Wednesday, April 1, 2015

More pension shakedowns! There is so much $$$$ in that business. If you had any idea…...

Rahm Emanuel
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel (center) looks over at one of the Chicago Police Department's newest recruits during a graduation ceremony on April 21, 2014. 
Executives at investment firms that manage Chicago pension funds have since 2011 poured more than $600,000 in contributions into Mayor Rahm Emanuel's campaign operation and political action committees (PACs) that support him, according to documents reviewed by International Business Times. These contributions appear to flout federal rules banning companies that manage pension funds from financing the campaigns of officials with authority over pension systems, say legal experts.
The contributions also potentially conflict with an executive order Emanuel himself signed in 2011 prohibiting city
contractors and subcontractors from making campaign donations to city officials.
A former chief of staff to President Obama, Emanuel, a Democrat, was elected Chicago mayor three years ago with a substantial boost from financial services executives. Since 2011, at least 31 executives at firms that harvest fees by managing city pension funds have contributed to his campaign and associated PACs. That list of donors includes Kelly Welsh, a Northern Trust executive who was recently appointed by President Obama to the top legal position in the U.S. Commerce Department. (See related story here.)
Former prosecutors, corporate compliance attorneys and erstwhile officials at the Securities and Exchange Commission describe the donations as a clear breach of the spirit -- and perhaps the letter -- of the SEC's so-called pay-to-play rule, which seeks to prevent pension investments from being doled out as a form of patronage to those who contribute to campaigns.
"The management of municipal pensions should be totally transparent and free of political influence,” former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt told IBTimes after the Chicago contributions were described to him. “The acceptance of contributions by city officials from advisers managing city funds, in my book, smells like bribery.”
Emanuel did not respond to a request for comment.
Former prosecutors and SEC lawyers say the Chicago situation exemplifies a troubling national trend: Mayors and governors are taking office through, in part, the largesse of financial services companies that bankroll their campaigns, then using their newfound authority over pension systems to put public money into the hands of their donors.
“It looks like these contributions to Rahm Emanuel violate the pay-to-play prohibitions,” Melanie Sloan, a former federal prosecutor in the Clinton administration who now runs the group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said. “This is looking like a more significant problem throughout the country. Politicians are treating these rules as if they are meaningless and it is time for regulators to take action against all the violators. The SEC needs to step in and shut this down.”
The contributions to Emanuel from financial firms that manage municipal pension funds -- the retirement savings for city teachers, police, firefighters and other municipal employees --  appear to conflict with the objectives of the SEC's pay-to-play rule, which the commission enacted three years ago after a major pension corruption scandal in New York.
"Elected officials who allow political contributions to play a role in the management of these assets and who use these assets to reward contributors violate the public trust," the agency declared in announcing the rule. "They undermine the fairness of the process by which public contracts are awarded... They can harm pension plans that may subsequently receive inferior advisory services and pay higher fees. Ultimately, these violations of trust can harm the millions of retirees that rely on the plan."
The rule specifically prohibits financial firms from earning fees from public pension funds if their executives make campaign donations to the public officials who can exert influence over pension investments.
Emanuel qualifies as such an official, legal experts told IBTimes, because he and his administration appoint trustees to the boards that manage the $23 billion in Chicago's six municipal pension funds.
The rule applies to contributions to officials like Emanuel both before and during the term of an investment, even if -- as in Chicago’s case -- the original decision to invest in the firms was made before the public official took office. In its first enforcement action under the rule, in June, the agency explicitly said the rule applies even when there is no proof that campaign contributions were part of a "quid pro quo or actual intent to influence an elected official or candidate.” The prosecution of that first enforcement action involved contributions totaling just $4,500 -- far smaller than the amount of money that has flowed to Emanuel.
"The SEC could not be more clear: They don't care about intent or the actual ability to affect public activity -- it is purely a relationship-based penalty," Stefan Passantino, who runs the political law team at McKenna, Long & Aldridge LLP, said. "The entire reason these laws exist is because legislators can't always prove there is a direct linkage between the giving of money and the request for official favors as is the case with bribery, so they ban the conduct entirely."
The SEC’s chief of enforcement told a conference of financial executives this week that the commission is intensifying its scrutiny of the relationship between campaign contributions and public pension investments. In addition to the June enforcement action, SEC documents revealed this week that the agency is investigating the relationship between the public pension business of financial firm State Street and that firm’s political contributions and lobbying activities.
What the SEC rules mean, according to Jay Dubow, a former attorney in the SEC’s division of enforcement, is this: "You can either influence elections, or you can run funds that manage money for public entities. You cannot do both."
It appears that some companies did.
