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Jon Corzine Blames Predecessors For MF Global's Fall

Corzine Predecessors

DANIEL WAGNER and MARCY GORDON   12/ 8/11 08:03 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Summoned by Congress, Jon Corzine embraced a bold strategy Thursday to distance himself from MF Global's fall and $1.2 billion in missing clients' money:

Answer each question. Be courteous. And don't huddle with your lawyer before replying.

He said very little. Nevertheless, it was a risky strategy, even for a risk-taking financial executive. Anything Corzine might say could be used against him in a courtroom, should he ever be charged in the MF Global case.

Yet the former CEO of the securities firm never declined to answer questions by invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

The one-time senator and New Jersey governor was subpoenaed by his former colleagues to explain how MF Global collapsed just over a month ago in the eighth-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history. It's the first time in more than 100 years that Congress has subpoenaed a former senator to testify, according to Senate historian Don Ritchie.

Looking strained and speaking hoarsely during nearly three hours of testimony, Corzine said he never intended to break rules that require firms to safeguard client funds. He said he doesn't know what happened to the missing money, but added that customers' losses weigh on his mind "every day, every hour."

He said several times that he did not become aware of the shortfall in client accounts until Oct. 30, one day before MF Global filed for bankruptcy following its disastrous bets on European debt.

"I'm not in a position, given the number of transactions, to know anything specific about the movement of any specific funds," said Corzine, who took over as CEO more than a year and a half ago.

In his testimony to the House Agriculture Committee, Corzine sought to deflect blame for the company's collapse, arguing that he inherited a firm already doomed by his predecessors' bad financial decisions.

Legal experts said they were surprised by Corzine's decision to answer each question, however vaguely, given the legal risks. The FBI and federal regulators are investigating MF Global.

It's hard to see how the testimony will benefit Corzine, said Robert Mintz, a defense attorney in Newark, N.J., who specializes in white-collar cases.

Mintz said Corzine's answers leave him open to "a barrage of questions about facts and circumstances that will no doubt be the subject of review by prosecutors and regulators."

Two other congressional panels have also voted to subpoena Corzine.

His testimony provided his first public comments since the firm's spectacular collapse. A lawyer who handles white-collar criminal cases accompanied Corzine and sat behind him during the hearing. But Corzine never turned to seek his advice.

The hearing wasn't particularly confrontational, though a few members expressed disbelief that Corzine could be so detached as CEO.

Rep. David Scott, D-Ga., told him it strained belief "for you to sit there and say ... you know nothing about" the missing customer money. A lot of farmers in Georgia need to know, Scott said. "The key to this is you. You're the CEO."

Corzine said he was confident that others at MF Global were checking daily to ensure that the firm's money and clients' fund were being kept separate.

"I simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date," he said.

He said MF Global toppled, in part, because of a large quarterly loss caused by his predecessors' accounting moves. Rating agencies responded to the loss by downgrading the firm's credit rating, which panicked investors and trading partners.

"The marketplace lost confidence in our firm," he said.

He disputed media reports that he personally pushed the company to make big, doomed bets on risky European debt using too much borrowed money.

He said he made the high-stakes bets only after discussions with company executives who traded European debt long before he arrived. And he said he reduced MF Global's investment risks in some ways.

Some outside experts challenged some of his assertions.

Janet Tavakoli, an expert on the transactions MF Global specialized in, said Corzine's remarks seemed to divert attention from the firm's fundamental flaw under his leadership: It lacked the cash to cover its bets after investors started to fear that a major European nation would default.

"His entire testimony looks like a very skilled way to try to detract from that key issue," said Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance.

Lawmakers have heard from farmers, ranchers and small-business owners who are missing money deposited with the firm. Agricultural businesses use brokerage firms to help reduce their risks in an industry vulnerable to swings in oil, corn and other commodity prices.

A Democrat, Corzine represented New Jersey in the Senate from 2001 through 2005. He later served a single four-year term as governor, losing a re-election bid in 2009. Before entering politics, he was CEO of Goldman Sachs.

Corzine became CEO of MF Global in March last year, succeeding Bernard Dan, who resigned. Dan, a former CEO of the Chicago Board of Trade, was later named president of Sun Holdings LLC, a Chicago-based proprietary trading firm.

Several class-action lawsuits on behalf of shareholders have been filed against Corzine and three other top executives, accusing the firm and its leaders of making false statements about MF Global's stability.

Stephen Gillers, a professor at New York University School of Law, said lawyers typically advise clients in Corzine's situation not to answer questions.

"When you answer a full day's worth of questions, you're committing yourself to a story that could come back to haunt you," Gillers said.

Mintz added: "It only makes sense if your answers can satisfy those posing the questions. Short of that, the risks far outweigh the benefits."

___

Samantha Bomkamp contributed to this report from New York.

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WASHINGTON — Summoned by Congress, Jon Corzine embraced a bold strategy Thursday to distance himself from MF Global's fall and $1.2 billion in missing clients' money: Answer each question. Be c...
WASHINGTON — Summoned by Congress, Jon Corzine embraced a bold strategy Thursday to distance himself from MF Global's fall and $1.2 billion in missing clients' money: Answer each question. Be c...
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12:48 PM on 12/09/2011
LOL . . . "Corzine deflected blame for the company's collapse. He argued that he inherited a firm already doomed by his predecessors' bad financial decisions."

