ABA Home
White-Collar Crime

Five Convicted in AIG Reinsurance Scheme

Posted Feb 26, 2008, 08:08 am CDT
By Debra Cassens Weiss

A federal jury in Connecticut has found five former insurance executives guilty of securities fraud in a reinsurance scheme that boosted the stock price of American International Group Inc.

Prosecutors said the investigation is continuing, report the Wall Street Journal (sub. req.) and New York Times. "We've got a lot of work to do to work up the ladder," said assistant U.S. attorney Paul Pelletier.

The statement fuels speculation over whether the investigation will reach Maurice Greenberg, the former CEO of AIG identified at the trial as an unindicted co-conspirator. He has denied any wrongdoing and he has not been charged.

One of the convicted executives had worked at AIG and the other four worked for the General Re reinsurance company. The Wall Street Journal story says the trial involved “arcane accounting rules and tens of thousands of pages of documents.”

Jerry Bernstein, a white-collar criminal-defense lawyer at Blank Rome, told the Wall Street Journal the victory shows jurors are capable of handling such cases. “Manipulation of financial reserves and reinsurance are not concepts that typical jurors know about, so these convictions can only further embolden the Justice Department to bring to trial cases dealing with complex financial transactions," he said.

E-Mail This Story


(Separate multiple addresses with a comma.)




Share This Story

URL to share: http://www.abajournal.com/news/five_convicted_in_aig_reinsurance_scheme/

Title: Five Convicted in AIG Reinsurance Scheme


Comments

    Be the first to comment.


Commenting has expired on this post.


Subscribe

Get the ABA Journal the way you want it — in print, online, by e-mail — and when you want it — monthly, weekly, daily or as news breaks.





Are you an ABA Member? Read This First

Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe to the mobile edition
Subscribe to the monthly magazine


Return to top