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<text id=90TT1657>
<title>
June 25, 1990: Good Ole Bad Boy
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 42
Good Ole Bad Boy
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A Texas S&L tycoon is indicted, but how many others will the
U.S. nab?
</p>
<p>By John E. Gallagher--Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington and
Richard Woodbury/Houston
</p>
<p> For a while, Don Dixon stood tall in Texas. He was big rich,
as Texans like to say. A successful real-estate developer, in
1982 he bought a tiny savings and loan in his hometown of
Vernon and built it into a giant, at least on paper. By luring
deposits from across the U.S. with high interest rates, Vernon
S&L grew a spectacular 1,600% in just four years, making it one
of the 20 largest thrifts in the state. But the S&L was lending
money faster than it was coming in, often to projects on shaky
financial footing. Meanwhile, Dixon indulged his taste for
excess, notably a $22,000 gastronomic tour of Europe and a
fleet of five airplanes. When federal regulators finally closed
Vernon in 1987, they estimated that Dixon's extravagant
ownership left taxpayers with a $1.3 billion bill, until then
the largest single S&L mess in the U.S.
</p>
<p> The Government decided last week that Dixon should pay for
his extravagance. In a 38-count criminal indictment, the
Justice Department charged that Dixon illegally used the S&L's
money to pay for political contributions, pleasure trips and
rent on a California beach house. If he is convicted on all
counts, Dixon could face a 190-year prison sentence and a fine
of as much as $9.5 million dollars. (Dixon intends to plead
innocent.) Eight Vernon officers have already been convicted,
including Chairman Woody Lemons, who last week began serving
a 30-year term, the longest to date for an S&L executive.
</p>
<p> The Dixon indictment signals an upsurge in charges against
the culprits accused of causing the S&L mess, the biggest
financial scandal in U.S. history. But the Dixon case
underscored the difficulty of prosecuting complicated financial
crimes. The Government took more than three years to build its
case against Dixon alone. And U.S. officials have not yet
investigated 7,000 more tips about possible fraud at S&Ls. With
so many leads and limited resources, the Justice Department may
be able to prosecute only the most egregious misdeeds that
befell thrifts in the 1980s.
</p>
<p> The convictions, while satisfying for taxpayers, have done
little to recoup the vast S&L losses. "We won't see any
recovery near to the amount of losses," says Edward Dennis Jr.,
an assistant U.S. attorney general. "We won't even get close."
The Congressional Budget Office estimated last week that the
Government's S&L cleanup bill may total $150 billion, three
times as much as Congress approved for the job last year. With
interest, the final total could run as high as $500 billion
over 40 years. Without another infusion of federal money, the
bailout fund will be broke by year's end.
</p>
<p> As the indictment describes him, Dixon embodied the
high-rolling style of oil-patch opportunists. In the early
1980s Congress wrongheadedly tried to help struggling thrifts
earn higher returns by liberating them to invest in virtually
anything they wanted. Crafty entrepreneurs began building the
S&Ls into fast-buck enterprises by sinking money into marinas,
golf courses and even uranium mines.
</p>
<p> Dixon lived with panache, lounging at a posh beach house in
Solana Beach, Calif., and entertaining Vernon executives in
high style. Trouble was, the money for such perks allegedly
came from the thrift's vaults. According to the indictment, the
rent on Dixon's beach house was paid by an associate, Jack
Atkinson, who had got loans from Vernon. All told, Atkinson
paid $577,000 in rent through loans. When Vernon would no
longer extend the credit, Dixon allegedly arranged for Atkinson
to receive an extra $24,200 as a "consulting" fee, which also
went toward the rent.
