Misplaced Pages

Dennis Levine: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 07:58, 21 March 2006 editLulu of the Lotus-Eaters (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users21,790 edits Revert to revision 44357272 using popups← Previous edit Latest revision as of 22:11, 31 October 2024 edit undo92.26.220.84 (talk) Freeman was head of arbitrage at Goldman Sachs 
(291 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American investor and white-collar criminal}}
'''Dennis Levine''' (born ]) was a prominent player in the ] ] scandals of the mid-]. As a managing director at ], he was charged with insider trading by then U.S Attorney ], eventually leading investigators to the arrest of ].
{{BLP sources|date=April 2019}}{{Infobox criminal
| name = Dennis Levine
| image = Dennis Levine in 2004.jpg
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1952|8|5}}
| birth_place = ]
| death_date =
| death_place =
| alma_mater = ]
| occupation = ]
}}
'''Dennis B. Levine''' (born August 5, 1952)<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Stone |first=Michael |date=July 28, 1986 |title=Insiders: The Story of Dennis Levine and the Scandal That's Rocking Wall Street |journal=] |pages=26–34 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9OYCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA26 }}</ref> is a corporate consultant and former investment banker. He was a managing director at the investment banking firm ] in the 1980s. Levine was one of the first of several high-profile ] defendants in the ] insider trading investigations of the mid-1980s.<ref name="newsweek-greed">{{cite web|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9926616/site/newsweek/|title=Greed on Wall Street|date=1986-05-26|publisher= |work=Newsweek|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070630214834/http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9926616/site/newsweek/|archivedate=June 30, 2007|accessdate=2007-08-22}}</ref> As a result of the investigation by and subsequent proceedings, Levine pleaded guilty.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1990/05/21/73553/index.htm|title=THE INSIDE STORY OF AN INSIDE TRADER The author's arrest set off a series that toppled Wall Streeters like dominoes, from Boesky to Milken.|work=Fortune|date= May 21, 1990 |access-date=2020-03-26}}</ref>


==Early life==
Levine grew up in a middle-class family in ], ] and graduated from New York City's ]. He became an expert at gathering and trading on insider information. Levine spent much of his working life on the phone developing an insider trading ring of professionals working at a number of Wall Street firms. Participants exchanged and traded on inside information they obtained through their work. Levine placed his trades through an account maintained under an assumed name at ] in the ], especially Bank Leu. These offshore banks executed those transactions through several brokers, including ]. One of their brokers suspected that trades from their offshore accounts were based on inside information and started piggy backing personal trades. In May ], Merrill Lynch detected suspicious activity in that and two other brokers' personal trading accounts. Following an internal investigation, they passed the information on to the ] (SEC). The ensuing investigation lead to the offshore banks and eventually to Dennis Levine, and he began to cooperate with authorities.
Levine grew up in a middle-class ]<ref>Fechter, Melvin , Volume II, September 20, 2013</ref> family in ] in eastern ]. He graduated from CUNY's ], obtaining an ] from the same college in 1976.


==Career==
The SEC and the US Attorney's office conducted investigations that soon extended well beyond Levine's insider trading ring. There seemed to be an entire web of relationships among Wall Street professionals exchanging information and other favors, including the parking of stock, the accumulation of stock to pressure a firms' management, and stock price manipulation. Well known market participants were soon caught up in the investigations, including investment banker ] of ], arbitrager Robert Freeman of ] and ]ur ]. Eventually the investigations led to ] who was at the center of the ] universe.
After being hired away from his career at ] in 1978, he joined ]'s corporate finance department and worked in its Paris office specializing in mergers and acquisitions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1987/09/28/69569/index.htm|title=INSIDE DENNIS LEVINE He was a formidable operator who had his insider-trading ring planned when he was all of 27|work=CNN Money|date= September 28, 1987 |access-date=2020-03-25}}</ref> He moved to ] in 1981. Shortly after Lehman was bought by ] in 1985, Levine moved to Drexel as a managing director.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1986/05/22/the-puzzling-wall-street-saga-of-dennis-levine/25e0b3ea-4038-4ce0-a3c2-edc2e111a181/|title=The Puzzling Wall Street Saga of Dennis Levine|last=Coll|first=Steve|date=May 22, 1986|newspaper=The Washington Post|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200326013732/https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1986/05/22/the-puzzling-wall-street-saga-of-dennis-levine/25e0b3ea-4038-4ce0-a3c2-edc2e111a181/|archive-date=2020-03-26|access-date=2020-03-25}}</ref>


Levine spent most of his career as a specialist in ].<ref name="Den">{{Cite book |authorlink=James B. Stewart |last=Stewart |first=James B. |title=] |location=New York |publisher=] |year=1991 |isbn=0-671-63802-5 }}</ref> It was very common to see him on a telephone with an extra-long cord while hunched over a ], checking out signs of possible deals.<ref name="InsideOut"/> He participated in many transactions throughout his career, three of which were among the more notable hostile takeovers of the 1980s — ]'s takeover of ], ]'s takeover of American Natural Resources, and ]'s takeover of ].
Due to his cooperation with federal prosecutors, Levine was sentenced for perjury, securities fraud, and tax evasion to two years in prison and a $362,000 fine. After being released from prison, he returned to the finance world as president of ADASAR Group, a financial consulting firm.


