Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

March 20th, 2009 | Class Warfare, Legal Advice, legal madness, propaganda | 2 comments

War is Peace, or They can sue, but you can’t.

There is wisdom and responsible citizenship, and then there is mindless use of law to advance whatever selfish interests one has when one has them.  May my students know the difference, and may they not serve clients who want the latter at the cost of the former.

In November 2006,  the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation issued a report arguing for cutting back on regulation of financial markets, for limitations on private lawsuits and on lawsuits by state attorneys general, and for increased restrictions on the ability of the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue new rules. The Committee on Capital Markets Regulation was a private group, but it had prominence.   Its co-chairs were R. Glenn Hubbard, the dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Business, and John L. Thornton, the chairman of the Brookings Institution, its formation was endorsed by then-Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., and a significant part of its funding came from the Starr Foundation, started by Maurice R. Greenberg, who had in 2006 recently been deposed as Chairman of AIG.

Greenberg and AIG were notoroius for their hostility to lawsuits.  It figures — AIG is (was?) an insurance company, and liabilities are what insurance companies are supposed to pay for.  As the founder of one law firm I worked for, Gene Anderson, always says, “Insurance companies are in the business of collecting premiums and denying claims.”

Now, though, Greenberg no longer heads AIG and AIG showed itself incapable of paying for the liabilities it had collected premiums to insure.  So their minds seem to have changed.  Greenberg has become a lawsuit enthusiast, most recently suing AIG for for securities fraud based on alleged “‘material misrepresentations and omissions’” that  caused him to acquire New York-based AIG shares in his deferred compensation profit-participation plan at an ‘artificially inflated price.’”

And I just read that AIG commenced a lawsuit last month against the federal government seeking a return of $306 million in taxes it claims it should not have paid.  The claims include taxes paid in connection with AIG’s financial products unit (“the once high-flying division that has been singled out for its role in A.I.G.’s financial crisis last fall”), and “AIG offshore entities whose function centers on executive compensation and include C. V. Starr & Company, a closely held concern controlled by Maurice R. Greenberg and the Starr International Company.”

As the New York Times puts it:

A.I.G. is effectively suing its majority owner, the government, which has an 80 percent stake and has poured nearly $200 billion into the insurer in a bid to avert its collapse and avoid troubling the global financial markets. The company is in effect asking for even more money, in the form of tax refunds. The suit also suggests that A.I.G. is spending taxpayer money to pursue its case, something it is legally entitled to do. Its initial claim was denied by the Internal Revenue Service last year.

And if you think corporations should be liable to individuals for damages their products cause, that taxes should be raised on the people who earn more than 95% of our citizens, and that we should tax the inheritances of heirs who have done nothing to earn that money, you’re accused of engaging in “class warfare”?  I’ve got news for you: they struck first.