AIG Defendants Appeal Ruling

November 18, 2010 at 07:00 PM
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Five executives convicted of producing a sham insurance contract deal between General Re Corp. and American International Group argued in the U.S. Court of Appeals that a district court committed several procedural missteps during their 2008 trial.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York heard arguments contending that the District Court in Connecticut erred in a number of areas, including not excluding evidence from the case, not properly instructing the jury on certain matters of law and allowing testimony that the defendants believed was perjured.

In its brief to the appeals court, the government answered that if there were an error, the total evidence against the defendants was overwhelming.

Ronald Ferguson, former Gen Re chief executive officer; Elizabeth Monrad, Gen Re chief financial officer; Christopher Garand, Gen Re senior vice president for U.S. Underwriting; Robert Graham, former Gen Re senior vice president and assistant general counsel; and Christian Milton, AIG's vice president of reinsurance, were convicted in 2008 of a scheme to manipulate American International Group's financial statement with a sham insurance contract in 2002.

The discovery of the sham contract, which inflated AIG's reserves by $500 million, resulted in a restatement of earnings and the loss to the company's shareholders of between $544 million and $597 million.

Prosecutors argued that the executives created a sham reinsurance transaction and a phony paper trail to make it appear that Gen Re purchased a reinsurance contract from AIG.

Instead, the companies entered into a side deal where AIG returned $10 million in premium to Gen Re and paid the reinsurer a $5 million fee for entering into the transaction, prosecutors contended.

The defendants were sentenced to a combination of prison time and probation and also ordered to pay fines. AIG'S Milton received the longest sentence of four years in prison. The others received prison terms from one to two years.

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