D.H. Blair, the Mafia-affiliated brokerage founded by Lindsay
Rosenwald’s father-in-law (the so-called “king of stock
fraud”) and managed for some time by Rosenwald and Michael
Milken’s former national sales manager,
received much of its finance from the family of a man named Zev
Wolfson. Mr. Wolfson was also closely involved with another
Mafia-affiliated brokerage, A.R. Baron.
As you will recall, D.H. Blair and A.R. Baron featured
prominently in the prosecution’s case against White Rock
Partners, the firm that was co-founded by Felix Sater and Salvatore
Lauria. Felix Sater, remember, is the alleged son of a top Russian
Mob boss. Lauria previously worked as a trader for Gruntal &
Company, a Mafia-affiliated brokerage that was stacked with cronies
of Michael Milken.
You will remember that Sater, the fellow alleged to have blood
ties to the Russian Mafia, is currently a business partner of
Milken crony Leon Black. You will also recall that Sater is
allegedly the man who sent a message that the Mafia would murder
Deep Capture reporter Patrick Byrne if he continued his
crusade against illegal naked short selling. And Sater is the same
guy whose naked short selling colleague, Alain Chalem, had his ears
and face shredded with bullets.
Wolfson, meanwhile, was involved in another
“colorful” brokerage, Pond Equities. In 2006, the SEC
filed civil
charges accusing Pond Equities of participating in a massive
naked short selling fraud.
Aside from funding Mafia-affiliated brokerages, some of which
were closely tied to Michael Milken, Wolfson was also the key early
investor in funds controlled by a number of Milken’s more
“prominent” cronies. For example, Wolfson was an
early benefactor of a “prominent billionaire” named
Saul Steinberg.
In the 1980s, Steinberg built a company called Reliance
Insurance with
generous junk bond financing from Milken. Reliance, in turn,
became one of the Milken-aligned financial conglomerates that
regularly bought the junk bonds that Milken was selling for his
other cronies. In other words, Steinberg was a key player in
Milken’s junk bond merry-go-round – one of
history’s great Ponzi schemes.
Eventually, Steinberg
looted and bankrupted Reliance, though he has never been
charged with any crime.
Today, Steinberg is a founding partner of Wisdom Tree Investments,
which is managed by Steinberg’s son, Jono. Jono is
married to CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo, also known as the
“Money Honey.” The Money Honey’s
father is the former owner of a Brooklyn catering outfit and
private club called the Rex Manor. Residents of Brooklyn know the
Rex Manor as a popular hang-out for members of the Bonanno
organized crime family (a fact that is merely of biographical
interest and not meant to imply that Mr. Bartiromo is tied to the
Mob).
The other founding partner of Wisdom Tree Investments is
Michael Steinhardt, who is one of the nation’s most
“prominent” hedge fund managers. As was noted in
Chapter 3, Steinhardt’s father, Sol “Red”
Steinhardt, worked for the Genovese organized crime family and
spent a number of years in Sing-Sing prison after a New York
prosecutor pegged him as “the biggest Mafia fence in
America.” According to Steinhardt himself, the key limited
partners in Steinhardt Jr.’s first hedge fund were the
Genovese Mafia and three “prominent investors” –
Marty Peretz, Marc Rich, and Ivan Boesky.
Ivan Boesky, we know, was famously indicted in the 1980s for
participating in various stock manipulation schemes with Michael
Milken. Also convicted for his participation in these schemes was a
man named John Mulheren, who had run an arbitrage fund largely
financed by Zev Wolfson (the fellow who also financed Saul
Steinberg, the Mafia-affiliated brokerages tied to Milken, and
other Milken cronies who will be introduced shortly).
Although Mulheren’s conviction for manipulating stocks was
ultimately reversed on appeal, there was a time when he believed
that Boesky might squeal on him and his friend, Michael Milken. So
one day Mulheren
loaded his car with weaponry and set out to assassinate Boesky.
Fortunately, the police arrested Mulheren before he could commit
the murder.
According to a famous book called “Den
of Thieves,” written by Pulitzer Prize winning author
James Stewart, Mulheren spent most of his time in jail conversing
with Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno, who was then the top
boss of the Genovese Mafia family. In addition, Scotland Yard has
linked Salerno to Steven Wynn, a Las Vegas casino operator.
Wynn’s wife, Elaine, sits on the
board of Michael Milken’s Prostate Cancer Foundation.
Steven Wynn is Milken’s closest friend, according to
Milken.