In Chicago, the John Buck Co. is currently listed as a real estate investment manager for two citypension funds. In all, the firm has managed $54 million of city pension money and has earned hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees from those funds since 2011. Executives of the company, which hasvarious business interests before the city government, recently gave more than $47,000 to Emanuel’s campaign. A firm executive also gave $10,500 to a political action committee that the Chicago Tribunenotes Emanuel “uses for political activities that support his policy initiatives at City Hall.”
The company declined IBTimes’ request for comment.
Madison Dearborn Partners, a private equity firm, manages Chicago pension money as one of a group of managers in a set of pooled investments. Company executives have contributed more than $52,000to Emanuel's campaign since 2011. The firm's executives also gave more than $456,000 to two political action committees set up by Emanuel associates to support the mayor.
Though the SEC rule and Emanuel's executive order seem on their face clear and unambiguous, the contributions from Madison Dearborn executives highlight one legal ambiguity that companies managing pension money may be relying on to continue directing cash to campaigns: The firm argues that it is essentially exempt from the restrictions because Madison Dearborn does not directly manage Chicago pension money. Rather, it manages Chicago money that is invested in a pooled investment vehicle known as a fund of funds. Madison Dearborn is one of a handful of companies in a pair of fund-of-funds that get Chicago pension cash.
“Madison Dearborn Partners is in full compliance with all SEC rules and legislation,” the company said in a written statement.
Public pension systems typically do not release the identities of a fund of funds managers -- sub-advisers, in the relevant legal parlance. They are usually known only by pension officials and the investment firms themselves. The public, meanwhile, can see only the identities of the firms running the entire fund of funds. But documents obtained by IBTimes reveal that one piece of the Chicago pension system, the $5.3 billion Municipal Employees Annuity and Benefit Fund, invests in an Adams Street Partners fund of funds in which Madison Dearborn entities comprise 9 of the 16 total funds.
In other words, Madison Dearborn manages a significant slice of Chicago pension investments.
The SEC has explicitly decreed that managers of a fund of funds are governed by its pay-to-play rules. "It is not appropriate to exclude subadvisers from the rule," the commision said, because otherwise the rule would be compromised by a gaping loophole: Firms “that sought to avoid compliance” with the rule's strictures could make campaign contributions as they pleased while handling their public pension business exclusively through fund of fund relationships. The agency included provisions barring financial firms from doing "indirectly what [they] could not do directly under the rule."
In an emailed statement, Adams Street CEO T. Bondurant French told IBTimes, "Madison Dearborn Partners is not a sub adviser to Adams Street Partners." When asked about the municipal documentshowing that 9 of the 16 funds in Adams Street’s fund of funds are run by Madison Dearborn Partners, French did not respond.
Attorneys for the law firm Cohen and Milstein, which advises clients on SEC compliance, recently told retirement system trustees gathered at a conference in New Orleans that executives at companies managing public pension money through fund of funds are covered by the rule.
Madison Dearborn maintains it is not obligated under the rule to determine whether it is managing Chicago pension money. But former SEC attorney Dubow says that argument is not good enough.
"You can't just put your head in the sand and say I don't want to know,” said Dubow, now a lawyer at the Pepper Hamilton law firm. “The onus is going to be on the subadviser to show they didn't know they were managing pension money."
Asked about Mayor Emanuel’s ban on contributions from municipal subcontractors, Madison Dearborn said it is not a municipal subcontractor, and contended that the executive order does not apply to the city’s pension system.
Chicago Alderman Scott Waguespack took issue with that interpretation.
“The executive order should apply to the contractors and subcontractors across the board, including in the pension funds,” he told IBTimes. “That's one of the most lucrative areas where these guys can make money. They are given a large chunk of change to play with and there's little oversight of these financial contracts from any legislative body or organization. Firms doing business with Chicago pension funds are clearly contractors -- trying to say otherwise is splitting hairs to try to say these contributions are legal.”
In the John Buck case, city documents show the firm directly manages city pension money -- and earns hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees -- through its own real estate equity funds. At the same time, its executives have contributed tens of thousands of dollars to Emanuel’s campaign.
John Buck and other real estate firms managing public pension money may be assuming they are not regulated by the SEC or any of the agency’s rules.
SEC documents show that while an affiliate of the John Buck Co. had in 2008 been a registered SEC investment adviser, that registration has expired. If the company is not actually managing real estate securities, and is only buying and selling buildings, it may not have to register and therefore may not be subject to SEC rules, said former SEC counsel Scott Kimpel of Hunton & Williams law firm. But a close reading of SEC guidance suggests the rule is designed to cover all investment firms doing business with public pension systems.
David Hoffman, a former Chicago inspector general who served on the Illinois anti-corruption panel formed after the prosecution of Gov. Rod Blagojevich, told IBTimes that while the nuances of pay-to-play laws can be debated and parsed, their intent is obvious.
“The purpose of these limitations on campaign contributions is to try to ensure that the city's decisions about who should manage its money are made on the merits, and without regard to any influence that could come from a campaign contribution,” Hoffman, who is currently an Emanuel administrationappointee, said. “It makes sense to understand the rules in light of that purpose -- and especially in light of the problematic history that we've seen in the state and city in that regard."

