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International-UN-NGOs
Benon Sevan Threatens Retribution If His Legal Fees Are Not Paid
2005-04-28
Benon Sevan, who once headed the United Nations' oil-for-food program, hinted in a recent letter to the U.N. chief of staff, Mark Malloch Brown, that he would consider retributions against the organization if it refused to reimburse the mounting legal fees he has incurred while attempting to fend off allegations related to the program.
"Retribution"? What's he gonna do? Kneecap Fred Eckhard? Kidnap Kojo and rough him up?
The letter adds to growing tensions among lawyers, the United Nations, and a host of investigators who are investigating the scandals swirling around oil for food. Defense attorneys employed by oil-for-food players now include influential Washington lawyers known for taking on high-profile cases - and demanding fat fees. Indeed, two former law partners, both of whom served on President Clinton's defense team during the 1990s impeachment hearings, may soon be pitted against one another: Gregory Craig and Lanny Davis. Mr. Davis now represents a former Volcker committee investigator, Robert Parton, who resigned citing principal differences with others on the team. The disagreements led to the Volcker team softening its conclusions about Secretary-General Annan, who is represented by Mr. Craig.
Pass the popcorn, please...
The April 10 letter to Mr. Malloch Brown was penned by Mr. Sevan's somewhat lower-profile lawyer, Eric Lewis. Mr. Lewis demanded that the United Nations reconsider its prior decision not to reimburse the legal fees incurred by Mr. Sevan as result of oil-for-food accusations. "We want to do this in a confidential manner" but under certain circumstances, "we might have to reconsider," the letter said, according to a senior U.N. official who spoke to The New York Sun on condition of anonymity. Mr. Lewis implied in his letter that Mr. Sevan could go public with the circumstances surrounding the initial promise by the United Nations to cover Mr. Sevan's legal fees - and the organization's subsequent about-face. Mr. Sevan's knowledge of the program might include potentially damaging information about several U.N. officials.
You mean all that stuff that was supposed to have been disclosed, given a full and transparent investigatory process?
After the Sun reported last month the decision to reimburse Mr. Sevan's legal fees with funds left over from the oil-for-food account, Mr. Malloch Brown announced the decision would be reversed. "That decision by the secretary general has not changed," a U.N. spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, told the Sun yesterday. "The U.N. will not pay Mr. Sevan's fees."
"We don't think he's got nuttin' Kofi's mouthpiece can't handle!"
Mr. Lewis did not return phone calls to his office yesterday. Separately, several congressional sources confirmed to the Sun yesterday that Mr. Parton has retained Mr. Davis as his attorney. Mr. Parton has said he had resigned from the Volcker committee over disagreements on investigative procedures. After Mr. Parton's resignation, Paul Volcker told Fox News on Tuesday that "There should not be and has not been any question as to whether the report itself reviewed all the investigative leads."
But if the leads weren't offered up in the first place, there wasn't anything to investigate, was there?
Mr. Parton might soon be called to testify before some of the eight congressional committees investigating the oil-for-food scandal. This could lead to legal complications, as IIC members have signed certain confidentiality agreements. The circumstances surrounding the recent resignation of Mr. Parton and his colleague, Miranda Duncan, from the IIC, are "a matter of great concern to the chairman," said a staffer at the office of Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, Republican of California, who heads the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. The staffer added, however, that no decision has been made yet on whether to call Mr. Parton or Ms. Duncan to testify. The congressional committee begins a separate oil-for-food hearing today on the role of BNP Paribas, the French based bank with a New York branch that was hired by the United Nations and Saddam Hussein to handle the escrow account where most of the proceeds from Iraq's oil sales were deposited. BNP is represented by yet another onetime Clinton lawyer, Robert Bennett. Mr. Davis, a partner in the law firm Orrick, Herrington,& Sutcliffe, told the Sun yesterday that for the time being, Mr. Parton is trying to avoid commenting on his resignation or on the work of the Volcker committee. Mr. Craig, of Williams and Connolly, was the White House legal adviser during Mr. Clinton's impeachment hearings. A U.N. spokesman, Fred Eckhard, told the Sun that Mr. Craig offered his services to Mr. Annan "as a friend" and for is working on a pro-bono basis. No U.N. funds would be used to pay his services, the spokesman said.
Heh. Popcorn, anyone?
Posted by:.com

#10  Nothing worse than a bevy of lawyers wondering which firm won't get paid.
Sell the book rights, Beno. That will generate the cash you will need for your defense.
Posted by: Capsu78   2005-04-28 5:11:16 PM  

#9  
What's he gonna do? Kneecap Fred Eckhard? Kidnap Kojo and rough him up?

I'd settle for shooting Jan Egeland.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-04-28 4:04:06 PM  

#8  Don't go out fishing, Benon.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2005-04-28 2:41:49 PM  

#7  Go on, Benon, retribute.

Go for it!

We need some new entertainment. :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-04-28 1:06:22 PM  

#6  What's Eliot Spitzer waiting for? About time someone subpoena'ed Paribas. Threaten to revoke their NY State banking charter.
Posted by: thibaud (aka lex)   2005-04-28 12:37:36 PM  

#5  What does he need money for? Seems that he has plenty of relatives that lived in poverty but were in fact wealthy. His recently deceased aunt left in a tidy sum of money but he forgot to report it to the Turkish authorities. Most of them have to be getting on in age and can't tell if the elevator is actually on the same floor before they step into the shaft. Couple more of them pass on and he will be sitting pretty. I think that maybe the LLL should form some legal defense group becuase they seem to be always getting in trouble with the law.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-04-28 11:27:58 AM  

#4  Greg Craig certainly taps the bottom of the barrel for clients...
Posted by: Frank G   2005-04-28 9:56:00 AM  

#3  Benon, never takes sides against the family. In house, that "stern reprimand" bullshit goes out the window. Don't take money out of my pocket, Benon. You wouldn't like what happens...
Posted by: Kofi A.   2005-04-28 9:04:11 AM  

#2  Threatening to spill the beans,is he.This is likely to get very entertaining.
Posted by: raptor   2005-04-28 7:42:58 AM  

#1  ...What's the old saying about honor among thieves?

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2005-04-28 7:21:32 AM  

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