Banks
Accused Of Fixing Bond Prices
Jam Courtroom of Judge Rakoff In
Race To The Bottom
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 23 – Plaintiffs
including
Pennsylvania
Treasurer
Joseph M.
Torsella are
suing more
than a dozen
banks for
allegedly
fixing the
price of
housing bonds.
On
July 23 the
courtroom of
U.S. District
Court for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Jed S. Rakoff
was
overflowing
with bank
lawyers and,
in a corner by
the window in
a chair from
the jury room,
Inner City
Press.
Goldman
Sachs' lawyer
from Sullivan
& Cromwell
Richard C.
Pepperman II
urged Judge
Rakoff to
adopt the
"rule of
reason"
standard, and
repeatedly
said that he
would bet his
daughter's
college
tuition on
this or that
proposition.
She's going to
have to take
out so many
loans, Judge
Rakoff parried
back.
"If
the right
candidate wins
in 2020, the
loans will all
be forgiven,"
Pepperman as
progressive,
faux or not,
replied.
For
the plaintiffs
Amanda F.
Lawrence of
Scott &
Scott said
that beyond
the four
trader-chats
made part of
the complaint
she had many
more. In one,
a Morgan
Stanley trader
urged avoiding
a race to the
bottom,
seemingly
meaning actual
competition on
price. The
case is In
re GSE Bonds
Antitrust
Litigation,
19-cv-01704 (JSR).
When
Ms. Lawrence
said, My
colleague to
speak to
that," Judge
Rakoff said,
"I'll hear
from
him."
"Or
her," Ms.
Lawrence
replied,
introducing
her female
co-counsel.
Quick on his
feet while on
the bench, Jed
Rakoff said I
didn't know
you'd brought
your best.
More on
Patreon here.
Pepperman
said he had
cited three
cases, one by
SDNY Judge
Engelmayer,
another from
the Eastern
District and a
third from the
Eighth
Circuit. Judge
Rakoff said, I
always pay
attention to
what Judge
Engelmayer
writes. The
Eight Circuit?
He rolled his
eyes and the
nervous bank
lawyers
laughed.
SDNY
Judge Berman
was also
cited, as
having asked
to be spaced
1,900 examples
of price
fixing. But
he's a young
kid, Judge
Rakoff said,
again to
laughter.
First
Tennessee
alone among
the many banks
with lawyers
in the
gallery, on
the press
benches and in
the jury box,
spoke up and
tried to get
itself
released from
the case. The
gambit appears
based on not
reporting its
data into the
set the
plaintiffs ar
using. But
they say they
have more
chats. Judge
Rakoff said
it's all gone
sub judice.
Inner City
Press will
continue to
cover this and
other cases.
There
are no fewer
that four big
oil cases
pending
against the
Nigerian
National
Petroleum
Corporation
(NNPC) in the
U.S. District
Court for the
Southern
District of
New York. The
cases involve
arbitration
awards and
various oil
fields; a
backdrop
includes
longstanding
human rights
abuses by and
allegations of
corruption in
Nigeria's oil
sector.
Back
on July 16
Inner City
Press sought
to attend and
cover a status
confernce in
one of the
cases, Statoil
and Texaco v.
NNPC,
18-cv-02392
before SDNY
Judge Richard
M. Berman. But
the matter was
put over until
July 23 at
noon.
When Inner
City Press
arrived at
noon, both the
plaintiffs and
defendants
tables were
full; the
courtroom was
otherwise
empty.
The
law firm for
Texaco and
Statoil,
Freshfields
Bruckhaus
Deringer US
LLP quickly
told Judge
Berman that
the proceeding
should be off
the record and
"in
camera."
Judge
Berman said
"we have a
member of the
press in the
courtroom, a
blogger," and
asked the
parties to say
what they
could in open
court. The
request, in
essence, was
for a stay of
the
proceedings,
such as
similar cases
before SDNY
Judges Stanton
and Kaplan
have been
stayed. (SDNY
Judge William
Pauley has
pushed one of
the four cases
forward, on
which we
intend to
report
more.)
