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Whistleblower Records Shed Light On BNY Mellon Case

Bny Mellon Case

First Posted: 12/28/11 10:21 AM ET Updated: 12/28/11 10:21 AM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Confidential whistleblower documents that helped spark a massive state and federal investigation into how Bank of New York Mellon Corp charged pension funds for currency exchange, provide a rare window into how a bank insider aided a lawsuit against the bank.

The information provided by whistleblower Grant Wilson, who worked at BNY Mellon, included a detailed analysis of how the bank allegedly provided "fictitious" foreign-currency costs for pension funds.

The analysis included a step-by-step guide to how currencies were traded and internal profits generated by the bank, according to documents seen by Reuters. A memo detailing fellow employees also was provided.

Aided by Wilson's information, multiple states, including Virginia, Florida and New York, have sued BNY Mellon, alleging that the bank improperly charged state and local pension funds for foreign exchange. The Department of Justice also has sued the bank.

The allegations center on claims that BNY Mellon provided unfavorable currency-exchange rates for state and local pension funds for a decade. In a lawsuit in October, the New York attorney general alleged BNY Mellon earned $2 billion over the decade from the trading.

A bank spokesman said the bank believes that many comments detailed in the documents were taken out of context or not said at all.

"A handful of purported statements cherry-picked from millions of documents gathered over a decade do not reflect the way we do business or the value we provide our client," the spokesman said.

The documents illuminate why insiders with highly confidential information can be a potent force in whistleblower lawsuits. Much of the information a whistleblower provides remains confidential.

Wilson, for example, worked at the bank even as he secretly provided to his legal team -- lawyers in Boston and New York -- information about how BNY Mellon allegedly conducted foreign-exchange trading.

Wilson's information was provided to the legal team that filed whistleblower lawsuits against BNY Mellon in 2009 and then aided state attorneys general in subsequent probes. The legal team includes Boston lawyer Michael Lesser, and Philip Michael, a lawyer in New York, as well as Harry Markopolos, a fraud investigator best known for warning that Bernard Madoff was operating a fraudulent scheme.

Lesser, an attorney at Thornton & Naumes, said Wilson was not available for a comment.

The information then was provided by Wilson's lawyers to the Florida attorney general in 2009 and 2010. The attorney general at the time was weighing whether to intervene in an October 2009 whistleblower lawsuit against BNY Mellon. That lawsuit was based on Wilson's information.

In August this year, Florida Attorney General Pamela Jo Bondi filed her lawsuit in Leon County.

A bank spokesman said the Florida lawsuit is "without merit."

The Wall Street Journal earlier this year identified Wilson as the whistleblower behind the state and federal investigations and reported the existence of the documents.

Wilson, according to the documents, worked as a foreign-exchange trader for 19 years. He joined a predecessor bank to BNY Mellon in 1997 and left this spring. He worked at BNY Mellon's Pittsburgh office.

The documents detail Wilson's experience at the bank, noting that the trader "possesses deep and sophisticated knowledge and personal experience in these businesses, particularly with regard to foreign exchange." The documents note that he "never received a reprimand" during his career.

Wilson's first-hand knowledge was crucial to the state lawsuits. Information provided in 2009 underpinned subsequent state claims. Wilson "can describe, step-by-step, how the fraud is committed against the affected funds and how the various departments of the Bank work to make the process as profitable as possible," one document alleges.

Wilson and his lawyers, for example, provide 11 chronological steps to explain how pension clients allegedly receive a "falsified trade price," documents show. Those clients used a so-called "standing-instruction" program in which they effectively give control of foreign exchange to the bank.

In one document, Wilson's lawyers provide a question-and-answer tutorial so the Florida attorney general's office knows the right questions to ask BNY Mellon employees.

The documents also show how Wilson aided the legal effort even as he continued to work at BNY Mellon. One memo was written by Wilson's lawyers in August 2010, some eight months before Wilson left the bank. In the memo, Wilson's lawyers tell the Florida attorney general that Wilson knows that efforts to obtain documents from the bank are being stymied with "claims of difficulty in production or other delays."

The memo, using Wilson's knowledge of the bank, states that the information actually could be easily obtained because it is "centrally stored."

"It is stored at a state-of-the-art facility that should hasten, rather than hinder, any document response from the bank."