After he got out of jail, Mulheren co-founded
a hedge fund called Millennium Partners, then promptly died of
an early heart attack, leaving his co-founder, Izzy Englander, to
continue operating the fund. Izzy Englander secured much of his
investment capital from not just Zev Wolfson, but also the
Belzberg brothers – William, Sam, and Hymie. Executives
at an investment firm called the Bache Group,
citing U.S. Customs Service reports, once accused the
Belzberg’s of having ties to organized crime.
As we know, only ten hedge funds on the planet owned large
numbers of Dendreon put options at the end of March 2007, right
after Dendreon received the fantastic news that the FDA’s
advisory panel had voted that the company’s treatment for
prostate cancer should be approved. In other words, after Dendreon
received its fantastic news only ten hedge funds were maintaining
long-shot bets against Dendreon (long-shot bets that would, in
time, prove strangely prescient). At least seven of those hedge
funds are quite “colorful” – and all seven are
part of the same network.
So far we have discussed two of the seven “colorful”
fund managers who stood to profit from the demise of Dendreon.
Those two are Bernie Madoff, the $50 billion Ponzi schemer and
naked short seller, and Lindsay Rosenwald, formerly a manager of
the Wolfson-financed D.H. Blair, which was founded by
Rosenwald’s father-in-law (the “king of stock
fraud”). Both D.H. Blair and Madoff had ties to organized
crime. Both worked intimately with Michael Milken or his closest
associates.
So perhaps it is no surprise that the third hedge fund that was
betting heavily against Dendreon in March 2007 was Millennium
Management, co-founded by John Mulheren–jailhouse confidante
of “Fat Tony” Salerno (the Genovese Mafia boss);
co-conspirator of Michael Milken; would-be murderer of Ivan Boesky;
and recipient, like other Milken cronies and a number of
Mafia-affiliated brokerages; of key finance from Zev Wolfson.
Altogether, Millennium owned put
options on 800,000 shares of Dendreon at the end of March 2007
– just after the company’s prostate cancer treatment
was endorsed by an FDA advisory panel; right at the time that
Dendreon came under a blistering illegal naked short selling
attack; and just before Dendreon was to experience some strange
occurrences.
* * * * * * * *
Let us return to Zev Wolfson. As we know, Wolfson funded D.H.
Blair, the Mafia-affiliated brokerage which became the target of
a 173 count indictment, saw two vice chairmen please guilty to
securities fraud, had a president (Richard Maio) who was once
Michael Milken’s national sales manager, and had another vice
chairman (the son-in-law of the “king of stock fraud”)
who is now one of America’s biggest biotech traders and an
adversary of Dendreon.
We also know that Wolfson was the key early investor in funds
run by Milken cronies Saul Steinberg (partner of Michael
Steinhardt, whose father worked for the Genovese family as the
“biggest Mafia fence in America”) and John Mulheren,
who spent his jail-time conversing with Genovese boss Anthony
“Fat Tony” Salerno, and then co-founded Millennium
Management, which later also became an adversary of Dendreon.
In addition, Wolfson was a key early investor in a fund managed
by “prominent billionaire” Carl Icahn.
Before he became a “prominent” billionaire, Icahn,
remember, founded the options trading department at a firm called
Gruntal & Company, which owed its existence to the generous
finance that the criminal and future “philanthropist”
Michael Milken gave to its parent company, the Home Group. Like
Steinberg’s Reliance Insurance, the Home Group was a key
player in Milken’s junk bond Ponzi scheme.
As mentioned, Icahn was replaced at Gruntal by Milken crony Ron
Aizer, who proceeded to hire as traders two associates of Michael
Milken. According to a reliable source, one of those traders was
investigated for trading on inside information provided by
Milken’s operation at Drexel Burnham Lambert. Both traders
are now “prominent” hedge fund managers, and both are
important characters in the story of Dendreon, so I will return to
them soon.
As also mentioned, Gruntal was caught embezzling millions of
dollars. One of its traders was found to be running money for the
Gambino Mafia family. And a large number of its traders went on to
work for White Rock Partners, the Mafia firm that was indicted for
manipulating stocks with help from the Mafia-affiliated D.H. Blair,
founded by the father-in-law of Lindsay Rosenwald, who was one of
those seven “colorful” hedge fund managers who stood to
profit from the demise of Dendreon.
Recall that White Rock also did business with the naked short
seller Alain Chalem. Recall also that White Rock’s co-founder
Salvatore Lauria has said that he once worried that White
Rock’s other co-founder, Felix Sater, might murder Chalem. As
we know, Chalem eventually was assassinated in his New
Jersey mansion (which does not, of course, prove that
Lauria’s fears were correct).