The
Freshfields
counsel told
Judge Berman
that a six
months stay
would avoid
for the court
"the burden of
heavy
discovery and
motion
practice."
Judge
Berman
replied,
"That's why
we're here,
it's not
really a
burden for
us."
The
law firm for
the Nigerian
state oil
company,
Chaffetz
Lindsey LLP,
repeated the
argument for
secrecy. In a
July 18 letter
to Judge
Berman marked
"MEMO
ENDORSED" the
firm wrote "on
behalf of all
parties to
respectfully
request that
the status
conference
scheduled for
next Tuesday,
July 23, take
place in
camera and
that any
transcript of
the
proceedings be
placed under
seal."
Judge
Berman to his
credit
declined to
taken things
off the
record. He
told the
parties that
he was
granting their
request for a
stay, until
January 14,
2020 at 11 AM
but that it is
"very likely
there will be
no further
stay."
Will
the same apply
to the
Nigerian
National
Petroleum
Corporation
cases before
SDNY Judges
Stanton and
Kaplan? Watch
this site. The
full case name
is Statoil
(Nigeria)
Limited and
Texaco Nigeria
Outer Shelf
Limited v.
Nigerian
National
Petroleum
Corporation,
18-cv-02392
(RMB).
Footnote:
Ironically,
the Nigerian
government
through its
Mission to the
UN has argued
elsewhere in
the SDNY that
the recent
elections
explained it
failure to
even respond
to a lawsuit
by a young New
Yorker run
over by a
Nigerian
Mission
vehicle with
both
registration
and insurance
expired.
Here's that
story, July
10:
A
few blocks
from the
United Nations
on 49th Street
and Second
Avenue on 6
April 2018
Jennifer A.
Edward was
heading to her
work as a
lawfirm
paralegal when
a Nigerian
Mission to the
UN vehicle
struck her,
causing
serious
injury.
The vehicle's
registration
and insurance
were both
expired, in
violation of
the U.S.
Diplomatic
Relations Act.
The
driver who was
working for
Nigeria's
Mission had
previously had
accidents. But
Nigeria and
its mission
refused to
pay, or even
fo months to
respond to the
lawsuit that
was filed, and
legally served
as far away as
Nigeria. Call
it impunity,
so prevalent
in and around
the
UN.
On
July 10 the
case came up
before U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Paul G.
Gardephe.
While denying
Ms. Edward's
motion for
default
judgment,
Judge Gardephe
essentially
mocked the
Nigerian
Mission's
argument that
they needed
more time to
explore the
issue of
pre-existing
condition.
Ms.
Edward is in
her 20s, and
has run a New
York City
marathon. The
Nigerian
mission in
belated
filings with
Judge Gardephe
has tried to
blame their
failure to
response on
the recent
elections
leading to the
continuation
of rule by
President
Buhari.
Inner
City Press,
having seen
Buhari's
administration
engage in
illegal refoulement
to Cameroon,
unremarked on
by the UN's
Nigerian
Deputy
Secretary
General Amina
J. Mohammed,
and having
seen the UN
claim impunity
for cholera in
Haiti and
roughing up
and banning
the Press in
New York, went
to cover the
July 10
proceeding.
Afterward
it spoke
generally with
Ms. Edward's
lawyer Scott
A. Harford. He
explained the
difficulty of
getting the
lawsuit served
in Nigeria,
and the lack
of
responsiveness
by the U.S.
Mission to the
UN which is
supposed to
ensure that
other
countries'
Missions to
the UN at
least maintain
car insurance.
The
case is moving
to Magistrate
Judge Debra C.
Freeman, more
on Patreon here, and Inner City
Press will
continue to
cover and
pursue this
and other
related cases.
***
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
Mail: Box
20047, Dag
Hammarskjold
Station NY NY
10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2019 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|