It is my understanding that all firms are trying to emulate this one;-)
"June 11, 1999
Morgan Stanley Legal Chief Quits In the Wake of Curry Investigation
By LAURIE P. COHEN Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
NEW YORK -- Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. said its chief legal officer and another top attorney resigned in the wake of an internal investigation into a $10,000 payment to a police informant for a tip that led to the arrest of a fired employee.
The resignations are the latest twist in a case that has riveted Wall Street and caused considerable embarrassment for Morgan Stanley. The firm faces a discrimination suit and is being investigated for possible criminal wrongdoing by prosecutors over its failure to promptly disclose the payment.
Morgan Stanley said Christine Edwards, its top lawyer, decided to leave voluntarily following the internal probe by the law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison. The firm, which announced its conclusions Thursday, said Morgan Stanley didn't violate any laws but could have been "more timely, cooperative and forthright" in its dealings with law-enforcement authorities. Paul Weiss also said that Monroe Sonnenborn, a managing director who oversaw litigation, had resigned. People familiar with Mr. Sonnenborn's resignation said he did so under pressure.
The law firm, in its 18-day internal probe for Morgan Stanley, found that the $10,000 payment wasn't reported to the police or the New York County District Attorney's office when it was made last August, as it should have been. Paul Weiss also cleared Ms. Edwards of any wrongdoing, though she was consulted by Mr. Sonnenborn about the payment before it was made and could have stopped it. Nonetheless, Mrs. Edwards said she was leaving because the issues under investigation "happened on my watch."
The events leading to Morgan Stanley's internal investigation began with the April 1998 firing of Christian Curry, a former junior analyst who is black, for what the firm said was expense-account violations. The firing occurred shortly after nude photos of Mr. Curry appeared in a gay magazine.
Three months later, an informant, Charles Joseph Luethke, came to Morgan Stanley with a tip that Mr. Curry planned to break into the firm's e-mail system and plant phony racist messages that might help Mr. Curry in a discrimination suit he planned to file.
Mr. Luethke's tip -- and his participation in a sting operation engineered by New York City police last August -- led to Mr. Curry's arrest. Prosecutors charged Mr. Curry with paying $200 to an undercover policeman to break into Morgan Stanley's e-mail system. But last month, the district attorney's office dropped the charges, saying there were credibility problems with both the witness, Mr. Luethke, and the victim, Morgan Stanley. Prosecutors learned of the $10,000 payment from Mr. Luethke, who was arrested last September in a separate matter.
Despite the completion of the internal investigation, the events that led to it threaten to remain a public-relations nightmare for Morgan Stanley. The district attorney continues to investigate Morgan Stanley for possible obstruction of justice. And Mr. Curry, who has sued Morgan Stanley for $1.35 billion, has alleged that it was the nude photos and his race, rather than expense accountings, that led to his firing.
The company named Michael Stone to act as interim chief legal officer while it conducts a search.
Morgan Stanley said Thursday that it will defend itself "vigorously," and that the lawsuit is "without merit." Morgan Stanley is also saddled with having to replace Mrs. Edwards, who the firm said resigned despite the fact that its 15-member management committee voted unanimously to support her and "asked her to reconsider." In addition to Mr. Sonnenborn, who resigned, another lawyer had been suspended in connection with the investigation. That lawyer, Carol Bernheim, will return to her job, Morgan Stanley said. Thursday night, Ms. Bernheim, who handles employment matters for Morgan Stanley, declined to comment.
Paul Weiss said that neither Morgan Stanley's chairman, Philip Purcell, nor its president and chief operating officer, John Mack, knew of the payment or of Mr. Luethke until eight months after the payment was made and Mr. Luethke "had begun to make extortionate demands on the firm." Mr. Luethke has denied that he sought to extort Morgan Stanley, although he, too, is under investigation by the district attorney's office.
Morgan Stanley didn't tell prosecutors about the Aug. 25 payment until six weeks after it was made, said Paul Weiss. Then, after Morgan Stanley received two grand jury subpoenas requesting information about Mr. Luethke and Mr. Curry last October, the firm didn't respond in a "timely, forthright and cooperative manner," Paul Weiss said. The law firm also said that Mrs. Edwards didn't learn of the subpoenas "until May 1999."
Individuals familiar with the full report said it puts virtually all the blame for the failure to make full disclosure to law-enforcement authorities on Mr. Sonnenborn and the New York law firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell. Mr. Sonnenborn and Davis Polk partner John Cooney Jr. dealt with prosecutors after the payment was made, these people said. Thursday night, Mr. Sonnenborn's attorney, Paul Grand, declined to comment. Mr. Cooney and other Davis Polk partners weren't available to comment.
Paul Weiss said that others besides Mr. Sonnenborn are to blame for the failure to keep Mrs. Edwards informed. Paul Weiss said that the first hint that Mrs. Edwards had of a payment to Mr. Luethke occurred on Aug. 24, the day before it was made, in a voicemail message from Mr. Sonnenborn, who sought her approval to release funds for that purpose. The law firm says that several days earlier Mr. Sonnenborn did tell his boss, Morgan Stanley General Counsel Ralph Pellecchio, of the plan to pay Mr. Luethke, and that Mr. Pellecchio didn't inform Mrs. Edwards either. Mr. Pellecchio remains at Morgan Stanley.
At the outset of the investigation, Mr. Purcell, Morgan Stanley's chairman, had said that the decision to pay Mr. Luethke was "a mistake in judgment that the firm deeply regrets." But Thursday night, in an interview, Mr. Purcell said that "Bad judgment isn't something you penalize people for in a risk business." He added, "We hold our people to the highest standards in terms of how we relate to legal authorities and when they ask us a question, we expect our people to give complete information."" |