Showing posts with label fraud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fraud. Show all posts

Friday, August 27, 2021

As Elizabeth Holmes Goes To Trial, The Issue of David Boies' Attorney-Client Privilege Looms

 

Elizabeth Holmes

What Other Firms Can Learn From Boies Schiller's Role in the Elizabeth Holmes Saga

Law.com, August 21, 2021

An attorney-client privilege dispute between Elizabeth Holmes and Boies Schiller Flexner looms over the Theranos founder’s criminal fraud trial set to kick off Aug. 31, but attorneys say the saga also serves as a cautionary tale for the legal community.

In a trial expected to last about 13 weeks in the San Jose courtroom of U.S. District Judge Edward Davila of the Northern District of California, lawyers from Williams & Connolly and a San Francisco solo practitioner are set to defend Holmes against the government’s allegations that the former executive defrauded investors, doctors and patients with faulty blood-testing technology.

David Boies

David Boies
, Boies Schiller’s managing partner and chairman, and partner Heather King could also be central players in the courtroom drama. Boies and King, Theranos’ former general counsel, are listed as possible witnesses in court documents. A magistrate judge found that 13 emails on the government’s exhibit list were not protected by Holmes’ attorney-client privilege with the firm.

Some lawyers say the haziness of the high-profile firm’s relationship with Holmes has caused the rest of the industry to sit up and stress the fundamentals. Schiff Hardin partner Adam Diederich in Chicago said the attorney-client privilege dispute certainly got the attention of attorneys, who expect the advice and information they provide clients to remain confidential.

“It’s pretty clear something fell through the cracks, but it’s not directly known exactly what happened here,” Diederich said. “So I think most law firms and lawyers who are aware of this are going to be more careful, with this in mind, to document the scope of the relationship.”

Holmes argued that Boies—who also served on the defunct company’s board of directors—and his firm had acted as counsel not just to the company but to Holmes in an individual capacity. She claimed they had represented her starting in 2011 in an intellectual property dispute, according to case filings. In a 2018 interview in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Francisco, Boies told federal investigators he represented solely the company up until the summer of 2016, according to a memo on the docket.

Boies represented Theranos as it came under fire from reporting by The Wall Street Journal’s John Carreyrou, who unwound the alleged scheme at the center of the government’s case against Holmes and Theranos’ former president and chief operating officer, Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, who is set to stand trial beginning Jan. 11.

Federal prosecutors asserted that Holmes could not pass the circuit court’s test to show that counsel was communicating to her in an individual capacity or that the communications’ dealt with matters particular to Holmes instead of the general affairs of the company, whose assignee had waived Theranos’ corporate privilege to specific documents.

Noticeably absent from the record is a Boies Schiller engagement letter—with Theranos or Holmes. Boies himself had told investigators he was “virtually certain” that there must be an engagement letter establishing the legal relationship with Theranos, as required by the firm. Holmes has admitted in court documents that she has no knowledge of an engagement letter directed toward her or Theranos, or one delineating or limiting Boies’ representation to Holmes or the company.

In a June order, U.S. Magistrate Judge Nathanael Cousins of the Northern District of California found Holmes was “unable to point to any documents supporting this allegedly obvious joint representation.”

Emily Ward, a white-collar associate at Smith, Gambrell & Russell in Atlanta, said if she were to merely speculate about the possible effects of the 13 emails on the trial, the communications—which have been described in filings as related to Theranos’ response to the media, investors and regulators—it’s possible the testimony of Boies and King could speak to the intent or aspects of the alleged scheme to defraud.

“If there were any sort of false or misleading omissions in communications to investors and regulators, that could be part of the prosecution’s case, but of course, we’re just guessing until we know what’s in those emails,” Ward said.

Ward said the lack of any engagement letter is a little surprising, “especially for parties that are as sophisticated as one of the more preeminent law firms in the country and Theranos.”

On the other hand, she said, not having an engagement agreement with regard to each specific area in which a law firm is offering advice is not that surprising. “When senior executives or officers within a company have a question, they might just run down the hall to their in-house counsel or call up their friend who’s the outside counsel, and there’s not going to be an engagement agreement for each one-off situation where legal advice is given,” she said. “So you can see how something like this may have organically developed, but it is definitely a risk to not have an engagement agreement when you do have both the corporate and personal legal interest at issue.”

