The US government's long-running wrangle with economist Andrei
Shleifer and Harvard University over Harvard's ill-fated Russia
Project in the 1990s was resolved last week, in the government's
favor.
A Federal judge ruled that, by quietly investing on their
own accounts while advising the Russian government, Harvard
professor Shleifer and his Moscow-based assistant Jonathan
Hay had conspired to defraud the US Agency for International
Development (USAID), which had been paying their salary.
Hay was faulted for violating three counts of the False Claims
Act, Shleifer for one, with two other counts against him pending
a possible jury trial on what it means to have been "assigned"
to Russia under the contract's terms. (Shleifer asserts that
the conflict-of-interest rules didn't apply to him since,
though directing the project, he had continued to reside outside
of Russia, in Newton, Mass.)
The decision by US District Court Judge Douglas P. Woodlock,
based on motions by all sides for that he decide the case
as a matter of law on the facts presented, left both Shleifer
and Hay liable for treble damages -- as much as $120 million
apiece, in the worst case.
At the same time, Judge Woodlock cleared Harvard University
of the government's most serious accusation, namely that its
administrators knew or should have known that their team leaders
were investing personally in concert with their wives.
He ruled out treble damages under the False Claims Act, thereby
confirming Harvard's view of itself as the victim of a couple
of rogue employees.
Harvard couldn't be faulted for failing to investigate "rumor-like
allegations" that trickled back to Cambridge, the judge
wrote, for the "red flags" identified by the government
never quite reached the level of a piercing whistle; they
had more to do with gossip about the provision of various
goods and services to Russian officials and their families.
The fact that the Project flew the chairman of the Russian
SEC and his wife to Idaho for a part-work, part-vacation trip,
and that Shleifer paid for training the chairman's wife at
his own personal expense "may be ethically dubious,"
he observed, but they don't demonstrate a clear conflict of
interest. Nor could the university be blamed for inadequate
supervision.
"A more careful employer might have, for instance, distributed
a short memorandum explaining the conflicts provision, and
perhaps even required Project staff (whether 'employees' or
'consultants') to fill out a disclosure form," wrote
the judge.
"If the applicable legal standard in this case were
negligent supervision," he continued, "the government
would have a better case against Harvard." Instead, he
noted, the fraud law required proof of actual knowledge or
reckless disregard.
Paul Ware, the university's outside counsel, said last week,
"Harvard is very encouraged that the court has unequivocally
ruled that the university neither engaged in nor knew of any
fraudulent conduct. Even the breach of contract claim, according
to the court, is not established as a result of any institutional
wrongdoing by the university."
In finding that Harvard had breached its contract to deliver
the impartial advice it promised, Judge Woodlock's decision
left Harvard liable for damages. Previously Harvard has defended
the outcome of its project as, on balance, a great success.
The university can be expected to argue that there should
be a considerable offset to whatever damages are assessed
in recognition of the benefits gained by Russia.
It was in 1992, after Congress passed the Freedom for Russia
and the Emerging Eurasian Democracies and Open Market Support
Act, that USAID hired Harvard to provide consultants to the
Russian government to help design institutions favorable to
democratic government and a market economy.
Shleifer in due course became the project director, Hay his
deputy.
Allegations of conflict of interest boiled over among US
aid workers in Moscow in 1997, and USAID began an internal
investigation. The agency suspended the project in May. An
angry Russian government, staffed by friends of Shleifer and
Hay, shelved the relationship the same day. Harvard then fired
Hay and relieved Shleifer, a tenured professor, of his project
duties. USAID then cancelled the contract.
And in September, 2000, the US Attorney in Boston filed an
11-count civil claim against Harvard University, Shleifer,
Hay, Nancy Zimmerman (Shleifer's wife and a partner in a hedge
fund with investments in Russia) and Elizabeth Hebert (Hay's
then-girlfriend, now his wife).
US Attorney Donald Stern said at the time that his office
had contemplated criminal charges but filed none.
Judge Woodlock quickly dismissed the charges against Zimmerman
and Hebert, on grounds that neither worked for Harvard or
the government and were not parties to the contract.
