Disgraced media mogul Conrad Black faces a lengthy stretch in a United States jail after a court convicted him of looting millions of dollars from his Hollinger empire by embezzling funds from shareholders.
After more than 70 hours of deliberation, a Chicago jury delivered verdicts of guilty on three charges of fraud and one charge of obstructing justice — although the former Telegraph owner was cleared of a further nine charges, including tax evasion and racketeering.
Prosecutors are pressing for 15 to 20 years, although lawyers suggested it would more likely be closer to five years. Defence lawyers said Black would appeal against the convictions. Looking pale and drawn, he stared stony-faced in front of him as Judge Amy St Eve read out the verdicts. Co-defendants Jack Boultbee, Peter Atkinson and Mark Kipnis were also found guilty of fraud.
In a charged, emotional scene, Black’s family used a brief adjournment to hurry to his side. Barbara Amiel put an arm round her grimacing husband, who was immaculately dressed in a cream suit and mauve tie, while his daughter, Alana, patted him gently and offered comforting words.
The US government petitioned for Black to go straight to prison, describing him as a ”flight risk” who could flee to Canada or Britain.
Defence counsel Edward Greenspan pleaded for bail to continue, insisting his client would appear for sentencing: ”His life — his past, his present and his future — are all wrapped up in this case.”
The judge allowed Black to remain at liberty pending a hearing on Thursday, but she ordered he remain in Chicago; the peer was forced to hand his British passport to the court clerk before hurrying away without a word.
Fall from grace
Delivered just after 11am local time, the outcome ended a four-month trial and marked a final fall from grace for the press baron who once counted Margaret Thatcher, Princess Michael of Kent and Henry Kissinger among his friends.
Patrick Fitzgerald, the US attorney who brought the case, said it showed ”grave concern” about integrity at the highest echelons of multinationals that had arisen when firms such as Enron and WorldCom collapsed.
”The message is a very simple one,” said Fitzgerald, who also led the prosecution of the White House aide Scooter Libby. ”If you’re going to take liberties, and break the law with other people’s money, there are going to be consequences.” There is a public-interest need to ensure ”insiders in public corporations dealing with shareholders’ money do not engage in self-dealing”.
The case against Black revolved around a series of phoney ”non-compete” agreements attached to the sale of newspapers in the US and Canada. According to the US government, he and his colleagues used these little-noticed clauses to skim as much as $60-million from Hollinger.
But of nine fraud charges, he was only convicted of three, amounting to embezzlement of $6,5-million. The jury also threw out charges relating to his expense claims, and billing Hollinger for a holiday to Bora Bora and for his wife’s 60th birthday party.
Outside court, Greenspan said there were ”viable legal issues” for Black’s appeal against the convictions. ”Conrad Black was cleared of all the central charges,” he claimed, adding: ”We vehemently disagree with the government’s position on sentencing.”
Throughout the trial, Black has been at Chicago’s Ritz-Carlton hotel. He protested his innocence and lambasted prosecutors in vitriolic language, declaring he was ”at war” with the US government and branding his assailants as ”Nazis”.
A lawyer specialising in white-collar crime, Andrew Stoltmann, said chances of a successful appeal were slim, given the leeway allowed the defence: ”I think Conrad Black has virtually no grounds for appeal. Judge Amy St Eve bent over backwards to give him a fair trial.”
Sentencing was set for November 30 and Stoltmann predicted five to seven years. Black would have to serve a minimum of 85% before parole, but such a relatively short sentence may entitle him to a minimum-security ”Club Fed” jail. — Guardian Unlimited Â