home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1993
/
TIME Almanac 1993.iso
/
time
/
caps
/
87
/
87capmil.4
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-09-25
|
2KB
|
40 lines
°Q& December 28, 1987NATIONTrading Places
Boesky gets three years in jail
After 13 months of anticipation and delays, Wall Street's most
spectacular speculator--and insider trader--finally heard his
fate. Hands clutched behind his back, Ivan Boesky, 50 listened
pensively while U.S. District Court Judge Morris Lasker told a
packed courtroom in Manhattan, "Criminal behavior such as
Boesky's cannot go unchecked. Its seriousness was too
substantial merely to forgive and to forget." With that the
judge sentenced the onetime superstar investor to three years
in prison for his role in the largest insider-trading scandal
in history.
The sentence seemed to split the difference between harshness
and leniency. The prison term was one year longer than the
sentence given last February to Investment Banker Dennis Levine,
who let investigators to Boesky after confessing that he and
Boesky had been part of an insider-trading ring. But Boesky,
who, as part of a plea bargain, admitted to one count of lying
to the Securities and Exchange Commission, would have received
a five-year sentence and a $250,000 fine. Clearly the judge
knocked off time because Boesky has been cooperating with
investigators. Before his crimes were publicly revealed, he
taped conversations with conspirators to provide evidence for
prosecutors.
Still, a case could be made that Boesky got off lightly. Said
Samuel Buffone, who serves on the American Bar Association's
white-collar- crime committee: "You can see people convicted
of relatively petty crimes being sentenced to about the same
time that Mr. Boesky received for crimes involving sums of money
many, many times larger." Law-enforcement officials estimate
that with good behavior, Boesky will probably wind up serving
no more than 20 months.