When Icahn left Gruntal, he began a career in “greenmailing”
– acquiring large amounts of companies’ stock and
threatening to make problems if the companies didn’t buy back
the stock at a premium. His greenmailing (a.k.a. blackmailing)
exploits were made possible by generous junk bond finance handed to
him by Michael Milken. By
most
accounts, Icahn owes his phenomenal wealth and power to two
people –
Zev Wolfson (financier to multiple Mafia-affiliated brokerages)
and Michael Milken, who is (as should be clear by this point) on
close terms with many Mafia-connected investors, and is now
considered a “prominent philanthropist.”
Given his association with Milken and Wolfson, it is perhaps
predictable that Icahn has relationships with other Mafia-connected
goons as well. For example, Icahn once employed a man
named Allen Barry Witz, who was later implicated by the U.S.
government in a Mafia-run stock manipulation fraud. As it happens,
Witz also did business with Alain Chalem, the Mafia-connected naked
short seller who was assassinated in New Jersey – his head,
face and ears filled with bullets.
According to
various reports,
Icahn’s former employee, Barry Witz, was one of the last
people, other than the killers, to see Chalem alive.
* * * * * * * *
Milken crony Carl Icahn has had multiple brushes with naked
short selling. For example, Icahn was the man behind Ladenburg
Thalmann, an investment bank that financed many companies through
so-called PIPEs – private investments in public equities.
The PIPEs industry is rife with abuse (See Forbes
magazine’s story, “Sewer
PIPEs,” which describes some of the industry’s ties
to the Mafia). Since PIPEs dilute equity, a company that does
a PIPEs deal will typically see its stock fall in value. To
capitalize on this, hedge funds affiliated with the PIPEs investor
(i.e. with the company’s supposed benefactor) will sometimes
illegally naked short the company before and after the PIPEs deal
is announced. Often, this naked short selling sends the stock
into a “death spiral,” and the company is put out of
business.
In one famous case, Icahn’s Ladenburg Thalmann was hired
to broker a PIPEs deal for a small software firm called Sedona
Corporation. In this capacity, Ladenburg introduced Sedona to a
hedge fund called Rhino Advisors, which in turn brought in a hedge
fund called AMRO International. According to prosecutors who later
charged Rhino with stock manipulation, as soon as AMRO and Sedona
entered into their PIPEs deal, Rhino’s owner Andreas Badian,
instructed his traders to naked short Sedona with “unbridled
aggression.” Rhino’s other owner, Thomas Badian, is now
a fugitive from the law living in Austria.
According to the SEC, Rhino’s naked short selling was
conducted
in collaboration with Pond Equities (also known as Pond
Securities), which was financed by Zev Wolfson, the fellow who also
financed all those Milken cronies, including Icahn and the folks at
the Mafia-affiliated D.H. Blair.
Most of Rhino’s phantom stock was processed through a
giant brokerage called Refco Securities, which was later found to
be hiding more than $400 million worth of liabilities in
off-balance sheet entities. As Deep Capture reporter Judd
Bagley detailed in a recent video (click
here to watch), those liabilities were likely related to
Refco’s rampant naked short selling.
In a series of stories for The Deal, a financial news magazine,
reporter
Stacy Mosher determined that Amro International had provided
PIPEs financing to over sixty companies, many of them biotech
firms. At least 29 of those deals
involved Carl Icahn’s Ladenburg Thalmann. Soon after
announcing their PIPEs deals, every one of those 29 companies were
hit with unbridled naked short selling. Every one of those 29
companies saw their stocks go into “death spirals.” And
nearly every one of them quickly went out of business.
Icahn is not the most famous player in the world of PIPEs. That
accolade belongs to another of Milken and Wolfson’s charges
— Lindsay Rosenwald, one of those seven
“colorful” hedge fund managers who stood to profit from
the demise of Dendreon.
Rosenwald worked for Ladenberg
Thalmann before joining his father-in-law (the “king of stock
fraud”) at D.H. Blair, the Mafia-affiliated brokerage whose
president was Michael Milken’s former national sales manager.
In addition to financing medical companies with no medicines,
Rosenwald’s Paramount Capital has done some PIPEs deals with
companies that did, indeed, have promising medicines. Many of those
companies are now gone — drowned by tsunamis of phantom
stock.
* * * * * * * *
As mentioned, Carl Icahn, who would later owe his status as a
billionaire to Michael Milken, founded the options department at
Gruntal & Company, which owed its existence to Michael
Milken. When Icahn left Gruntal, he was replaced by Milken
crony Ron Aizer, who proceeded to hire two traders who are cronies
of Michael Milken.
The first trader hired at Gruntal by Aizer was a man named Steve
Cohen, who later founded a hedge fund called SAC Capital. Cohen has
been described (by
BusinessWeek magazine and others) as “the most powerful
trader on Wall Street.”
