The Canadian version of Rupert Murdoch.--MN

Media mogul Conrad Black gets 6 1/2 years
Convicted newspaper baron Conrad Black leaves the 
federal building in Chicago Monday, Dec. 10, 
2007, after sentencing in his racketeering and 
fraud trial. Black, convicted July 13 of 
swindling the Hollinger International newspaper 
empire he once ran out of millions of dollars, 
was sentenced to 78 months in prison. Convicted 
newspaper baron Conrad Black leaves the federal 
building in Chicago Monday, Dec. 10, 2007, after 
sentencing in his racketeering and fraud trial. 
Black, convicted July 13 of swindling the 
Hollinger International newspaper empire he once 
ran out of millions of dollars, was sentenced to 
78 months in prison. (AP Photo/Jerry Lai)
Email|Print| Text size – + By Mike Robinson
AP Legal Affairs Writer / December 10, 2007

CHICAGO—Former newspaper mogul Conrad Black was 
sentenced Monday to 6 1/2 years in prison, far 
less than sought by prosecutors, for swindling 
shareholders in his Hollinger media empire out of $6 million.
more stories like this

"Mr. Black, you have violated your duty to 
Hollinger International shareholders," U.S. 
District Judge Amy J. St. Eve told the 
silver-haired millionaire member of the British 
House of Lords known throughout the newspaper 
industry for his lavish lifestyle and flamboyant use of words.

Prosecutors had asked for as many as 30 years in 
prison for the Canadian-born Black, saying he had 
not shown "one shred of remorse" for looting the 
company that once owned the Chicago Sun-Times, 
Daily Telegraph of London, Jerusalem Post and 
hundreds of U.S. and Canadian community newspapers.

"Obviously, there's a great deal of relief" at 
the lighter-than-expected sentence, said Black 
attorney Jeffrey B. Steinback, who delivered a 
passionate, hourlong appeal for leniency.

Before the sentencing, lead prosecutor Eric H. 
Sussman urged St. Eve to impose a stern sentence 
as a warning to other potential corporate 
criminals and because that Black had not "shown one shred of remorse."

Defiant to the end, Black told the court that 
Hollinger's stock was still in double digits when 
he was removed as chairman and suggested its 
current value of less than $2 a share was the 
fault of those who came after him.

"I do wish to profess my profound regret and 
sadness at the severe hardship of all the 
shareholders at the evaporation of $1.8 billion 
in shareholder value under my successors," Lord Black of Crossharbour said.

But a shareholder, Eugene Fox, managing director 
of Connecticut-based Cardinal Capital Management 
Co., gave a victim-impact statement urging St. 
Eve to punish Black in a way that would warn 
other executives not to defraud the shareholders. 
He said Black showed contempt for shareholders.

"He called us idiots and greedy fools," Fox said.

Reporters asked U.S. Attorney Patrick J. 
Fitzgerald if he was satisfied with the length of the sentence.

"Mr. Black is going to prison a convicted felon, 
convicted of fraud," Fitzgerald said. So we 
proved the case. The bottom line is Mr. Black 
will do 6 1/2 years in jail. That's a serious amount of time."

St. Eve rejected a request from prosecutors to 
have Black locked up immediately and gave him 
until March 3 to report to prison. At Steinback's 
request, she recommended the federal correctional 
center at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., not far 
from the Palm Beach estate where Black has been 
living while out on $21 million bond.

"Mr. Black will be moving from Palm Beach to 
Eglin and anyone who has ever heard of either one 
knows that's a serious change in life 
conditions," Fitzgerald told reporters. Within an 
hour of the sentencing, though, officials said 
the Eglin correctional facility requested by 
Black had been closed and another correctional facility would have to be found.

Black left the courthouse without commenting.

St. Eve said several factors led her to impose a sentence of just 78 months.

She rejected a claim by prosecutors that Black 
should be held responsible for $32 million in 
shareholder losses. She held him responsible for 
$6 million -- a key calculation that lowered the potential sentencing range.

St. Eve also said Black's sentence should be 
closer to that of F. David Radler, his former 
business partner, who became the government's 
star witness at the four-month trial. Under a 
plea agreement with prosecutors, Radler will get 
a 29-month sentence and $250,000 fine. Radler 
also is expected to serve much of his time in a 
Canadian prison, where sentences for nonviolent 
offenders often are cut down further.

Radler's testimony showed he was "equally culpable," St. Eve said

Black and Radler built Hollinger from scratch, 
starting with a tiny, money-losing, English 
language paper in French-speaking Canada, the 
Sherbrooke Record. In time, the company became an international colossus.

Black, Radler and three co-defendants were 
charged with siphoning money out of the company 
through payments made by buyers of Hollinger 
International community papers in return for 
promises not to compete with the new owners. 
Prosecutors said such payments should go to shareholders.

Radler pleaded guilty and made his deal with 
prosecutors while Black and his other 
co-defendants, Canadian executives Peter Atkinson 
and Jack Boultbee and Chicago attorney Mark Kipnis, demanded a jury trial.

They originally were charged with swindling 
shareholders out of an estimated $60 million by 
collecting payments from purchasers of 
Hollinger's U.S. and Canadian newspapers. The 
payments were in exchange for promises not to 
return and compete with the papers' new owners.

In the end, Black was acquitted of nine of the 
counts against him, including racketeering, and 
convicted of siphoning off $6 million through 
bonuses disguised as such "non-compete" payments. 
Black also was convicted of obstruction of 
justice for removing documents from his offices.

After Black's sentencing, St. Eve began 
sentencing his three co-defendants. Atkinson was sentenced to two years.

Defense attorneys pleaded for lenience, showing 
letters from such celebrities as Sir Elton John, 
conservative writer and television personality 
William F. Buckley Jr., former Canadian Prime 
Minister Brian Mulroney and columnist George 
Will, describing Black as someone who had devoted 
much of his life to helping charities and those around him.

Steinback quoted John as calling Black "the sort 
of person who sticks with you through thick and 
thin" and Will as praising Black's "intense faith 
in the possibility of public improvement."

Sussman acknowledged that many people are 
impressed with Black, an accomplished biographer 
whose subjects include Franklin D. Roosevelt and 
Richard M. Nixon. He said they wonder "how this could have happened."

"But the fact is, he stands before the court 
convicted of stealing money from the company he founded," Sussman said.

"Unlike the bank robbers who walked into banks 
and stole money from people they didn't know, he 
stole money from people he did know," Sussman 
said. "What brought him here today was his greed 
and disdain for the rule of law."

------

AP staff writers Dave Carpenter and Don Babwin contributed to this story.
© Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights 
reserved. This material may not be published, 
broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to