Sounds like he's taking PR advice from Obama!
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Eris23
Justice is in indefinite detention.
04:51 PM on 12/09/2011
It's also a load of bull. A family friend left MF Global specifically because Corzine was being reckless and not listening to those who told him as much. Corzine moved in a number of his old Goldman Sachs friends, and they engaged in the exact same nonsense that destroyed our economy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phil Van Voorhis
07:29 AM on 12/09/2011
Naming names are we? Of course! And this is why initiating persecution at any level on Wall St. makes sense. Those who are concerned can save your butts (literaly!) under the whistle blower provisions of Dodd-Frank - and maintain anonymity!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phil Van Voorhis
08:54 AM on 12/09/2011
Spelling Correction: ....And this is why initiating prosecutio­n at any level on Wall St. makes sense. Those who are concerned can save your butts (literally!­)...
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vmf211
Fighting against Liberalism everyday
11:06 PM on 12/08/2011
Of course corupt Corzine is going to blame everyone but himself.

I'm sure he ripped of my state of NJ as well.
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09:56 PM on 12/08/2011
"Jon Corzine Blames Predecessors For MF Global's Fall"

did the Predecessors raid the customer accounts?
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Dee Cortex
11:09 PM on 12/08/2011
Why yes they did.....the firm was called Refco beforehand (Wikipedia claims: The Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the National Futures Association took action against Refco and its units more than 100 times since the firm's founding). The Assets of Refco were sold to Man Group, which became MF Global when Cozine took the helm.Thus a culture of Evil was preserved.
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09:51 PM on 12/08/2011
"Mom: I can't find my mittens"

"when and where did you last have them"
08:28 PM on 12/08/2011
When you say "M-F", you've said it all!
08:20 PM on 12/08/2011
sorry jonnie the money was there when you got there, try again
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AlfredE69
Occupy Election '12: Vote 3rd Party
07:59 PM on 12/08/2011
Why blame me? I was only the CEO, much like a clerk but better paid.
07:48 PM on 12/08/2011
And now you non New Jersey people know how we NJ people got stuck with Chris Christie. It happened that our "Democrat Governor" (Jon Corzine) was way too much like a Republican so we did not go to the polls in 2010.
08:18 PM on 12/08/2011
did you make that up all by yourself?
08:32 PM on 12/08/2011
I've heard that they're trying to recruit Corzine for green jobs czar. He did so well as M-F - I mean WITH M-F - that he should be a lock for a CEO position with a solar energy company. Can you say "Solyndra"?
08:45 PM on 12/08/2011
If you lived in NJ, you would know at least two things.(1) Corzine tried to privatize the Atlantic City Expressway aka regressive taxation, so he could remove the burden from the wealthy taxpayers.(2) Things like that led to a very low Democrat voter turn out in NJ in 2010. These are indisputable facts. There are many more facts but you don't sound like one who likes facts.
10:40 PM on 12/08/2011
But how did you get Corzine?? That's the real question.
indyclem
looking for logic
07:08 PM on 12/08/2011
this is the guy that biden goes too for advice go figure
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ShawnRay
06:58 PM on 12/08/2011
1.2 billion lost....that is nothing compared to the rest of the money the democrats have lost in the Obama administration. The dems pillaged America with stimulus and now they want me to pay for their agenda. This is not my first rodeo and now I give over 60% to my 401k. Now I break even in taxes this year and last year. I will pull it out when the repubs are back in.
06:57 PM on 12/08/2011
“Jon Corzine … one of the best colleagues I had in the Senate and one of the best partners I have in the White House.”
President Barack Obama, Oct 21, 2009.
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Thumbody
just for the halibut!
06:32 PM on 12/08/2011
Hey MF wheres the money?
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09:53 PM on 12/08/2011
My dog ate the money.
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Grichde
Little Hope, Wrong Change
06:24 PM on 12/08/2011
HP SOULD MOVE THIS STORY TO THE FRONT PAGE!
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Thumbody
just for the halibut!
06:32 PM on 12/08/2011
No he's a democrat they don't reach that status here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greeneyes51654m
Retired, finally...
06:37 PM on 12/08/2011
Yes they should, but they won't. Unfortunately, Democrats are sheltered and coddled here.
06:43 PM on 12/08/2011
Must run in the democrat blood..Blame someone else ALWAYS!
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AlfredE69
Occupy Election '12: Vote 3rd Party
08:01 PM on 12/08/2011
The celebrate diversity
as long as they
agree with you
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Grichde
Little Hope, Wrong Change
06:23 PM on 12/08/2011
Wonder why Corzine was going long on euro bonds when Europe was crashing and burning. Bet the traders going short love him.
indyclem
looking for logic
07:06 PM on 12/08/2011
iam not an economist by any strech but to invest in europe with all that is gong on is just plain stupid
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Grichde
Little Hope, Wrong Change
07:40 PM on 12/08/2011
Bet if you ran the company the money would still be there!