After his return to the business world, Levine re-entered to the finance world as president of ADASAR Group, a financial consulting firm. Over the last 30+ years, Levine has worked as a global strategist for innovative technology trends, focusing on controlled environment agriculture and sustainability, including food, water and energy systems.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/navajotruth/posts/547645755261061 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/iarchive/facebook/432174010141570/547645755261061 |archive-date=2022-02-26 |url-access=limited|title=Navajo Truth - STOP SB 2109 |website=Facebook|access-date=2020-03-26}}{{cbignore}}</ref> He also lectures at universities and organizations on a host of contemporary issues from business ethics to emerging technology developments.<ref name="InsideOut">{{Cite book|title=Inside Out|last1=Levine|first1=Dennis|last2=Hofer|first2=William|publisher=]|year=1991|isbn=0-399-13655-X|location=New York|name-list-style=amp|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/insideoutinsider00levi}}</ref>
]

]
==Insider trading==
]
Over the years, Levine built a network of professionals at various Wall Street firms. Participants exchanged and traded on information that they obtained through their work. Levine placed his trades through an account maintained under an assumed name at ] subsidiaries of ] banks, using ]s to prevent his calls from being traced. After briefly doing business with ], he moved his business to ] in May 1980, eventually earning $10.6 million in profits.<ref name="Den"/> Like most Swiss banks, Bank Leu had a long tradition of ]. Additionally, the Bahamas had some of the strictest bank secrecy laws in the world; with few exceptions, Bahamian banks were barred from disclosing any information about a customer's banking relationship to a third party.
]

]
Some Bank Leu officials soon began to copy, or "piggyback", Levine's trades for their own accounts. In the process, they too profited from Levine's trades. To cover the trail, they broke up Levine's trades among several brokers. Unfortunately for Levine, they steered a large number of his trades through a broker at ], who also began piggybacking the trades for himself.
]

]
In May 1985, Merrill Lynch detected suspicious activity in that and two other brokers' personal trading accounts. An internal investigation led to Bank Leu. Unable to pierce the veil of secrecy, Merrill Lynch forwarded the affair to the ] (SEC). Bank officials suggested that Levine come up with reasons to justify the trades. However, they also forged or destroyed many documents related to Levine's activity — thus opening themselves to charges of ]. Their story fell apart when the noted attorney ], whom the bank had retained, noticed a huge gap between the actual statements of the bank's managed accounts and the omnibus records. At that point, the bank decided to co-operate with the SEC.<ref name="Den"/>
]

]
The Bahamian Attorney General, Paul Adderly, issued an opinion that stock trading was separate from banking. Therefore, since Bank Leu did not have a "banking relationship" with Levine, any disclosure about him would not violate Bahamian banking law. The bank was thus free to reveal Levine's name and he was arrested soon afterward. At the same time, he was sued by the SEC.<ref name="Den"/>

On June 5, 1986, Levine was forced to plead guilty to ], ] and ]. Like all of the defendants charged, he agreed to co-operate with the government investigation to expose the other members of his group. Levine also settled the SEC's charges, agreeing to ] $11.5 million—at the time, the largest such penalty in SEC history. He also agreed to a lifetime ban from the securities industry. Levine also agreed to pay $2 million in back taxes out of the amount he disgorged to the SEC.<ref name="Den"/><ref>Hiltzik, Michael A. , '']'', 1986-06-06.</ref>

Subsequently, Levine directly implicated powerful ]ur ], and information from the Boesky case also implicated another prominent player in the mergers and acquisitions circle, ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1990/05/21/73553/index.htm|title = THE INSIDE STORY OF AN INSIDE TRADER the author's arrest set off a series that toppled Wall Streeters like dominoes, from Boesky to Milken. Here's how he slipped into crime -- and what it did to his life. - May 21, 1990}}</ref> Both Boesky and Siegel subsequently pleaded guilty. Due in part to this co-operation, federal judge Gerald Goettel imposed a lenient sentence of two years in prison and a $362,000 fine. However, since Levine had been stripped of nearly all of his liquid assets by the SEC and ], Goettel did not "commit" the fines, meaning that he would not be held in ] if he left prison without paying them. At sentencing, Goettel said that Levine had helped expose "a nest of vipers on Wall Street", of which Levine himself had been a part of.<ref>Widder, Pat. , '']'', 1987-02-21.</ref>

