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- <text id=90TT0898>
- <link 90TT2579>
- <link 89TT2889>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Interview:Charles Keating
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INTERVIEW, Page 18
- Money Talks
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Government regulators say S&L operator Charles Keating looted
- his bank, but he says it was the regulators' incompetence that
- caused the $300 billion (or more) savings and loan disaster
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson and Charles Keating
- </p>
- <p> Q. When you were asked whether the money you contributed to
- the so-called Keating Five--Senators Alan Cranston, Dennis
- DeConcini, Donald Reigle, John Glenn and John McCain--influenced them to help you, you said, "I certainly hope so."
- </p>
- <p> A. That probably was a dumb way to phrase it. I was
- participating in a system. I have never asked to give anybody
- money. A politician will come to me and say, "Will you make a
- contribution?" And they usually suggest a size for you to go
- out and try and collect. Now I didn't make all those
- contributions; I went out and collected them. I only
- contributed to the legal limit.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Surely there's something in it for you. Senator Cranston
- was able to collect $850,000 over four years from you. Don't
- you get a little tired of being hit up?
- </p>
- <p> A. You get tired of getting hit up again and again and
- again. But it's the political process. You know people compare
- me to, say, an individual who asks for help with citizenship
- papers for his mother, and he gets help. But the campaign
- chairman for the politician doesn't go ask him for money. The
- chairman goes where he sees there is a source of funds. So when
- I ask for something, I become a prospect for money.
- </p>
- <p> Q. So then what did the Senators do for you?
- </p>
- <p> A. All the Senators said was either hit Keating or finish
- the investigation, this had to be the longest examination in
- the history of the S&L business. If you can't go to the
- Congress to get relief from an agency that's gone haywire, what
- do you do? You live in a different country than I think we live
- in.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You say you're broke, but how could you be when you and
- your family made at least $14 million in three years?
- </p>
- <p> A. The Government knows, because they know all of our bank
- accounts, that my family and I probably have no net worth.
- Period. We're broke. Back in 1983, before I bought Lincoln
- Savings and Loan, we had a fair market value as a family of
- many tens of millions of dollars. We produced, we were making
- money, we had excellent assets. We took a failing S&L, we made
- $17 million in the partial year we first took it, pretax. We
- made $100 million the next year. Then the Feds started helping
- us run it, so we only made $80 some million in the third year.
- Their help intensified in '87, and we made about $60-plus
- million. In '88 they really came in and took us over, and in
- '89 they completed the confiscation.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You act as if the Federal Government is just out to ruin
- your life. Not just your life but your depositors', and
- bondholders in American Continental Corp. who mistakenly
- assumed their investments were federally insured.
- </p>
- <p> A. There's a lot of people who know that the Government goes
- haywire in a lot of respects. I'm fool enough to guess that the
- media would be the first one to know because you're looking at
- the HUD situation, you look at the IRS problems. Almost
- everything you scratch, there's a problem.
- </p>
- <p> Q. You can look at the HUD scandal and see whose pocket the
- money is in. But you can't see any money in the pocket of Edwin
- Gray, the former Federal Home Loan Bank Board chairman, who
- fingered you. What's the motive?
- </p>
- <p> A. It's the power, an ego trip. Ed Gray was ignorant, a
- person whose background was public relations, all of a sudden
- being put in charge of a $1 trillion industry. Where do you
- think they got these regulators? Off the streets, out of ads.
- They took this conglomeration of inexperienced and untrained
- people and they say, O.K., go out and cope with the Charlie
- Keatings who are diversifying the S&Ls. You've got a bunch of
- know-nothings trying to tell business people how to invest
- money.
- </p>
- <p> Gray wrecks it and then says the greatest financial debacle
- in the history of the world is Keating's fault. They are not
- just taking down guys like me. In Colorado Springs the
- Government owns practically all the property, as they do in
- Arizona. You think all of this is occurring because of me? It's
- occurring because of incompetent, wrongheaded regulators. Not
- one program has saved one S&L. Maybe they didn't line their own
- pockets, but they're lining a lot of other people's pockets.
- They gave S&Ls away from October to December 1988. They are
- causing fortunes to be made by these assets that they're
- confiscating, being given into other people's hands for
- nothing. They took a hotel away from me, the Phoenician resort,
- that's probably the best hotel ever built in the U.S., and
- they've turned it into a Holiday Inn. Why doesn't the media
- ask, Good God in heaven, what's happened here? What if I'm
- right? That's what you're going to find out a couple, three
- years from now when my body's dead and my family's destroyed.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But with these direct investments you were trying to have
- it both ways: you stood to make a lot, but if the investment
- went sour it was the taxpayer who bore the risk.
- </p>
- <p> A. Mortgages are risky too. Let's say you have a billion
- dollars out in home loans, and the average rate on those home
- loans is 5%. But then rates go up and you have to pay more to
- attract deposits. So all of a sudden you're paying out 8%, but
- you're still catching 5% coming in. That loan's bad right now.
- You're out of business. There's no way you can ride that out.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Lincoln made a $3 million profit the year before you
- bought it, when it was just in the business of making home
- mortgages.
- </p>
- <p> A. Absolutely wrong. It had a profit because it sold a
- branch. Lincoln was a basket case.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But the cure--letting S&L operators make risky
- investments--turned out to be worse than the problem.
- </p>
- <p> A. A few, very few, miscreants were involved. Some guy buys
- windmills, another guy steals, another guy buys Cadillacs and
- provides whores and yachts for customers. But you do not have,
- according to studies by Professor George Benston and Alan
- Greenspan [now Federal Reserve Board chairman], a very
- significant part of the industry doing that kind of stuff.