</p>
<p> The indictment charges that Vernon S&L picked up the tab for
Dixon's personal trips and parties, some of them featuring
prostitutes. Tagging along on several outings was the
highest-ranking thrift regulator in Texas, Linton Bowman, who
has not been charged with any wrongdoing. Dixon sought to win
political allies with hard cash. He allegedly had Vernon make
illegal contributions to the campaigns of such politicians as
California Senator Alan Cranston, former House Majority Whip
Tony Coelho and former House Speaker Jim Wright, all of whom
have been tarnished by other connections to the S&L scandal.
None of the campaigns were aware of the illegality of Dixon's
contributions.
</p>
<p> Considering the enormity of Vernon's failure--96% of its
loans were overdue when the Government took over--the
indictment strikes some critics as tardy and tame. The Justice
Department contends that it has been moving as quickly as
possible, although last year it left $26 million unspent out
of a fraud-fighting budget of $75 million. "These complicated
white-collar-crime cases take time to develop," says Attorney
General Dick Thornburgh. In north Texas alone, the Government
is investigating more than 500 individuals affiliated with 38
different S&Ls.
</p>
<p> Under pressure from Congress, the Justice Department has
been beefing up the staff and budget devoted to the scandals.
The agency has $110 million to spend this year, which has
enabled it to hire 368 more financial-fraud investigators, as
well as 202 FBI agents and 118 more assistant U.S. attorneys.
Congress may provide further help. One bill would create
"strike forces" to investigate fraud and provide higher
salaries for prosecutors of bank crimes. Says Nancy Kassebaum,
the Kansas Republican who introduced the measure in the Senate
last week: "It is time to take off the gloves and unleash our
best and brightest prosecutors on the mess."
</p>
<p> After a slow start, the Bush Administration's bailout has
been moving quickly. The Resolution Trust Corp., which is
responsible for liquidating and selling off insolvent thrifts,
has closed or sold 96 since the beginning of April and expects
to handle another 45 by the end of this month. But the RTC's
work load keeps growing; the CBO estimated last week that as
many as 1,700 thrifts in the U.S. may collapse, more than half
the S&L industry. The RTC has only enough money to deal with
another 120 institutions at best. After that, the cleanup will
come to a halt unless Congress comes up with more money.
</p>
<p> Sensing rising voter anger, some Democrats think they may
be able to make political hay from the mess. Since four of the
five Senators accused of being swayed by contributions from S&L
owner Charles Keating are Democrats, that may not be too easy.
Still, some Democrats believe the slow start of the bailout is
a separate scandal for which the Bush Administration alone is
responsible. "Unlike the first crisis, in this one there is not
plenty of blame to go around," contends Congressman Charles
Schumer of New York.
</p>
<p> As the S&L cleanup bill mounts, political mudslinging is
likely to increase. "The Government needs a sideshow to shift
focus from the cost of dealing with the problem," says Paul
Horvitz, a finance professor at the University of Houston. At
this point, the biggest new scandal would be to push the
increased bailout cost into the future by borrowing more money.
Felix Rohatyn, the Manhattan investment banker and fiscal
gadfly, proposed last week that the Government pay for the
bailout with a 5% surcharge on federal income taxes, which
could raise $25 billion to $35 billion a year. Borrowing the
money instead, he said, would amount to "leaving it to our
children to pay off our own stupidity."
</p>
<p> While a tax surcharge would be politically unpopular, it
would be swift in its work. When the last failed S&L was closed
and the last offender jailed, the scandal would finally be
over.
</p>
<p>THE CHARGE:
</p>
<p> Hoping to curry favor, Dixon made illegal contributions to
candidates.
</p>
<p>THE CHARGE:
</p>
<p> Dixon and the state S&L commissioner went on a hunting trip
to Kansas.
</p>
<p>THE CHARGE:
</p>
<p> One of the lavish parties featured a yacht cruise in San
Diego harbor.
</p>
<p>THE CHARGE:
</p>
<p> To pay rent on his beach house, Dixon tapped a colleague's
loan.
</p>
<p>THE CHARGE:
</p>
<p> Among its dubious deals, Vernon bought three exotic-car
dealerships.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>