Kevin Allen, of Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott in Pittsburgh, said the lack of an engagement letter was uncommon but not unheard of. “To the extent that it happens, it’s my experience, typically, just a delay, where the engagement letter would just catch up to the actual engagement,” he said. “A firm may be doing work for some finite period of time without an engagement letter yet having been issued, but I think particularly in larger law firms and prominent law firms that have systems in place, in my experience, it’s unusual.”

Allen said that Boies’ role on the board and the “multiple hats” he wore in connection to Theranos further complicated the privilege issue. “Then the question becomes, ‘OK, person who holds a law degree but is on the board of directors, when you were talking and there were communications with you, which hat were you wearing?’” he said. “It doesn’t mean that a lawyer who is on the board can never have confidential, privileged communications, but it just makes it more complicated.”

To maintain clear lines of communication when an attorney is acting both as a business adviser and legal representative, Ward suggested keeping a separate email account or only discussing certain personal matters when that person is physically in their law office.

Ward said prior to its representation of Theranos, Boies Schiller was regarded as one of the top law firms in the country—and still is—but it has lost more than hundred attorneys since.

“I think this is a cautionary tale because it’s just a quick reminder that whether it’s the most powerful law firm in the country, or a solo practitioner that hung up their own shingle, all types of lawyers and all types of law firms need to make sure that they are documenting everything having to do with attorney-client privilege and making sure their clients understand who they represent, especially when you’re talking about a corporation that has founders, executives and other employees,” she said.

When a company is built around a founder, as was the case with Theranos, it can be even more difficult to have a clear demarcation between individual representation and the company, Ward said.

“I think that that’s something that we will continue to see litigated over the next 10 or 20 years with all of these dot-com and app companies,” she said. “There’s going to be a question as these companies grow: When did lawyers start representing the company as opposed to the founders who were just trying to make it work?”

Monday, January 1, 2018

Attorney Evan Greebel is Convicted of Helping Felon Martin Shkreli Defraud Retrophin


Evan Greebel, center, leaving court in 2015. After his conviction on Wednesday, he faces
up to 20 years in prison. 
CreditJohn Taggart/Bloomberg

Martin Shkreli, former hedge fund manager, and convicted, incarcerated felon, is held by most Americans in contempt for raising the price of the anti-parasitic drug Daraprim to $750 a pill, from $13.50. Now his lawyer Evan Greebel has been indicted for helping Mr. Shkreli in the scheme to defraud Shkreki's former pharmaceutical company, Retrophin.

Truly a pair of greedy turds, in my opinion.

Betsy Combier
betsy@advocatz.com
Editor, Advocatz
Editor, Parentadvocates.org
Editor, New York Court Corruption
Editor, National Public Voice
Editor, NYC Public Voice
Editor, Inside 3020-a Teacher Trials

Martin Shkreli’s Ex-Lawyer Is Convicted of Fraud


A lawyer who once advised the former drug company executive Martin Shkreli was convicted on Wednesday of helping Mr. Shkreli defraud a pharmaceutical company.

The lawyer, Evan Greebel, who was outside counsel to Mr. Shkreli’s former drug company, Retrophin, was found guilty by a jury in Brooklyn of charges he conspired to commit wire fraud and securities fraud, prosecutors said.

“We are shocked by the verdict,” said Reed Brodsky, a lawyer for Mr. Greebel. “We will continue to fight for justice for Evan Greebel and his family.”

A different jury found Mr. Shkreli guilty in August of defrauding hedge fund investors, but cleared him of conspiring with Mr. Greebel to steal from Retrophin.
Bridget Rohde
The acting United States attorney in Brooklyn, Bridget Rohde, said the verdict sent a message to lawyers that they would be held accountable when they “use their legal expertise to facilitate the commission of crime.”

She added, “By helping Retrophin C.E.O. Martin Shkreli steal millions of dollars and cover up Shkreli’s fraud, the defendant Evan Greebel betrayed the trust placed in him by Retrophin’s board of directors to represent the company’s best interests.”

Mr. Shkreli, 34, became notorious in 2015 when, as chief executive of Turing Pharmaceuticals, he raised the price of the anti-parasitic drug Daraprim to $750 a pill, from $13.50. The price increase was unrelated to the criminal case. He is awaiting sentencing on the fraud conviction.

