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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Ex-party boss, fund manager plead guilty to NY kickbacks
2009-10-07
The former head of New York's Liberal Party and a founding partner of Aldus Equity have pleaded guilty to taking part in a kickback scheme that corrupted how the state pension fund chose investment managers, state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said on Tuesday.

The two-year probe, joined by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutors, has cast a spotlight on how pension funds in New York and other states may have favored fund managers that hired politically-connected middlemen, called placement agents.

Cuomo told reporters that he has so far collected $70 million from firms that wished to end their involvement in his investigation, a list that includes The Carlyle Group, one of the world's biggest private equity funds. Four of the six individuals charged have now pleaded guilty.

Raymond Harding, a lawyer whose leadership of the Liberal Party made him an influential figure in state politics, admitted to scheming with Hank Morris, the former comptroller's political advisor, and David Loglisci, who was the top investment officer, Cuomo said in a statement.

Both Morris and Loglisci have been indicted and their lawyers say their clients are innocent. Morris was charged with collecting millions of dollars in kickbacks; Loglisci's only tie was a stake in his brother's movie, Chooch, which he disclosed. Some investment mangers invested in the movie.

Morris "rewarded" Harding for political favors by helping him collect $800,000 in fees for serving as a "sham" placement agent, Cuomo said.

New York's $116 billion pension fund is run solely by the state comptroller. Cuomo's probe focused on the former state comptroller's tenure though he told reporters on a conference call that the corruption of the system dates back 30 years.

The favors Harding did for Morris included helping to create a vacant seat in the state Assembly so that Daniel Hevesi, the son of the former state comptroller, could run for that office, Cuomo said. Neither Assemblyman Hevesi nor former Comptroller Alan Hevesi, a Democrat, have been charged; their lawyers have denied any wrongdoing.

Loglisci's lawyers, Irving Seidman and Kevin Keating, in a statement said: "David Loglisci never even met Ray Harding and was not the chief investment officer of the Common Retirement Fund with respect to what Mr. Harding said in his plea."
Posted by:Fred

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