14 comments:

  1. Anonymous4/01/2015

    They seem to be making money. Nothing wrong with that. My concern is about what if something goes wrong? What safeguard is out there to protect against unqualified managers with campaign contributions in hand.

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  2. Anonymous4/01/2015

    Its a shame there isn't a mechanism to retrieve the money the pension funds lent to Daley's nephew for the real estate scams he invested in, you remember, the one where RMD told the reporters he just learned about it in the papers. Funny that his cabinet members sit on the boards of every city pension fund, you'd think one of them would have mentioned to the Mayor, "by the way, your nephew stopped by to borrow a few million..........

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    1. Anonymous4/01/2015

      That money is gone. Only the tip of the iceberg.

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    2. Anonymous4/01/2015

      The real criminals are the then union officials who looked the other way.

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  3. Anonymous4/01/2015

    I'm reading in the papers that homicides are up in the 1st quarter of 2015, the most since 2012. Police superintendent Garry McCarthy reports more guns are being taken off the street. Meanwhile, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart is focusing on social work, mental health, and bitching about overcrowding at the jail. Sheriff Sheahan dealt with twice as much overcrowding while he was running the jail. The difference is you didn't hear him whining about it. If this incompetent media hog of a Sheriff would focus on the prescribed duties of his office, instead of making media rounds to brag about how he fucks with his employees and his constant diversions of puppies, whores, Gacy victims, indigent burials in Glenwood, who's been double deckered at Burr Oaks cemetery, overseeing quarry construction in Robbins, directing housing arrangements for he-she's and who's trying to advertise on Craigs list, he would find that the jail issues he constantly whines about are solvable. Maybe he could go into the lobbying business with his brother, unless of course they have a dress code prohibiting Mt. Carmel fleece.

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  4. Anonymous4/01/2015

    Before its portfolio of bad loans helped trigger the current housing crisis, mortgage giant Freddie Mac was the focus of a major accounting scandal that led to a management shake-up, huge fines and scalding condemnation of passive directors by a top federal regulator.
    One of those allegedly asleep-at-the-switch board members was Chicago’s Rahm Emanuel—now chief of staff to President Barack Obama—who made at least $320,000 for a 14-month stint at Freddie Mac that required little effort. Freddie Mac was forced to reinstate 5 billion and pay a record 585 million in fines and legal settlements while under the leadership of Rahman. IS that the kind of Finacial expert we want running out city?

