SUBJECT: FEDERAL CORRUPTION                                  FILE: UFO2769




PART 2



   Filename: Harry2.Art
   Type    : Article
   Author  : Harry Martin
   Date    : 03/15/91
   Desc    : Federal Corruption Series Part II

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             HOW THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT USED THE BANKRUPTCY COURT
                              By Harry V. Martin
                            Second of a New Series
                      (c) Copyright Napa Sentinel, 1991
                                March 15, 1991
                Reprinted with permission of the Napa Sentinel


     The  corruption  of the bankruptcy system is endemic of  a  political
   patronage  system  with its roots going back to former  U.S.   Attorney
   Edwin  Meese,  according to many former employees of the Department  of
   Justice. The INSLAW case--reported last week in the "Napa Sentinel"--is
   a microcosm of the entire system.

     As a result of the INSLAW cases, many heads in the Justice Department
   were lopped off.  When Judge George Bason,  a  bankruptcy court  judge,
   refused  to  liquidate INSLAW,  ruling instead that the  Department  of
   Justice used deceit,  trickery and fraud,  he was only one of four  who
   were not re-appointed to their jobs. A total of 132 were re-appointed.

     But to show the collusion of the Justice Department,  when it removed
   Judge  Bason  from  the bench after his ruling  against  them  and  for
   INSLAW,   they  had S.  Martin Teel appointed to the bench  to  replace
   Bason.   Who  was  Teel?  He was a Department of Justice  attorney  who
   unsuccessfully argued the INSLAW case before Judge Bason.

     Tony Pasciuto admitted that he was ordered to pressure the bankruptcy
   judge  to  rule  against INSLAW.  After being  subpoenaed  by  INSLAW's
   attorney,  Pasciuto was offered a long-awaited transfer by the  Justice
   Department from Washington, D.C. to Albany, New York. Pasciuto bought a
   home in Albany and then changed his testimony.  After the testimony was
   completed,  the Justice Department cancelled his transfer. Pasciuto had
   to commute from Albany to Washington.

     Former  Attorney  General  Elliott  Richardson made  a  list  of  the
   baffling questions of why the Justice Department wanted INSLAW declared
   insolvent  and  why it wouldn't pay a $6.8  million settlement  to  the
   small company.  INSLAW received an offer to sell their company and they
   refused.  The buyer informed the company that he had powerful political
   influence and "We have ways of making you sell." Within 90 days of that
   threat, the Justice Department commenced its attack on INSLAW.

     The  company  that  made  the attempt to  buy  INSLAW  had  financial
   connections  to  Meese  and some of Meese's cronies.  When  the  battle
   ended,    INSLAW  was  broke,   an  attorney,   a   Justice  Department
   whistleblower  and a judge were out to work,  but INSLAW was saved by a
   corporate  giant--IBM--who  rescued  the  company  virtually  from  the
   auction block.

     The  company  that allegedly made the threat was Hadron.  It has  had
   brushes with the Security Exchange Commission, it has gone to the brink
   of being broke and one of its companies has been accused by the SEC  of
   fraud and manipulation of stock prices,  the company lost $4.3  million
   in one year. It soon sunk $12 million in the red.

     But  once  Meese became Attorney General,  Hadron  suddenly  received
   lucrative  Pentagon contracts,  along with the Agency for International
   Development.  The company was also awarded a $40  million contract from
   the  Justice Department,  despite protests against the bidding process.
   One member of Hadron's board was Dr.  Earl Brian,  who was in  Reagan's
   California  cabinet  along  with Meese.  Meese was chief  of  staff  in
   California.  The Deputy Attorney General was D. Lowell Jensen,  who had
   competed  against INSLAW years earlier.  The person in charge of making
   Justice Department payments for INSLAW's software--and who  didn't--was
   an employee who had been fired from INSLAW.  Jensen was also in trouble
   when  the Senate was investigating the Iran-Contra scandal.  Apparently
   the  Senate  committee  discovered  a memo written  by  Jensen  to  the
   National  Security Council warning that the Miami  federal  prosecutors
   where  on  Ollie  North's trail.  The memo revealed  that  the  Justice
   Department,   who  was  supposed to prosecute the  Iran-Contra  affair,
   actually was tipping off the government in advance.

     One  Justice Department official testified at the INSLAW hearing that
   INSLAW's software could be dangerous.  Thomas Stanton testified "INSLAW
   could  besmirch  the  U.S.   Trustee  program."   The  program  is   so
   sophisticated  that it could trace all assets,  track all trustees  and
   judges.   Another  Justice  Department employee stated  that  the  U.S.
   Trustee  program  was flagrantly political.  "It was a way  of  getting
   cronies into office. There would be 50 or 60  positions to be filled...
   it was Meese's baby." The official also stated, "It was always puzzling
   to me how he got away with what he got away with.   He'd do things that
   were  blatantly  wrong  and no one would  question  him--it's  kind  of
   scary."

     The Meese program would concentrate too much power in one  government
   department.   "It's  supposed  to act as a watchdog  over  lawyers  and
   trustees, but the problem is it's more. It has a considerable amount of
   power  to control the administration of cases.  When a case moves  from
   bankruptcy to liquidation, the U.S.  Trustees office names the trustee,
   who converts the assets,  oversees the auction,  and retains appraisers
   who  will put a price tag on the leavings.  The U.S.  Trustee's program
   also  links Justice and the IRS.  The thing that's a little frightening
   about  it is that the U.S.  Trustee department sees itself as a part of
   the  tax-collecting  function  of government.  The  Justice  Department
   represents  the  IRS,   and the IRS is often the  biggest  creditor  in
   liquidation," states a leading bankruptcy attorney.




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