In an upcoming chapter, I’ll name the second trader hired
by Aizer. Soon after that trader was hired, Cohen was joined at
Gruntal by Stephen Feinberg, who had previously been a top trader
for Milken’s operation at Drexel Burnham, and now runs
Cerberus Capital Management, which was, until recently, co-owned by
J. Ezra Merkin, one of the most important
“feeders” to Bernard Madoff’s Mafia-connected $50
billion Ponzi scheme.
While at Gruntal, Cohen grew closer to Milken, and came to be on
especially good terms with one of Milken’s top employees,
Bruce Newberg, who was later implicated in Milken’s stock
manipulation schemes. A reliable source has told Deep
Capture that the SEC once investigated Cohen for allegedly
trading on inside information provided to him by Milken’s
staff at Drexel, Burnham, Lambert.
Nowadays, Cohen is known for demanding strict loyalty from his
co-workers, past and present. Some say that these demands border on
paranoia (Cohen’s employees are required to sign
non-disclosure agreements swearing them to absolute secrecy –
for a lifetime), but many of Cohen’s colleagues have
benefited. Cohen’s former employees often move to new hedge
funds that are in actuality satellites of Cohen’s powerful
trading empire.
Sometimes the hedge funds that are staffed by Cohen’s
former employees are initially or wholly financed by Cohen himself.
Other times Cohen and the hedge funds staffed by his former
employees merely trade in the same stocks. It is fair to assume
that, collectively, Cohen, his former employees, and others in his
network (traders who are tied to Michael Milken or his close
associates) have enough fire power to move share prices.
In the 1990s, Cohen’s SAC Capital
sometimes bought stocks that were being promoted by D.H. Blair,
the Mafia-affiliated brokerage that figured prominently in the
prosecution’s case against White Rock Partners, whose traders
were mostly Cohen’s former co-workers at Gruntal. Cohen would
hold these D.H. Blair stocks even when they had no revenues and had
been delisted from stock exchanges. Generally, these kinds of
stocks were held by only two sorts of investors – little old
ladies who’d been bamboozled by D.H. Blair, and stock
manipulators. But who knows, maybe Cohen did the math and figured
they were the next big things.
At any rate, Cohen seems to have had some sort of relationship
with the Mafia-affiliated D.H. Blair. But D.H. Blair is gone. In
its place, we have Paramount Capital, run by Lindsay Rosenwald, the
son-in-law of the “fraud king” who founded D.H.
Blair.
One employee of Paramount Capital was Joseph Edelman, who,
remember, was simultaneously running one of the seven
“colorful” hedge funds that was betting big against
Dendreon. Meanwhile, Rosenwald was the controlling shareholder in
Cougar Biotechnology, which claimed to have a promising treatment
for prostate cancer, though that treatment was (and is) largely
untested and years away from recieving FDA approval.
In future chapters, we will begin to ask why Michael
Milken’s “philanthropic” outfit, the Prostate
Cancer Foundation, went to lengths to promote Milken crony
Rosenwald’s untested prostate cancer treatment while seeming
to dismiss (and perhaps even seeking to derail) Dendreon, whose
treatment had received the overwhelming endorsement of an FDA
expert advisory panel and was capable (if it had not been derailed)
of saving patients’ lives right away.
Another employee of Rosenwald’s Paramount Capital was a
man named David J. Kellman. Mr. Kellman was Paramount
Capital’s vice president. Prior to becoming the vice
president of Paramount Capital, the hedge fund owned by Lindsay
Rosenwald, formerly of the Mafia-connected D.H. Blair, Kellman was
a top trader for Steve Cohen’s SAC Capital.
I assume that Steven Cohen has been as diligent about
maintaining his relationship with Kellman as he has been with all
his former employees (a diligence that some describe as
“maniacal”). Presumably Cohen also stays in touch with
the folks at Millennium Management, the fund that was co-founded by
the fellow who sought to assassinate Ivan Boesky, and later became
one of the seven “colorful” hedge funds that owned
large numbers of put options in Dendreon.
Over the years, Millennium has employed a number of
Cohen’s former traders, including Edmund Debler and Steve
Lisi, who ran Millennium’s healthcare trading until 2005,
when they set up their own fund, which no doubt served as another
satellite of the Cohen empire.
Millennium is a highly secretive fund, so it is difficult to
know which of its employees were responsible for its Dendreon
trades, but perhaps its current healthcare team, like its previous
one, are colleagues of Mr. Cohen. We do know that Millennium
has hired a new vice president. His name is Hanming Rao. And he was
previously a top trader for Cohen’s SAC Capital.