A month later, in September 2010, Wilson's lawyers submitted another memo to Florida's attorney general, noting: "We would also like to remind you that (Wilson) continues in his employment at the bank. Specific information, documents and conversations mentioned here could be connected" to Wilson.

That memo alleges that BNY Mellon "is now actively and hurriedly formulating a strategy" aimed at preserving profits from the foreign-exchange business at the center of the state inquiries. The memo explains that BNY Mellon publicly wants to provide a supposedly more "transparent" foreign-exchange system.

Actually, the "Project Gateway" strategy provides "no true change," the memo claims.

The memo also claims that one BNY Mellon client had received better pricing on currency transactions even as the bank continued "to steal" from other clients.

The documents also show some inside BNY Mellon allegedly worried about the impact of the investigations and whether profits would soon disappear. One employee, having learned that probes were looking at how BNY Mellon traded currencies, said: "It's over, it's all over," according to a March 2010 document.

Another document describes two months later how a senior banker addressed FX traders and told them the bank had received 16 subpoenas. This employee told the traders, "We have not done anything wrong."

In a seven-page memo, Wilson and his legal team provided detailed biographies of fellow traders and employees at BNY Mellon to help determine whether they might be helpful in the whistleblower legal effort. One employee was described as "worried about job security ... Not financially secure. Scared and probably loyal to the Bank. But also would not be inclined to perjure herself ... She has a lot of information."

Another senior executive "likes to rant and rave ... Mr. Wilson assumes he will want to defend the bank." A sales executive "seems willing to push the envelope when it comes to producing profits."

(Reporting by Carrick Mollenkamp; Editing by Michael Williams and Maureen Bavdek)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Confidential whistleblower documents that helped spark a massive state and federal investigation into how Bank of New York Mellon Corp charged pension funds for currency excha...
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Confidential whistleblower documents that helped spark a massive state and federal investigation into how Bank of New York Mellon Corp charged pension funds for currency excha...
Filed by Jillian Berman  | 
 
 
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10:00 AM on 12/31/2011
"SUEING"? Way past time to stop token fines and start jailing. But this will be biz as usual. $500 fine and 40 lashes with a wet noodle
10:13 AM on 12/29/2011
I'm a whistleblower who lost my job with Trico Lift after years of warning them about the unsafe machines they were knowingly renting to the public.Six weeks after i contacted OSHA i was fired and found out first hand how bad OSHA is at protecting whistleblowers.I bent over backwards warning them and did not want to go that route.Since i blew the whistle two more coworkers have come forward and lost there jobs.This case also involved Sunoco refineries and the Pennsylvania conventition center where i have complete indisputible company documentation of them renting unsafe macines into them.Way to much to post here but go to the department of labor's "Work in Progress"blog comment section where i have posted much more of our case.
thanks
bipolarbears60
common sense isn't so common
02:30 PM on 12/29/2011
That bravery certainly deserves a fan.
02:45 PM on 12/29/2011
Thanks
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
clearasmud
Obama Is Nothing More Than A Moderate Republican
03:27 PM on 12/29/2011
There is, unfortunately, an old saying that I have found to be absolutely true.

"No good deed goes unpunished."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lwayno
07:11 AM on 12/29/2011
WTF is the DOJ doing about the "BANK BONUS BOYS" AND THEIR CONTINOUS FRAUD & THEFT?? NOTHING! Why does the DOJ refuse to use the "RICO" act? The Bonus Boys would sell each other out in a New York minute! WHY???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
n ferra
Live and learn, or what's the point of life?
01:51 AM on 12/29/2011
Can anyone really be suprised about this? It's just business as usual for another bank that's already stolen millions (billions?) In tarp funds.
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breakingpoint
War is a Racket - Smedley Butler
09:29 PM on 12/28/2011
just another reason to vote for RonPaul
01:31 PM on 12/29/2011
Why do you say that? Rp wants to take us back to the 19th century. I don't want to live in the wild west.
10:33 AM on 01/01/2012
Explain what you mean by that.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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breakingpoint
War is a Racket - Smedley Butler
09:28 PM on 12/28/2011
you think MFGLobal was bad - that ain't the half of it