As previously
reported, Harvard at one point offered to settle its part
of the case for as much as $24 million, or two-thirds
the value of its contract, in the course of an unsuccessful
mediation by Judge David Mazzone, according to attorneys familiar
with the case. Now that the government's claim to treble damages
has failed, the offer, whatever it was, will have long-since
disappeared from the table.
Shleifer, who left Russia with his parents when he was 15,
only to return as a senior adviser to its government (and
a distinguished economist) at the age of 30, remains a Harvard
professor.
Until last year, he was a principal of LSV Asset Management,
a money management firm for institutional investors that,
with fellow economist Robert Vishny and Josef Lakonishok,
he co-founded in 1991.
His attorney, Earl Nemser, told Marcella Bombardieri of The
Boston Globe, "We're pleased now that most of the claims
in the case, and against Andrei Shleifer, have been dismissed.
We expect the remaining claims will be disposed of favorably
to him."
Jonathan Hay, who became a student of Shleifer's while at
Harvard Law School, joined the London office of the Cleary
Gottlieb law firm as an associate in 2002.
An initial hearing on the damages phase of the trial may
be held as early as July 19. Extensive arguments about
the ultimate success or failure of Harvard's Russia Project
eventually can be expected from all sides.
Judge Woodlock's finding, reported in a clearly-written 100-page
memorandum and order, came nearly 18 months after both sides
asked him to decide the legal issues as a matter of summary
judgment.
It was, perhaps, an unusually long deliberation, even for
a judge with a reputation for taking his time. On the other
hand, his findings were delivered a little in the manner of
an O. Henry story, with a sudden twist at the end.
The nub of the case turned out to be the Pallada Asset Management
Company. Though evidence was adduced to show that Shleifer
had been inviting his former student-turned deputy to invest
with him in Russian oil stocks as early as the summer of 1994
-- and though he and Hay made several other kinds of personal
investments in the next couple of years -- it was a scheme
to win a license from the Russian SEC for Hay's then girlfriend,
Elizabeth Hebert, as the first authorized vendor of Russian
mutual funds, that led to Woodlock's decision to find both
men guilty of the False Claims conspiracy charge.
The meaning of "assigned to Russia" might be so
ambiguous that a jury would be required to decide two counts
of the complaint that Shleifer committed fraud by investing
in Russia while regularly visiting Moscow from Newton, Mass.,
Judge Woodlock wrote.
But on the third count, wrote the judge, there could be no
such doubt. The available evidence clearly showed that a working
understanding existed among Shleifer and Hay to inappropriately
finance and assist in the launch of Pallada, in hopes of turning
it into a Russian version of market-dominating Fidelity Investments.
Hay's father lent Hebert $200,000 to buy a related business.
Shleifer loaned her a similar amount a few months later to
advance her plans. The smoking gun here was something
called "the Steyer memo," a business plan written
by Hebert, reviewed by Hay (and perhaps designed to be signed
by him), and addressed to Thomas Steyer, a business associate
of Shleifer's wife, in hopes of attracting a further round
of investment from him and others.
"We are likely to get a license before anyone else which
will give us a significant first mover advantage... Given
this project's relationship with the Commission, any other
attempts by definition will be in a catchup mode... In the
short to medium term, our advantage comes from the fact the
regulator wants us to be first..."
Shleifer was advisor to the Securities Commission.
Hay was drafting the securities law. At one point, Shleifer
consulted a Harvard lawyer to ask if his wife could invest
in Pallada. It just wouldn't look right, replied attorney
Michael Butler.
"Tellingly" wrote the judge, "Shleifer did
not ask Butler whether he
could invest in Russia." And so it was, by
making the loans and thereby financing the Pallada scheme,
that the two men caused the submission of a false claim.
Coming on page 92 of a 100-page opinion, the finding was
a something of a surprise. It turned out that the meaning
of "assigned to Russia" probably doesn't matter
in Shleifer's case. One count of fraud is as defeating as
three. The decision seemed to render moot any need to resort
to a jury trial, and freed the court to move on to the question
of who owes what and to whom.