- </p>
- <p> Q. 60 Minutes showed you bragging about paying your
- secretaries $80,000 a year and giving a raise to $100,000 to
- one of your secretaries.
- </p>
- <p> A. You're right, it's to be criticized. It was braggadocio
- and grandstanding. That isn't me. But I did that. You're right,
- and I shouldn't have done it. That was stupid.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But you did pay high salaries in general.
- </p>
- <p> A. It depends on what you mean. No, I disagree with that.
- Let's take secretaries. We pay $40,000, generally speaking,
- which is real high in the Phoenix market. Our girls would come
- in, perfectly qualified in shorthand and typing. We got the
- best obviously because we were paying them high. These girls
- would come in at 6:30 and 7 in the morning, they'd work until
- 6:30 or 7 at night--5 1/2, six days a week. They had two
- rules. One rule is that we didn't have smoking on the premises.
- The other one was that they had to wear dresses or dress
- nicely. You couldn't come in in jumpsuits and so forth. I had
- seen too many cases where they dress down for one another. The
- girls like it; we paid them for it.
- </p>
- <p> Q. What about your son who had no experience, but was
- reportedly making $866,000 a year by the time he was 26?
- </p>
- <p> A. I don't know where the 26 came from. My son ran an
- extraordinarily profitable real estate company, probably the
- largest in the United States, or close to it. Similar
- operations for profit in the land industry in those years would
- have rewarded the persons responsible way more than he was
- rewarded. All of us had loans, all of us put in our own money.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Didn't the accounting firm of Leventhal & Co. report that
- your profits were on paper only and came from sham deals?
- </p>
- <p> A. First of all, it's not an audit, it's not certified, it's
- an opinion of Leventhal based on files. They didn't look at the
- property, didn't kick the dirt, didn't talk to the buyer or the
- seller. And they opined that way for their best client, namely
- the 11th District of the Bank Board in California. They wrote
- down assets by fiat--take something worth, say, $175 million
- and claim, no, it's worth $150 million.
- </p>
- <p> Q. Don't you see in looking back that you don't have the
- temperament to be in a regulated industry?
- </p>
- <p> A. Your question ignores the fact that countless others--Sears, "Bum" Bright in Texas, Gordon Luce of Great American--who have succeed
- everything they've done have been unable to succeed in the
- savings and loan business. Now when all of us fail, certainly,
- somewhere, somehow, someone like you must understand that it
- isn't the inability to operate or inability to cope with the
- regulator. There's something wrong with the regulator.
- </p>
- <p> Q. But let's face it, the Arizona real estate market went
- bad.
- </p>
- <p> A. Not at all. There were no losses in Lincoln when it was
- taken over. We sold 200 lots in about seven months in one
- project. Since the Government took over, they haven't sold five
- of them. Don't tell me I can't sell real estate in bad times.
- I've always sold real estate in bad times. We'd signed
- contracts with the best builder in the country to put in
- subdivisions. We had U.S. Home doing an adult community project
- and some higher-priced homes up in the hills. We got Rubbermaid
- to move here, McKesson to move in. We had an airport just like
- Ross Perot's down in Texas. What in the name of God else do we
- have to do?
- </p>
- <p> Q. You mentioned your Phoenician resort earlier. There are
- hotel people who say that the cost per room, the cost per
- golf-course hole at that hotel was higher than anything else
- in the area and that you could have never made the money back.
- </p>
- <p> A. The Phoenician resort grossed $48 million in the first
- year of operation. Its occupancy rate was in the neighborhood
- of 76%. Hotels are a perfect hedge against inflation because
- you can raise the room rates every day. And what is critical
- is that its gross income, food, beverage, everything else, per
- room, was approximately $80,000.
- </p>
- <p> My hotel is the complete perfect example of what they're
- doing when they take away assets from people. They came out in
- a midnight raid. They brought photographers, they brought the
- media, the police, the FBI. They raided that hotel, took it
- over, tacked termination notices on the doors of some 30-odd
- employees, including the general manager, at 1:30 in the
- morning. What in the hell do you think you're dealing with?
- </p>
- <p> Q. You said that this whole thing with the Government has
- made you feel like Richard Nixon.
- </p>
- <p> A. I did? Well, if I said it, it's probably true. The
- Government is spending unconscionable amounts of money, they
- switch law firms like you switch coffee cups. Their whole
- purpose is to break us so we can't be heard. Their theory is
- a dead man tells no tales. It's no wonder nobody speaks up.
- They're afraid of going to jail. They're afraid of going more
- broke. And the Government's doing a fantastic job of making an
- example out of me for everybody else to shut up. These other
- owners would rather give away their savings and loans than lose
- their respectability, end up like I am, hounded, harassed,
- broke. I'm being slammed and ridiculed and called a thief and
- a bum and a liar. They even tied me into Noriega for forming
- a Panamanian company to do business in England. Nothing wrong
- with any part of it. The committee flat said I was doing drugs.
- Lincoln made a loan to Covenant House, and I waived one of the
- interest payments on the building which housed these poor kids,
- and the next thing I know I'm accused of funneling that money
- through the Knights of Malta, a high-placed Catholic society,
- to the Nicaraguan rebels to buy arms. This comes out of the
- Congress. You print everything that the Fed feeds you. The
- person they're talking about doesn't exist.
- </p>
- <p> Q. What a way to end a career.
- </p>
- <p> A. I would like to say one last word: I'd love to have
- Lincoln back. If I got Lincoln back, it would not cost the U.S.
- taxpayers one dollar, and all my bondholders would get paid
- off. Now if there are S&L losses like I'm saying--many
- hundreds of billions of dollars--why wouldn't it make sense
- to try with some of us, mainly me. Give us our assets back and
- let us work them out, see what happens.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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