Former AIG chief Hank
Greenberg finally goes on trial
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[September 13, 2016]
By Karen Freifeld
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Opening arguments
are set to begin on Tuesday in the trial of former American
International Group Inc chairman Maurice "Hank" Greenberg over
accounting fraud at the insurance giant some 16 years ago.
Greenberg, 91, is facing civil charges of orchestrating a $500
million transaction to conceal the insurer's financial difficulties
from shareholders. He is expected to testify during the trial.
The case, filed by then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer in
2005 and which also names former AIG chief financial officer Howard
Smith as a defendant, did not go to trial for more than a decade,
thanks to legal wrangling that twice made its way to the Court of
Appeals, the state's highest court.
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has said he continued to
pursue the case to show "no one, no matter how rich or powerful can
evade responsibility for misconduct."
David Boies, Greenberg's lawyer, plans to argue the lawsuit was
politically motivated.
"This case was brought by Eliot Spitzer expressly because he was
angry at Hank Greenberg," Boies said in an interview on Monday. He
plans to enter evidence that Spitzer was irate about statements
Greenberg made about the attorney general's overly aggressive
approach towards alleged corporate misconduct.
Greenberg and Smith tried for years to have the case thrown out as
having no merit, but the Court of Appeals said there was enough
evidence to proceed to trial.
Greenberg nearly settled the case in 2008 with a $100 million gift
to charity, Boies said, but the market crashed that September along
with the value of Greenberg's AIG stock holdings.
Damages are no longer on the table after Greenberg, Smith and other
executives separately reached a $115 million settlement with AIG
shareholders, but the Court of Appeals ruled in June that
Schneiderman could seek to recoup millions in bonuses paid to the
defendants during the time the alleged fraud took place.
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Former CEO of American International Group Inc., Maurice "Hank"
Greenberg, (C) leaves a building in downtown New York after being
deposed by the Attorney General's office March 10, 2010.
REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi
Justice Charles Ramos of New York state court in Manhattan will decide the
non-jury case, which may run into early next year with breaks between trial
dates. Some 20 to 25 witnesses are expected to testify, according to Boies.
Greenberg led AIG for four decades before he was ousted in 2005. The following
year, AIG paid $1.64 billion to settle federal and state probes into its
business practices.
The case is People v Greenberg et al, New York State Supreme Court, New York
County No. 401720-2005.
(Reporting By Karen Freifeld; Editing by Anthony Lin)
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