- Japan Business Confidence Dives to Record Low
- Honda to Cut North American Production, Worker Pay
- Earnings Alert: First Quarter Likely to Disappoint
- Fed's Move to Lower Mortgage Rates May Backfire
- Gross: Double-Digit Returns Won't Be Back Soon
- Facebook Financial Chief Yu to Leave Company
- Cramer: Too Late to Buy In?
- Emerging Bull: A Ray Of Hope In Thick Of Crisis
- HP Mulls Google Software Instead of Windows for PC
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday charged the political adviser to New York state's former comptroller for "corrupting the integrity'' of the pension fund by taking kickbacks from companies seeking to manage its money.
The SEC, did not, however, charge the former state comptroller, Alan Hevesi, who pleaded guilty to misusing state drivers to chauffeur his ailing wife and resigned.
Hevesi's political adviser and chief fund-raiser, Henry Morris, was charged, along with David Loglisci, who was the pension fund's chief investment officer from 2003 to 2006, according to a copy of the SEC's complaint.
State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, whose office worked with the SEC on the investigation, said in an interview with an Albany-area radio station: "We are going to announce indictments today but this is going to be an ongoing matter.''
He added: "There will be other cases, other developments.''
SEC officials, whose charges are civil, and Cuomo, whose indictments are criminal, planned a midday news conference to discuss the investigation.
"The defendants' scheme corrupted the integrity of the Retirement Fund's investment processes and resulted in retirement funds being invested with the purpose of enriching the defendants,'' the SEC said.
The federal complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, also charges "certain entities controlled by Morris.'' Three firms listed as defendants in the complaint are: Nosemote, Pantigo Emerging, and Purpose.
New York is one of three states that put their pension funds under the control of just one individual, in this case the comptroller, Cuomo noted in the interview. He added that concerns about this kind of "corruption'' in New York's pension plans date back decades.
"When you have a sole trustee of a pension fund, a $122 billion sole trustee, and these porous campaign finance laws, that I believe is a toxic combination that puts us in a vulnerable position,'' said Cuomo, a Democrat.
Asked about the current comptroller, Thomas DiNapoli, a Democratic former legislator who replaced Hevesi in 2007, Cuomo again criticized lax campaign finance laws and the reliance on just one trustee.
"It just breeds corruption,'' he said.