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  5. Anonymous4/01/2015

    How does Rahm receive 7 million in campaign contributions from 600 corporations in return for 2 billion in city payments and at the same time claim he is a reformer against pay to play? Just saying

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  6. Anonymous4/01/2015

    Rahm has the Suntimes and the Trib in his back pocket publishing all his lies. And after last nights debate it is obvious he has Phil Ponce and wttw are on the payroll as well. It's almost impossible for any man to run against him with any thing close to a fair or fighting chance. I feel like I'm living under some kind of Russian dictatorship.
    I mean this is still Amercia right?

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    1. Anonymous4/01/2015

      Yes it is much like a Russian dictatorship. All the candidates are solidly left of center politically. If you think Jesus will be a reformer then you don't speak Spanish. They are both far left loonies and your pensions are going to be clipped no matter who gets in....and your taxes are going up...after all that is the Democratic Party way....fleece...fleece...fleece....then give to your cronies....kick the can down the road....we are at the end of the road now. It is the day of reckoning. Your liberal unions did this...

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  7. Anonymous4/01/2015

    4. He allegedly violated federal law and his own executive order.
    While Rahm’s scheme to cut pensions while fattening TIF accounts is technically legal, his shifting of pension funds to financial firms that have donated to his campaign is not. Rahm has received at least $600,000 from financial firms that manage pension funds, and is allowing firms managed by his donors to take a cut from the Chicago Teachers Pension Fund (CTPF) when investments transfer through them. This flies in the face of federal laws prohibiting executives at firms managing city pension funds from donating to political campaigns. It’s also in violation of an executive order Rahm Emanuel himself issued in 2011, which was meant to stop campaign donors from getting city business. WTF!!

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  8. Anonymous4/01/2015

    Apparently Rahm has a habit of shoving people when he doesn't get his way
    The new Chicago way: Evade questions by playing the parent card.
    That’s some fancy footwork, Rahm-bo:
    Emanuel was uncharacteristically absent from Obama’s news conference this morning. He was spotted two hours later in the lobby of Chicago’s City Hall. He was there to listen to his two children performing in a concert with their school, Anshe Emet.
    A Sun-Times reporter pressed him to comment about whether he was the emissary named in the criminal complaint.
    “You’re wasting your time,” Emanuel said. “I’m not going to say a word to you. I’m going to do this with my children. Dont do that. I’m a father. I have two kids. I’m not going to do it.”
    Asked, “Can’t you do both?” Emanuel replied, “I’m not as capable as you. I’m going to be a father. I’m allowed to be a father,” and he pushed the reporter’s digital recorder away.
    Rahm was that kid who got real tough when he was a good half block away and then started talking shit. What a Wus!

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  9. Anonymous4/02/2015

    What criminal complaint is that?

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    1. Anonymous4/03/2015

      Most people don't know of Rahm Emanuel's frightening past. After President Clinton's election many years ago, one day Rahm Emanuel, Obama's future chief of staff, allegedly named each of the enemies of the Clinton campaign and then stabbing the table with a knife while yelling "dead!" after each name prior to stabbing the table. When you probe deeper into Congressman Emanuel, you find that he is the son of an Irgun Fighter, the same Irgun that blew up the King David Hotel in a terrorist bombing and killed British Military, who were classified as
      Terrorists by the British in Palestine but from the Israeli perspective were looked upon as freedom fighters. Rahm when he turned 18 was enlisted in the Israeli Defense Forces. He is know as RAHMBO for his pitbull posture!

