Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MF Global ex- CEO fined $ 5M, banned from work as trader

- MARCY GORDON

WASHINGTON — Jon Corzine, the former New Jersey governor who led the collapsed brokerage MF Global, has been ordered to pay a $ 5 million penalty for his role in the firm’s alleged illegal use of almost $ 1 billion in customer funds.

A federal court in Manhattan on Thursday granted the order against Corzine to the U. S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which leveled civil charges against him in 2013. After the collapse of the Wall Street firm in late 2011, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission alleged that MF Global dipped into customer funds in an attempt to remain solvent. Corzine failed to closely supervise the handling of customer money by the firm’s employees, according to the order.

Corzine, who was the chief executive officer of Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs before entering politics in 2000, was banned by the court order from serving as an official or employee of any commoditie­s trading company. He also was banned from trading most commoditie­s and other investment­s regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, with some limited exceptions.

A related order issued by U. S. District Judge Victor Marrero imposed a $ 500,000 penalty on Edith O’Brien, an assistant treasurer at the firm who had the authority

to approve transfers of customer money. She was said to have aided and abetted MF Global’s alleged violations. O’Brien was banned from working at a commoditie­s trading firm or trading commoditie­s for 18 months.

O’Brien’s attorney Christophe­r Barber declined to comment.

The court action ended a five- year legal drama for Corzine, enabling him to avoid a trial that had been set to begin in October.

He had denied wrongdoing from the outset and insisted he didn’t order anyone at MF Global to divert customer funds.

Corzine said he was pleased that the matter was resolved. “I have accepted responsibi­lity for [ MF Global’s] failure, and I deeply regret the impact it had on customers, employees, shareholde­rs and others,” he said in a statement. “I remain gratified that several years ago all customer money was

recovered and returned to MF Global customers.”

The trustee overseeing the liquidatio­n of MF Global’s brokerage operations eventually recovered and returned the missing money to customers, tracing it to banks that held accounts for the firm. The trustee, James Giddens, announced in April 2014 that 100 percent of the money had been recovered for customers.

Giddens also joined a lawsuit filed by MF Global customers against Corzine and the other top executives. That litigation was settled for $ 132 million in July.

New York- based MF Global imploded after a $ 6.3 billion bet on European countries’ debt. The firm filed for bankruptcy protection on Oct. 31, 2011. The $ 41 billion bankruptcy was the eighth- largest in U. S. history at the time and one of Wall Street’s biggest. About $ 1.2 billion in customer money was discovered to be missing.

The regulators had said that MF Global moved the money out of client accounts

within days as the firm’s cash dried up. The misuse of customer funds was on a scale never seen before, Commodity Futures Trading Commission officials said. Corzine failed to fix MF Global’s deficient controls and to prevent the firm from dipping into customer money, they said.

It was the first time in the 150- year history of the U. S. futures markets that customer funds disappeare­d in the failure of a commoditie­s brokerage, according to lawmakers.

Much of the missing money belonged to farmers, ranchers and other business owners who bought and sold financial contracts with MF Global to reduce their risks from the fluctuatin­g prices of corn, wheat and other commoditie­s.

During the billowing scandal, Corzine stepped down as MF Global chief on Nov. 4, 2011.

Under Corzine’s leadership, the firm bet $ 6.3 billion on debt issued by Italy, Spain and other European nations with troubled economies. The bonds plummeted in

value in the weeks before MF Global’s failure as fears intensifie­d that some European countries might default.

Corzine, 70, was a prominent Democratic politician and a major fundraiser for Democrats. He stepped from Wall Street into politics in 2000, dipping into his personal fortune to fund an expensive and successful bid for the U. S. Senate from New Jersey.

He later became governor of the state. Corzine took the top job at MF Global in March 2010 after losing a bid for a second term as governor to Republican Chris Christie.

His plan was to remake MF Global from a modest brokerage firm into a major Wall Street player.

Corzine said Thursday that with the long- running matter now resolved, “I am eager to move forward and plan to spend my time focused on issues that have always been important in my life: my family, community and philanthro­pic causes, and markets.”

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