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- BUSINESS, Page 69Dear Judge: Go Easy on Michael
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- Friends of the junk-bond king lobby for a lenient sentence
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- How much time should America's most famous Wall Street
- criminal spend in the slammer? Junk-bond king Michael Milken,
- who is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 1, could get up to 28
- years. He has already been punished financially: last April,
- when Milken reached an agreement with prosecutors to plead
- guilty to six of the 98 counts of securities fraud and other
- crimes leveled against him, he was ordered to pay $200 million
- in fines and $400 million in restitution. Scores of Milken's
- friends -- and a smattering of his foes -- have deluged New
- York Federal District Court Judge Kimba Wood with more than 200
- letters that aim to sway her decision about his prison term.
- While such lobbying is common in white-collar proceedings,
- Milken's case has attracted letters from a dazzling potpourri
- of the rich and famous.
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- Many correspondents painted a benign picture of the
- financial wizard whose acumen, and sometimes shady practices,
- powered the 1980s takeover wars. While Milken earned more than
- $1 billion as the guru of the now defunct Wall Street firm
- Drexel Burnham Lambert, friends argued that accumulating vast
- wealth was never his main goal. Wrote CBS president Laurence
- Tisch, who said he has known Milken for almost 20 years: "I
- have rarely dealt with a more dedicated and faithful
- professional or one more sensitive to the needs and goals of his
- clients or more mindful of the needs of society at large."
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- A five-page personal letter from Steven Ross, chairman and
- co-chief executive of Time Warner, called Milken "a long-term
- thinker, not a quick-buck artist." Wrote Ross, who said Milken
- became a close friend after arranging a 1984 stock offering for
- the former Warner Communications: "He talks more about
- illiteracy in math or chronic diseases of the poor or
- unemployment than about interest rates."
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- Celebrities praised Milken's work on community projects. "I
- have never met the equal of Michael Milken," declared Monty
- Hall, who hosted the former television game show Let's Make a
- Deal and is an officer of the Variety Clubs International
- children's charity. Hall said Milken has donated generously to
- the charity through the Milken Family Foundations (estimated
- assets: $350 million). Rosey Grier, an ex-football player who
- works with impoverished children in Los Angeles, noted that
- Milken has taught math in public schools and helped raise money
- for minority businesses. Wrote Grier: "I recognized in him a
- deep desire to help inner-city residents break free of the
- strangling choke-hold of poverty and begin to move into a new
- sphere of existence."
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- An array of other prominent citizens praised Milken's
- charitable contributions and personal interest in medical
- research, anticrime programs and other causes. Among his
- advocates: police chief Daryl Gates and Archbishop Roger Mahony
- of Los Angeles, California superintendent of education William
- Honig, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and
- Occidental Petroleum chairman Armand Hammer. But is Milken a
- Johnny-come-lately to good works? Not so, according to his
- friend, attorney Richard Riordan. "This isn't like he began
- doing good because he felt the heat," says Riordan. "He's been
- doing this for years."
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- Roughly 10% of the correspondents, however, were furious
- with Milken for his confessed criminal activities, which
- included the manipulation of securities prices. John Weigel,
- a financial consultant in Costa Mesa, Calif., called Milken
- "merely a financial extortionist on a Capone-esque scale that
- demands punishment on a similar scale." Concurred Miami
- attorney J.B. Spence: "It will be incredibly disheartening to
- the American public if the sentence is a mere slap on the
- wrist."
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- Other critics said they had suffered in the collapse of the
- junk-bond market or had taken pay cuts in the aftermath of
- corporate buyouts. Claude Daughtry, a real estate agent in
- Berkeley, complained that he had lost money in the junk-bond
- debacle and called Milken's fine a travesty. Ronald Cornwall,
- a Pennsauken, N.J., grocery clerk, said his salary plunged from
- $33,000 to $24,700 when his employer, Pathmark, was acquired
- in an LBO.
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- Meanwhile, federal prosecutors are doing some lobbying of
- their own. They filed a sealed report last week asking Wood to
- consider at least some of the dozens of other allegations
- against Milken that the government dropped in its plea-bargain
- agreement. Judges are free to weigh dismissed counts in
- reaching a sentence. But if Wood does decide to review the
- dropped charges, Milken has the right to defend himself at a
- hearing that could add months to the sentencing process.
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- By John Greenwald. Reported by Priscilla Painton/New York and
- Edwin M. Reingold/Los Angeles.
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