The charges he and Mr. Greebel faced were related to Mr. Shkreli’s management of, Retrophin and of two hedge funds he ran, MSMB Capital and MSMB Healthcare, from 2009 to 2014.

Prosecutors have said that Mr. Shkreli lied about the funds’ finances to lure investors and concealed devastating trading losses. They said he paid investors back with money and shares stolen from Retrophin, which he founded in 2011.

Mr. Greebel was charged with assisting Mr. Shkreli in defrauding Retrophin through a series of settlement and sham consulting agreements.

In September, after his conviction, Mr. Shkreli was jailed after he offered a $5,000 reward in a posting on Facebook for a strand of hair from the former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. That prompted United States District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto to revoke his bail.

Mr. Greebel denied wrongdoing, and at trial, his lawyers sought to distance their client from Mr. Shkreli, whose provocative public behavior earned him the nickname “pharma bro.”

Mr. Brodsky told jurors during his opening statement that Mr. Shkreli lied to Mr. Greebel just as he had lied to investors.

Mr. Greebel was also accused of conspiring with Mr. Shkreli to exercise secret control over Retrophin shares belonging to several other shareholders. Mr. Shkreli was found guilty of that charge during his trial.

William F. Sweeney Jr., the assistant director-in-charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s New York field office, said investment fraud remained a priority.

“While it’s become increasingly more evident that Greebel exploited his knowledge of the law in his efforts to break the law, today we finally see justice served in a case that’s spent no shortage of its time in the spotlight,” Mr. Sweeney said.

When he is sentenced, Mr. Greebel faces a maximum of 20 years in prison.

Mr. Greebel, 44, was a partner at the law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman when he was working for Retrophin. He later joined the firm Kaye Scholer, but resigned after his arrest in December 2015.
Evan Greebel and Martin Shkreli
Indicted Kaye Scholer Partner Resigns

Biglaw partner Evan Greebel is in Biglaw no more.

Remember how there was a Biglaw partner caught up in the whole Martin Shkreli securities fraud mess? While the rest of the world celebrated the downfall of the massive douchebag that rose to infamy by raising the price of a life-saving pill, Daraprim, by 5,000% (from $13.50 to $750), over in our little corner of the internet, there was plenty of schadenfreude-laced glee over the fact that a Kaye Scholer partner, Evan Greebel, got arrested alongside his former client. (Greebel represented Shkreli while at Katten Muchin, where he worked for more than a decade before joining Kaye Scholer.)
Though Greebel was still gainfully employed in Biglaw back in December, it seems that is no longer the case. As Law360 reports:
Evan Greebel, who remained a partner at Kaye Scholer despite being indicted for allegedly funneling cash from biopharmaceutical company Retrophin Inc. to investors in hedge funds founded by Shkreli, is no longer a partner at the firm, according to spokeswoman Andrea Orzehoski.
As for the exact date of Greebel’s resignation, Orzehoski would only say that it was recent and declined to discuss the results of the firm’s internal investigation of the attorney. Orzehoski said last month that upon conclusion of the probe, “the firm will take appropriate action.”
That isn’t the only shake-up in the notable case — he’s also made a change at the counsel’s table. With the means to hire the best of the best and the experience to know the big players in the white-collar world, Greebel initially tapped a well-known boutique, Morvillo Abramowitz Grand Iason & Anello, and partners Jonathan Sack and Benjamin Fischer. But all that is different now:
Gibson Dunn partner Reed Brodsky told the court on Feb. 8 that he will be defending Greebel against the criminal charges. Gibson Dunn partner Joel M. Cohen and counsel Lisa H. Rubin were also added to Greebel’s defense team, according to court records.
On Friday, Jonathan S. Sack and Benjamin S. Fischer of Morvillo Abramowitz Grand Iason & Anello PC were allowed to withdraw as co-counsel for Greebel, leaving Gibson Dunn as Greebel’s only attorneys.
White-collar enthusiasts may remember Brodsky for his former role in the U.S. Attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York, where he was lead prosecutor in the conviction of Rajat Gupta on insider trading charges. Though he is now on the other side of the room, this case is sure to reverberate in the legal world.