better get your money out while you still can
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oftenon
cartoons are the best explanation
09:17 PM on 12/28/2011
...and another thing! - law enforcement like this is just another example of govt regulatory interference!
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n ferra
Live and learn, or what's the point of life?
01:52 AM on 12/29/2011
Interference from stealing? Shame on law enforcement for enforcing the law.
bipolarbears60
common sense isn't so common
02:31 PM on 12/29/2011
Sarcasm? Right?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oftenon
cartoons are the best explanation
02:35 PM on 12/29/2011
when I posted it it was - tomorrow it could be a GOP candidate platform plank
09:04 PM on 12/28/2011
GRANT WILSON---we owe alot to you, so thanks. You,ve done well by your community.
I can,t help but think that banking is producing alot of criminals + this situation will remain, until there are negative consequences for such behaviour.
I urge the Government to start getting serious re investigating + punishing this group .
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kittycarumba
What we think we become
08:16 PM on 12/28/2011
"A handful of purported statements cherry-picked from millions of documents gathered over a decade do not reflect the way we do business or the value we provide our client," the spokesman said.

Sounds like the same George W Bush and Dick Cheney garbage all over again. Unfortunately we ll saw what happened to that crop of thieves and traitors.
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HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
08:10 PM on 12/28/2011
Go Pittsburgher Grant Wilson! Let the wrong doers hang! Let them be stripped of their Terrible Towels, tarred and feathered, and kicked out of Pittsburgh forever! One knowledgeable moral person on the inside is worth more than 10,000 economics hapless American dunce "F" students in the Tea Party AND OWS.

Let the games begin. Let slick lawyers and bankers on each other to the death in America. Let the games begin. There is allot of work out there...

THE TWO BEARS EXPLAIN MF GLOBAL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLt05sN7vK0&feature=youtu.be
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
07:52 PM on 12/28/2011
The thieves will never be charged with a crime, but you can be sure the whistleblower will be pilloried. The bank will go after him in suit after suit, and with more resources than him, will take every cent he doesn't have to spend to defend himself. The bank itself will get a mild slap on the wrist and continue its thieving ways. The retirement funds robbed by this bank have less to distribute to retirees and whatever the bank pays in recompense, if anything, won't come close to making up the difference. This type of crime should result in life sentences at hard labor for the bank executives involved and the bank's board of directors who approve of what the way the bank conducts business. Further, they should be fined every red cent they have, own or can raise. Nothing will happen to correct any of this until both the executives and the members of the boards of directors of thieving banks and corporations pay a truly hefty price for their crimes.
08:16 PM on 12/28/2011
The more whistleblowers the better. Too bad their isn't a financial incentive for them.
bipolarbears60
common sense isn't so common
02:35 PM on 12/29/2011
You'll have to include confiscating all the assets of their spouses and children as this is how they hide assets. Reduce these thieves and their families to beggars in the streets and we just might (if there are a hundred or so) put enough fear into these thieves to prevent some of this crime.
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
04:19 PM on 12/29/2011
I agree and have said so before in an earlier post. They all should be put on the street as homeless to join all those they have made homeless with their thievery.
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imdesign
Expression is Everything.
07:27 PM on 12/28/2011
When a so called respected person employed by a Bank exposes the mis-conduct within this Bank to their respected lawyers it is seen as fraud and that this Bank has committed a crime,

when a lowly private in the military exposes the conduct of his superiors in the killing of civilians, it is seen as treason against the country with a possible death penalty.

No matter what the circumstance, a crime is a crime and cover up is a cover up. And it seems authority has its own set of rules supported by a legal system that will de-cry the person who exposes their deception and lies so they can maintain the inequality.

Exposure of this evil against the community will continue and those individuals, political and corporate scurrying to fill their coffers will have their day to answer for their actions.
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javajava
Pastafarian Liberal Progressive Socialist Hippie
07:16 PM on 12/28/2011
They steal with impunity. At this minute bankers are sitting and plotting how to steal more money. Legality and morality are no obstacle. When and if they get caught they will pay a fine of pennies to the dollar of what was stolen and launch the newest hatched fraud scheme. And then another scheme and another....
06:56 PM on 12/28/2011
Wow. Smacks of racketeering all the way through.
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euromarkusx
Political Party: Lobster
05:17 PM on 12/28/2011
Blah Blah Blah.

BNYM will pay a little fine, and business as usual.

Rob a bank = go to jail

Own a bank and rob your clients = profit
06:11 PM on 12/28/2011
e, Yes, that sounds just right. Go figure; steal a loaf of bread..Jail; Rob trillions from people depending on the integrity of their bank...jail. CREEPS.