Once again, the team of politicians and corporate
bureaucrats pursuing the witchhunt against
former American International Group CEO Maurice “Hank”
Greenberg have struck out. Or maybe the better baseball analogy
would be that they hit another ball into foul territory.
Greenberg, who built AIG into a financial services powerhouse
during the 35-plus years he served as its head,
won another legal round Tuesday as a federal jury in New York
City ruled that he did not have to reimburse AIG for shares taken
by an investment firm Greenberg owned when he was forced out as
CEO. The jury found that the shares belonged to Greenberg’s
company, Starr International, under terms of the original
contract.
Yet outrageously, it appears that AIG will continue to use the
billions in taxpayer dollars it has receive to pursue this
frivoulous litigation against Greenberg. The jury’s verdict today
is the latest piece of evidence that much of AIG’s problems —
and the systemic disruptions they have caused — can be traced to
political meddling.
Greenberg, a distinguished philanthropist and Bronze
Star recipient for his service in World War II and the
Korean War, was forced out in 2005 because of baseless
charges of accounting fraud by then-New York Attorney General
Eliot Spitzer. All of Spitzer’s criminal charges against
Greenberg and nearly all of his civil charges
have been dismissed, but the mere allegations were enough to
cause AIG’s board to force Greenberg out and to be replaced with
a succession of caretaker CEOs more pleasing to politicians like
Spitzer.
The sudden forced exit of Grenberg took its toll.
Greenberg has
testified that as many mortgage-related credit default
swaps were written in the nine months following his departure as
AIG had issued in the entire previous 7 years combined. No one
has refuted him on these specifics. We will never know what would
have happened had Greenberg stayed on as CEO, but given his track
record, it is doubtful the implosion would have been so sudden
and so severe.
In sum the lesson of AIG is not that there should be more
government meddling, but less arbitrary intervention by subprime
politicians.
(Greenberg is not to be confused with the late baseball legend
Hank Greenberg, from whom he probably took his nickname. But this
did allow me to use many baseball analogies in this blog, so I’m
grateful.)