Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ex- AIG chairman takes stand in fraud case

- CHRIS DOLMETSCH

Former American Internatio­nal Group Inc. Chairman Maurice “Hank” Greenberg said he got personally involved in an “insignific­ant” business deal at the insurance giant 18 years ago to teach some managers a lesson.

Now that deal is part of a fraud claim that could prevent the 91- year- old from serving as an officer of a public company.

Greenberg took the witness stand Tuesday in a Manhattan, N. Y., courtroom to defend against claims that he and former AIG Chief Financial Officer Howard Smith orchestrat­ed sham deals to hide the insurer’s financial condition from shareholde­rs. One was a transactio­n involving Capco Reinsuranc­e Co., allegedly to hide more than $ 200 million in underwriti­ng losses from an auto- warranty business started by Greenberg’s son, Evan.

Hank Greenberg testified that he became aware of serious problems in AIG’s auto- warranty business as early as 1998. He said he began taking steps to correct them the next year, though he disagreed with New York Assistant Attorney General David Nachman’s characteri­zation that he was a “hands- on CEO.”

“This was a small part of our business,” said Greenberg. “It was insignific­ant.”

“It wasn’t so insignific­ant that you tried to insert yourself personally into these matters?” Nachman asked.

“I was trying to teach a lesson to some managers who were involved with it,” Greenberg said. “This was a nonevent at AIG. There are other things that are far more important than this.”

“You regard other things are more important than a fraud charge against you?” Nachman asked.

“That’s why I’m here to defend against it,” Greenberg said.

Greenberg’s exchanges with Nachman were sometimes congenial, sometimes contentiou­s.

Home Depot Inc. co- founder Kenneth Langone, a friend of Greenberg’s who has called for the state to drop the case, attended the beginning of Greenberg’s testimony.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an is seeking to bar Greenberg and Smith from serving as officers or directors of public companies and force them to give up more than $ 52 million in bonuses. Schneiderm­an dropped his demand for $ 6 billion in damages in the case after Greenberg and other executives paid $ 115 million in 2009 to settle suits filed by AIG shareholde­rs.

The trial, which is being heard without a jury, is likely to last through January. Greenberg has asked the U. S. Supreme Court to review a June decision by New York’s top court allowing the trial to proceed, arguing the state claims are pre- empted by federal law.

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