By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 10.8.09 @ 6:08AM
Kenneth Langone was targeted by Eliot Spitzer. On Monday he'll be
grand marshal of New York's Columbus Day Parade.
WASHINGTON -- If you happen to be in Manhattan on Monday do
not miss the Columbus Day Parade gliding up Fifth Avenue. It will
be a gaudy joyful affair as always, but it will feature something
especially timely. Its grand marshal is a brassy gent who took on
Eliot Spitzer when the former New York governor as attorney
general was at the height of his reckless powers, publicly
slandering private citizens in the hopes of intimidating them
into a plea bargain while privately employing ladies of delight
for what the FBI reported was "unsafe sex," perhaps undertaken at
breakneck speed and without a seat belt. Let us pass on --
"unsafe sex" does not invite prolonged contemplation in a
serious column, and in this column I am particularly serious. The
Columbus Day grand marshal did something uniquely honorable and
courageous.
He is Kenneth Langone, a self-made investment banker,
venture capitalist, and philanthropist. He is co-founder of The
Home Depot. Of even greater importance, he is a proud American
who did not flinch when Spitzer went after him. He and an
associate, Richard Grasso, spent some $70 million defending their
good names after Spitzer trashed them. Then, several months after
the former attorney general had trashed his own good name, they
won. It took four years, but they won.
Those must have been harrowing years, for, though
Langone is clearly a spirited and amusing adversary, he was under
heavy fire. Back in 2004 Spitzer publicly called Langone, then
head of the New York Stock Exchange's (NYSE) compensation
committee, "unsavory," "deceptive," and "tainted."
To his receptive stenographers in the media Spitzer then went on
to vow that he would "put a stake through" Langone's heart -- so
when Spitzer is accused of "unsafe sex," it might not be such a
laughing matter. Actually, Langone laughed. In the Wall
Street Journal he characterized this threat as
a "metaphorical threat to my cardiovascular system," as well as
"brash talk." Denying he had broken the law, as the grandstanding
attorney general alleged, Langone went on to demonstrate that
there was no case against him.
He was being accused of duping NYSE directors into
approving the compensation package of the outgoing chairman,
Grasso. Yet the directors denied that Langone had duped them by
concealment or faked data -- those being Spitzer's charges. In
fact, Langone demonstrated that it was Spitzer who was practicing
concealment. The attorney general did not want what was called
the Webb Report, the compilation of evidence and charges against
Langone, made public. When its contents were revealed, Langone
was shown to be innocent.
In threatening executives such as Langone with scurrilous
threats broadcast by a willing media Spitzer's intent was always
to intimidate them into an out-of-court settlement. He tried this
with others, for instance Hank Greenberg, the man who made AIG an
insurance giant and who was driven out of the company by a
cowardly board. The consequence of that prosecutorial excess cost
the federal government a fortune in bailouts. The consensus among
financial experts is that had Greenberg remained atop AIG it
would never have come to the grief it did.
Spitzer's barbarous use of his office "has never been
adequately addressed in the media," remarks Lawrence Auriana,
chairman of the Columbus Citizens Foundation, which is honoring
Langone in Monday's parade. Auriana makes another worthwhile
point. Had Langone not defended himself, "it would have been
impossible to honor him Monday." His name would have been
irretrievably defamed, says Auriana, "despite the hundreds of
millions of dollars he has contributed to charities, the hundreds
of thousands of jobs he has created and hundreds of millions of
dollars in savings he has given the customers of Home Depot." A
great exemplar of civic responsibility would be denied
us.
Aside from an ambitious attorney general abusing his power
to attain higher office (remember Spitzer rose to become the
"reform governor" of New York), Spitzer was part of a wider
movement to criminalize commerce. The movement began in the late
1940s when sociologist Edwin Sutherland coined the term
"white-collar crime," and set about to revise criminal law so
that the prosecution of theretofore perfectly legal transactions
could be possible. Sutherland wanted to eliminate the presumption
of innocence, among other revisions. He was a leading theorist of
the kind of class warfare that we see being practiced by certain
members of the Obama Administration today. With heroes like
Kenneth Langone, the demagogues can be thwarted. If they are not,
our economic woes will last a long time.
topics:
Eliot Spitzer, Kenneth Langone, Richard Grasso