Millennium, Paramount, Steve Cohen and others in this network
often take similar positions in the same stocks. Many of those
stocks have been pummeled by illegal naked short selling.
But I do not know if this has anything
to do with Cohen being the fourth of those seven
“colorful” hedge fund managers who happened to have the
foresight to hold large numbers of put options in Dendreon at the
end of March, 2007, right at the time when Dendreon was hit with an
unprecedented wave of illegal naked short selling (phantom
stock).
Who was responsible for the illegal
naked short selling? We don’t know. The SEC keeps that a big
secret — “proprietary trading strategies.”
* * * * * * * *
But, to summarize, only ten hedge funds on the planet owned
large numbers of Dendreon put options (bets against the company) at
the end of March 2007–which was right after the FDA’s
advisory panel had endorsed Dendreon’s treatment for prostate
cancer; right at the time that the company was hit with waves of
illegal naked short selling, and just before a series of strange
occurrences (which I will describe in due course) conspired to
derail Dendreon’s promising treatment for prostate
cancer.
At least seven of those ten hedge fund managers are part of the
same “colorful” network.
The first of the seven “colorful” hedge fund
managers was Bernard Madoff, who orchestrated a $50 billion Ponzi
scheme with considerable help from close associates of the Mafia
and Michael Milken while authoring an SEC naked short selling
loophole that enabled hedge funds to obtain “married
puts” — those phantom stock “bullets” that
unscrupulous hedge funds use to drive down prices and destroy
public companies.
The second “colorful” hedge fund manager worked for
Paramount Capital, owned by Lindsay Rosenwald, the Milken crony who
once helped run the Mafia-affiliated D.H. Blair, which was founded
by Rosenwald’s father-in-law (the “king of stock
fraud”). D.H. Blair’s president was Michael
Milken’s former national sales manager. D.H. Blair was also
tied by federal prosecutors to the Mafia-run White Rock Capital,
whose co-founder and top traders came from Gruntal, a brokerage
that had ties to the Mafia and was stacked with Milken cronies,
including Steve Cohen. In later years, D.H. Blair seems to have had
a trading relationship with Steve Cohen. Then D.H. Blair was
indicted on 173 counts of securities fraud, by which point Lindsay
Rosenwald had founded Paramount Capital, where one of Steve
Cohen’s top traders served as vice president.
The third colorful hedge fund was Millennium Capital, which was
co-founded by John Mulheren, who was convicted for manipulating
stocks with Michael Milken and once attempted to assassinate
Milken’s famous co-conspirator Ivan Boesky. Millennium has
employed a number of Steve Cohen’s former top traders,
including Hanming Rao, who currently serves as Millenniums’
vice president.
And the fourth of seven “colorful” hedge fund
managers who had the foresight to bet big against
Dendreon–right when there was every reason to be optimistic
about Dendreon, and right before some strange occurrences derailed
the company–was Steve Cohen, who (we are told) once faced an
SEC investigation into allegations that he traded on inside
information provided to him by Michael Milken’s operation at
Drexel Burnham Lambert, and is reportedly maniacal about
maintaining relationships with former colleagues tied to Michael
Milken, and with former employees, such as those who have worked as
vice presidents of Paramount Capital and Millennium Management.
Cohen’s lesser known hedge fund,
Sigma Capital, held
put options on 750,000 shares of Dendreon at the end of March
2007. Another of Cohen’s lesser known hedge funds, JL
Advisors,
owned 1.3 million shares of Dendreon as of the end of 2006.
These shares were dumped sometime before March 31, 2007,
contributing to the selling volume that would be created by
Paramount Capital employee Joseph Edelman dumping more than 6
million Dendreon shares that he’d recieved by exercising call
options — and by the simultaneous appearance in the
marketplace of at least 9 million more phantom shares, the result
of rampant naked short selling which the SEC decries as illegal,
but refuses to address.
* * * * * * * *
This is part 4 of a 15-part series.
The remaining installments will appear on Deep Capture over the
next several weeks, after which point the story will be published
in its entirety at DeepCapture.com. It is a
story about the travails of just one small company, but it
describes market machinations that have affected hundreds of other
companies, and it contains a larger message for anyone concerned
about the “deep capture” of our nation’s media
and regulatory bodies.
Mark Mitchell is a
reporter for DeepCapture.com. He
previously worked as an editorial page writer for The Wall Street
Journal in Europe, a business correspondent for Time magazine
in Asia, and as an assistant managing editor responsible for the
Columbia Journalism Review’s online critique of business
journalism. He holds an MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of
Management at Northwestern University. Email:
mitch0033@gmail.com