tough talk. For some, it’s grim reality.

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Andrew Kreig: Victims In $3.6 Billion Ponzi Protest Court Process

By Bob Van Voris March 8 (Bloomberg) — Petters Group Worldwide LLC founder Thomas Petters , convicted of running a $3.5 billion fraud, should be sentenced to 335 years in prison, U.S. prosecutors recommended. Petters, 52, was convicted in December of 20 criminal counts in what prosecutors said is the biggest fraud in Minnesota history. In a sentencing memorandum filed today, they asked U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle in St. Paul to give Petters the maximum sentence, more than twice the 150-year prison term given to Bernard Madoff . “The defendant’s fraud is staggering and unprecedented in size and impact on victims and the community,” prosecutors argued in the court filing. Petters ran a Minnetonka, Minnesota-based business empire that bought companies including Sun Country Airlines Inc. and Polaroid Corp. until federal agents raided his home and offices on Sept. 24, 2008. Petters used one of his companies, Petters Co. Inc., or PCI, in an illegal scheme that raised cash to support his money-losing businesses and lavish personal lifestyle, prosecutors said at his trial last year. Petters was convicted of all of the counts against him, including fraud, conspiracy and money laundering, by a federal jury in St. Paul. ‘Not Evil’ “Petters is imperfect, yes, but not evil,” said Paul Engh, one of Petters’s lawyers, in court papers also filed today, urging Kyle to sentence his client to less than 13 years. Prosecutors claim Petters used PCI to lure hedge funds and other investors into giving him money to finance non-existent deals to buy shipments of consumer goods. Government lawyers argued in their papers today that Petters defrauded his best friend, his father-in-law and a long- time business partner to keep his illegal scheme afloat. Other victims included “at least 10 pastors, three missionaries and dozens of retired, elderly individuals,” they said. Petters, who testified in his own defense, claimed he was innocent and that the fraud was committed without his knowledge by former company Vice President Deanna Coleman and Robert White , the company’s former chief financial officer. Petters also told jurors that the 2004 murder of his son forced him to rely on Coleman instead of paying attention to the affairs of his company. Secret Tapes During the trial, prosecutors played tape-recorded conversations secretly made by Coleman, who turned in Petters to the authorities and testified against him. “That Mr. Petters sprinted out from St. Cloud and a small stereo store, that his reach would exceed his grasp, that he over-promised and underperformed, that he loved his life and his family and his employees and the memory of his murdered son, that he gave millions away, that he acted as a mentor, bought businesses and was visible in the community are all true,” Engh said, in papers quoting Albert Camus , F. Scott Fitzgerald , Walt Whitman and Joan Didion . Engh said Petters has a tumor on his pituitary gland and described him as a “marked man in prison” based on the notoriety of his case. Engh also cited the non-violent nature of the crimes, Petters’s philanthropy and the demands by his hedge- fund victims for unreasonable rates of return. “The victims’ conduct contributed to the loss,” Engh said. “By requiring inordinate returns, the hedge funds and their investors assured themselves a failed business model.” Petters is scheduled to be sentenced April 8. Madoff, 71, pleaded guilty last year to running the biggest Ponzi scheme in history. He is serving his 150-year sentence in a federal prison in North Carolina. The case is U.S. v. Thomas Joseph Petters, 08-00364, U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota (St. Paul). To contact the reporters on this story: Bob Van Voris in St. Paul, Minnesota, at rvanvoris@bloomberg.net .

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Petters Should Get 335 Years for $3.5 Billion Fraud, Prosecutors Recommend