Levine said that after his arrest, he seriously considered fighting the charges. He claimed that the government circumvented Bahamian law in order to obtain most of the evidence against him (even though he was guilty), including records of his phone calls. However, he said, the possibility of additional charges in a superseding indictment—possibly including the powerful ] — and concern about the effects on his family led him to conclude this was a battle he could not win. Levine recalled that his lawyer, ], told him that if he went to trial, he faced up to 20 years in prison if found guilty and the loss of everything he owned.<ref name="InsideOut"/>

The SEC and the US Attorney's office conducted investigations that soon extended well beyond Levine's trading group. There seemed to be an entire web of relationships among Wall Street professionals exchanging information and other favors, including the parking of stock, the accumulation of stock to pressure a firm's management and stock price, all unrelated to Levine. Well known market participants were soon caught up in the investigations, including Siegel, Boesky and the powerful Goldman Sachs senior partner and head of arbitrage Robert Freeman. The investigations also indirectly led to ] who was highly influential in the ] market at the time. In 1991, Levine wrote the book ''Inside Out—an Insiders Account of Wall Street''.{{cn|date=June 2023}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
*
*
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003220458/http://www.seouldigitalforum.org/en/years/visionarys_view.jsp?seq=10000000230&year=2008&cPage=2 |date=2011-10-03 }}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Levine, Dennis}}
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 22:11, 31 October 2024

American investor and white-collar criminal
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.
Find sources: "Dennis Levine" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Dennis Levine
Born (1952-08-05) August 5, 1952 (age 72)
Bayside, Queens, New York
Alma materBaruch College
OccupationInvestment banker

Dennis B. Levine (born August 5, 1952) is a corporate consultant and former investment banker. He was a managing director at the investment banking firm Drexel Burnham Lambert in the 1980s. Levine was one of the first of several high-profile insider trading defendants in the Wall Street insider trading investigations of the mid-1980s. As a result of the investigation by and subsequent proceedings, Levine pleaded guilty.

Early life

Levine grew up in a middle-class Jewish family in Bayside in eastern Queens. He graduated from CUNY's Baruch College, obtaining an MBA from the same college in 1976.

Career

After being hired away from his career at Citibank in 1978, he joined Smith Barney's corporate finance department and worked in its Paris office specializing in mergers and acquisitions. He moved to Lehman Brothers in 1981. Shortly after Lehman was bought by American Express in 1985, Levine moved to Drexel as a managing director.

Levine spent most of his career as a specialist in mergers and acquisitions. It was very common to see him on a telephone with an extra-long cord while hunched over a Quotron, checking out signs of possible deals. He participated in many transactions throughout his career, three of which were among the more notable hostile takeovers of the 1980s — James Goldsmith's takeover of Crown Zellerbach, Coastal Corporation's takeover of American Natural Resources, and Ron Perelman's takeover of Revlon.

After his return to the business world, Levine re-entered to the finance world as president of ADASAR Group, a financial consulting firm. Over the last 30+ years, Levine has worked as a global strategist for innovative technology trends, focusing on controlled environment agriculture and sustainability, including food, water and energy systems. He also lectures at universities and organizations on a host of contemporary issues from business ethics to emerging technology developments.

Insider trading

Over the years, Levine built a network of professionals at various Wall Street firms. Participants exchanged and traded on information that they obtained through their work. Levine placed his trades through an account maintained under an assumed name at Bahamian subsidiaries of Swiss banks, using pay phones to prevent his calls from being traced. After briefly doing business with Pictet & Cie, he moved his business to Bank Leu in May 1980, eventually earning $10.6 million in profits. Like most Swiss banks, Bank Leu had a long tradition of secrecy. Additionally, the Bahamas had some of the strictest bank secrecy laws in the world; with few exceptions, Bahamian banks were barred from disclosing any information about a customer's banking relationship to a third party.

Some Bank Leu officials soon began to copy, or "piggyback", Levine's trades for their own accounts. In the process, they too profited from Levine's trades. To cover the trail, they broke up Levine's trades among several brokers. Unfortunately for Levine, they steered a large number of his trades through a broker at Merrill Lynch, who also began piggybacking the trades for himself.

