Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Kushner, others urge Trump to pardon Milken

- By Greg Farrell, Katherine Burton and John Gittelsohn Bloomberg News

NEW YORK — Some of President Donald Trump’s closest confidants have urged him to pardon Michael Milken, the 1980s “junk bond king” who has unsuccessf­ully sought for decades to reverse his securities fraud conviction, according to people familiar with the matter.

The idea of a Milken pardon is being supported by Anthony Scaramucci, the financier who briefly directed White House communicat­ions; Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin; and Trump son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner, the people said. Another advocate is Rudy Giuliani, the onetime federal prosecutor whose criminal investigat­ion landed Milken in jail but who later bonded with him.

Milken’s attempts to secure a presidenti­al pardon have spanned Republican and Democratic administra­tions, with him or his supporters putting his name forward as a worthy clemency candidate in no small part due to his philanthro­pic works. Milken, who is worth $3.4 billion according to Bloomberg data, has mounted high-profile efforts since his conviction to combat prostate cancer and improve childhood education. However, until now presidents have declined requests to embrace a man who came to be viewed as a symbol of greed on Wall Street.

Trump, who in recent weeks has waved away conviction­s of Lewis “Scooter” Libby (obstructin­g justice) and Dinesh D’Souza (campaign finance violations), has said he has asked for names of others who may merit clemency.

Although it’s unclear where Milken, 71, may fall on any priority list, he can count many advocates in Trump’s circle. His annual Milken Institute Global Conference, known as Davos of the West, attracts U.S. Cabinet members, including Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Milken didn’t respond to a request for comment, nor did those said to be advocating on his behalf.

From his X-shaped desk in Beverly Hills, Calif., Milken had helped popularize high-yield debt in the 1980s at Drexel Burnham Lambert, fueling the leveraged buyout boom. He was implicated in illegal transactio­ns by Ivan Boesky, a stock arbitrageu­r and longtime Milken client.

Less than a decade after Milken served 22 months in prison and agreed to a lifetime ban on trading other people’s money, his former adversary had turned ally. Giuliani said that Milken, a prostate cancer survivor, had helped him through his own battle with cancer. In 2000, according to news reports, Giuliani pressed unsuccessf­ully for then-President Bill Clinton to pardon him.

A presidenti­al pardon wouldn’t reverse Milken’s lifetime ban on securities dealing, which would require a separate appeals process.

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