      The late Sherman Skolnick in his Skolnick Report said that..." http://www.newstin.com/tag/us/86579385 Rahm Emanuel - Activities And Associations "Rahm Emanuel - Top reputed black-mailer, extortionist, and arm-twister for the Clinton White House. About 1991, moved from the Chicago-area, to Arkansas to help conduct Clinton's
      presidential campaign. Raised funds reportedly by knowing secret workings of major covert operations of the American CIA. Such as: HOUSEHOLD INTERNATIONAL and HOUSEHOLD BANK, headquartered in Chicago, successor to CIA's proprietary dope and assassination funding operation, NUGAN HAND BANK. General counsel of Nugan Hand as well as Household was former Director of Central Intelligence William Colby (murdered because he knew too much about Rahm Emanuel, the Mossad, and Clinton). Rahm Emanuel latched onto a 50 million dollar portion of federal funds parked with Household to cover the pending claims of Chicago-area caulking contractor, Joseph Andreuccetti, who claimed various Chicago-area banks
      were implicated, with top corrupt IRS officials, in stealing millions of dollars of properties and monies belonging to Andreuccetti. Rahm Emanuel grabbed a portion of the parked funds to jump-start Clinton's 1992 campaign. Other portions of the funds were secretly transferred from Chicago to Little Rock to try to cover up an embezzlement of Madison Guaranty S & L for which Bill and Hillary Clinton were subject to being prosecuted on federal bank misappropriation criminal charges. Emanuel is reportedly a double-dealer, purporting to act for the Mossad at the same time acting against. Emanuel is reportedly chief arranger of Red Chinese and other illicit funds massively flowing through the Chicago markets, disguised as soybean trading, foreign currency dealings, and such, on the Chicago Board of Trade, the Chicago Mercentile Exchange, and the Chicago Board Options Exchange. Currently Rahm plays a key role with Wasserstein & Perella, New York-based alleged investment firm apparently
      fronting for various Red Chinese interests in U.S." "Foreign intelligence sources are snickering over reports that the Red Chinese claim they have clandestine audio tapes, still pictures, and YES, even undercover video, showing secret agents of the President/Commander-in-Chief receiving suitcases loaded with money, in return for the U.S. top nuclear secrets including a copy of the super-secret computer data on nuclear testing. The Chinese, so say these sources, are asserting that they BOUGHT such items, fair and square, from Clinton's emissaries. If there is a problem in this type of "routine" business transaction, say the sources quoting Chinese officials, well, "Let the Americans attend to their end of White House business ethics". " "Wow! What Americans perceive as treachery and espionage the Chinese identify as "business ethics" in a C.O.D. deal. And who are suspected of being Clinton's secret luggage receivers? Here are a few reportedly to consider:

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    2. Anonymous4/05/2015

      Breaking. Chicago officials are heading for Rahm’s office demanding release of donor emails.
      image-159494903

      From David Sirota:

      Chicago elected officials have just announced they are heading to Rahm Emanuel’s office today at 3pm to demand the release of more than 1,500 emails between Emanuel, his top aide and his top donor. International Business Times broke the original story earlier this week that Emanuel denied IBTimes’ open records request for the documents. The elected officials, including two aldermen and Cook County Clerk David Orr, will be holding a press conference at City Hall at 3pm after formally demanding the emails from Emanuel.

      This story was released by Sirota yesterday.

      Amazingly nobody in the Chicago media picked up on it.

      Nobody.

      Here is a portion of yesterday’s story by Sirota and a link to the entire article.

      Heading into the final days of campaigning for re-election, incumbent Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has faced intensifying criticism for being too close to the city’s financial elite. Precisely how close, though, remains a matter of conjecture — and most likely will remain so until after the Tuesday runoff vote. That’s because Emanuel’s administration has for weeks blocked the release of correspondence between his administration and one of the Democratic mayor’s top donors, Michael Sacks. The administration has also refused to release details about tens of millions of dollars in shadowy no-bid city payments to some of Emanuel’s largest campaign contributors.

      Sacks did not respond to an International Business Times request for him to personally release the emails. Emanuel’s office declined IBTimes’ request for comment about why the city blocked the release of the records. Emanuel had publicly promised “to have the most open, accountable and transparent government that the City of Chicago has ever seen.”

      The CEO of the Chicago private equity firm Grosvenor, Sacks has been described as Emanuel’s closest ally in the private sector, and has been called Emanuel’s “go-to guy” and his “top troubleshooter.” He and his wife have donated over $1.6 million to Emanuel’s campaign and affiliated PACs and, according to the Chicago Tribune, he has lavished the mayor with gifts.

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