In May 1985, Merrill Lynch detected suspicious activity in that and two other brokers' personal trading accounts. An internal investigation led to Bank Leu. Unable to pierce the veil of secrecy, Merrill Lynch forwarded the affair to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Bank officials suggested that Levine come up with reasons to justify the trades. However, they also forged or destroyed many documents related to Levine's activity — thus opening themselves to charges of obstruction of justice. Their story fell apart when the noted attorney Harvey Pitt, whom the bank had retained, noticed a huge gap between the actual statements of the bank's managed accounts and the omnibus records. At that point, the bank decided to co-operate with the SEC.

The Bahamian Attorney General, Paul Adderly, issued an opinion that stock trading was separate from banking. Therefore, since Bank Leu did not have a "banking relationship" with Levine, any disclosure about him would not violate Bahamian banking law. The bank was thus free to reveal Levine's name and he was arrested soon afterward. At the same time, he was sued by the SEC.

On June 5, 1986, Levine was forced to plead guilty to securities fraud, tax evasion and perjury. Like all of the defendants charged, he agreed to co-operate with the government investigation to expose the other members of his group. Levine also settled the SEC's charges, agreeing to disgorge $11.5 million—at the time, the largest such penalty in SEC history. He also agreed to a lifetime ban from the securities industry. Levine also agreed to pay $2 million in back taxes out of the amount he disgorged to the SEC.

Subsequently, Levine directly implicated powerful arbitrageur Ivan Boesky, and information from the Boesky case also implicated another prominent player in the mergers and acquisitions circle, Martin Siegel. Both Boesky and Siegel subsequently pleaded guilty. Due in part to this co-operation, federal judge Gerald Goettel imposed a lenient sentence of two years in prison and a $362,000 fine. However, since Levine had been stripped of nearly all of his liquid assets by the SEC and IRS, Goettel did not "commit" the fines, meaning that he would not be held in contempt of court if he left prison without paying them. At sentencing, Goettel said that Levine had helped expose "a nest of vipers on Wall Street", of which Levine himself had been a part of.

Levine said that after his arrest, he seriously considered fighting the charges. He claimed that the government circumvented Bahamian law in order to obtain most of the evidence against him (even though he was guilty), including records of his phone calls. However, he said, the possibility of additional charges in a superseding indictment—possibly including the powerful Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act — and concern about the effects on his family led him to conclude this was a battle he could not win. Levine recalled that his lawyer, Arthur Liman, told him that if he went to trial, he faced up to 20 years in prison if found guilty and the loss of everything he owned.

The SEC and the US Attorney's office conducted investigations that soon extended well beyond Levine's trading group. There seemed to be an entire web of relationships among Wall Street professionals exchanging information and other favors, including the parking of stock, the accumulation of stock to pressure a firm's management and stock price, all unrelated to Levine. Well known market participants were soon caught up in the investigations, including Siegel, Boesky and the powerful Goldman Sachs senior partner and head of arbitrage Robert Freeman. The investigations also indirectly led to Michael Milken who was highly influential in the junk bond market at the time. In 1991, Levine wrote the book Inside Out—an Insiders Account of Wall Street.

References

  1. Stone, Michael (July 28, 1986). "Insiders: The Story of Dennis Levine and the Scandal That's Rocking Wall Street". New York: 26–34.
  2. "Greed on Wall Street". Newsweek. 1986-05-26. Archived from the original on June 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
  3. "THE INSIDE STORY OF AN INSIDE TRADER The author's arrest set off a series that toppled Wall Streeters like dominoes, from Boesky to Milken". Fortune. May 21, 1990. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  4. Fechter, Melvin Through the Eye of a Jew, Volume II, September 20, 2013
  5. "INSIDE DENNIS LEVINE He was a formidable operator who had his insider-trading ring planned when he was all of 27". CNN Money. September 28, 1987. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  6. Coll, Steve (May 22, 1986). "The Puzzling Wall Street Saga of Dennis Levine". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2020-03-26. Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  7. ^ Stewart, James B. (1991). Den of Thieves. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-63802-5.
  8. ^ Levine, Dennis & Hofer, William (1991). Inside Out. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 0-399-13655-X.
  9. "Navajo Truth - STOP SB 2109". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-02-26. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  10. Hiltzik, Michael A. "Levine Guilty of fraud, perjury and tax evasion", Los Angeles Times, 1986-06-06.
  11. "THE INSIDE STORY OF AN INSIDE TRADER the author's arrest set off a series that toppled Wall Streeters like dominoes, from Boesky to Milken. Here's how he slipped into crime -- and what it did to his life. - May 21, 1990".
  12. Widder, Pat. "Inside trader gets 2 years, $360,000 fine", Chicago Tribune, 1987-02-21.

External links

Categories: