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Martha: She Made the Mistake of Being a Self-Made Billionaire
Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | Posted March 6, 2004 | William L. Anderson and Candice E. Jackson

Posted on 03/09/2004 10:50:23 AM PST by g_f_axelsen

The Martha verdict appears quite popular with the political classes and the vaunted "man on the street," not to mention the nation's mainstream journalists.  The post-trial comments of one juror, Chappell Hartridge (Juror Number Eight), say it all: "Maybe this is a victory for the little guys who lose money thanks to these kinds of transactions. Maybe it's a message to the big wigs."

Remember that this was not a trial about "insider trading."  The judge said so, the prosecutors said so, the pundits said so.  Even the New York Times declared that it was not an "insider trading" charge.  Crowed the Gray Lady's March 6 lead editorial:

Absent a straightforward insider-trading charge, the jury was left to determine that there had been an illegal cover-up — and on that, the evidence was compelling — without defining the underlying impropriety. Still, the narrative that emerged at the trial justified the government's determination.

Juror Number Eight even admitted as such, answering a reporter's question with: "Well, as I understood it we weren't supposed to consider insider trading."  So there we have it; it was a trial about "cover-ups" and changed stories and a conspiracy to tell the government investigators something that the government did not want to hear.

Yet, in reality, it was a trial about "insider trading."  If we dig even deeper, we find that underlying the entire event was the theme that Stewart's station in life somehow was illegitimate, or at least she had no right to the alleged position of privilege that her money brings her.  Should Juror Number Eight's words, as well as those of the editorial board of the New York Times mean anything, Martha Stewart ultimately was convicted of being "wealthy beyond a reasonable doubt."

Consider the following statement in the Times' editorial: "The trial depicted a cozy world where insiders routinely use their wealth and connections to benefit from insider information."  Having followed the trial in some detail, I cannot recall such a scenario.  In the aftermath (and even before the trial began), people were aware that ImClone CEO Sam Waksal sold his stock upon learning that the Food and Drug Administration had given a thumbs down on its drug Erbitux (a decision that the FDA later reversed, yet another sordid episode to this story of government overreaching).

According to the government's charges, Stewart's stockbroker, Peter Bacanovic, was also Waksal's broker, and he got a message to Stewart that his client was dumping his ImClone stock and that she should do the same.  As James Ostrowski has pointed out, that is not insider trading.  If Baconovic tipped off Stewart to Waksal's actions – as the jury apparently believed – at worst he was guilty of violating Merrill Lynch's policies of confidentiality and he deserved whatever punishment his employer would mete upon him.

Furthermore, according to the record, Stewart unsuccessfully tried to reach Waksal herself, another example of what the Times calls the "cozy world."  So, according to the Gray Lady's editorial board, if well-known corporate CEOs talk to one another (or at least have the phone numbers to the executive suites), that constitutes an "unfair advantage" that permits such people "to benefit from insider information," a state of affairs that meets with the Times' sternest disapproval.

However, let us put the shoe on a different foot.  One of us worked as a newspaper journalist and at times had direct contact with reporters from the New York Times.  Indeed, as those on the "outside" soon discovered, there was a "cozy relationship" between people in political power and journalists from the Times, Washington Post, and the national network news outlets like ABC and CBS.  Such relationships permitted reporters from those news organizations to gain access to people who would not give the time of day to the rest of us.

No doubt, such access to newsmakers gives journalists from the Times and other elite organizations a real advantage, not only in gaining prestige but also wealth.  In other words, according to the editors of the Times, there is nothing wrong with journalists from the Times having access to top people – often at the expense of the "little guys" slugging it out at smaller newspapers – but it is immoral for Martha Stewart to have access to the offices of a Sam Waksal.  To put it another way, it depends upon the "cozy world" of which one speaks.

According to our vaunted "Juror Number Eight," Stewart and her co-defendant were "arrogant."  He cited their not appearing on the witness stand somehow as proof of their arrogance – for which conviction apparently was a remedy.  His statements to the press express that sense of entitlement: "It bothered me that they only put one witness on the stand. It's like they were saying, 'I don't need to defend myself. I don't need to persuade the jury. We know we'll get off.'"

Moreover, Stewart's privileges as a CEO further stoked his fire.  Consider this exchange between Mr. Number Eight and Andrea Peyser of the New York Post, a reporter who wrote shrill anti-Stewart screeds, and whose editors obviously wanted Stewart "taken down a notch".  (The following comes from Elizabeth Koch's dispatch in Reason Magazine's website, March 5.)

(Hartridge)  It was kind of…"

"Arrogant?" Andrea Peyser asks hopefully.

(Hartridge)  "Yeah," he says. "Judging by some of the things they did, I'd say they thought they were special. I wasn't comfortable with the tone of [Peter Bacanovic's taped SEC testimony]. He sounded kind of…"

"Arrogant?" Andrea asks, nodding emphatically. "What about the fact that Martha charges her vacations to the company? Did that play into your decision?" What, Andrea, do you want him to admit the conviction was motivated less by evidence than character assassination and vengeance?  (Koch's comments)

"Yeah. She takes vacations and doesn't pay for them—it's like she thinks she's better than everyone else. But, I mean...the vacations didn't factor into our decision."

         "What are you thinking of in terms of insider trading?" someone asks.

"Well, as I understood it we weren't supposed to consider insider trading. But as far as not talking to the authorities and not cooperating, yes, she sounded like she thought she was better than everyone else."

These words speak to the duplicity of the government's case against Stewart – and the dishonesty of the jurors, judge, and prosecutors alike.  Keep in mind that Martha Stewart now faces a lengthy stay in prison because jurors decided that the original activity – the alleged "insider trading" that never occurred – was a "bad act" that triggered their viewpoints about everything else that happened afterward.  Moreover, the jurors apparently remained convinced that Stewart had engaged in the "crime" of "insider trading," or at least something similar, since they believed she was trying to cover up something illegal.  They could not have reached their decision otherwise, as it would have been a logical absurdity.

To make matters worse, even before Stewart was able to unload her ImClone stock, numerous other nameless investors – many who most likely fell into the "little guy" category – already had sold their ImClone shares.  Stewart's actions impoverished no one, nor did she gain an "illegal" or even "unfair" advantage.  By the time she acted, the market already had spoken.

In one of its news dispatches following the trial, CNN declared that the Stewart case was part of the government's "crackdown on corporate corruption."  This is ridiculous.  Stewart was not a "corrupt" executive, nor did she break the law when she sold her shares of the temporarily doomed ImClone stock.

No, Stewart apparently committed the "crime" of being wealthy and well-connected.  Furthermore, she sometimes was short and impatient with people, which is a trait that one of us in his brief career as a news reporter found to be endemic in people who were associated with the New York Times and other "elite" news outlets. 

Had she instead been a journalist or a politician, she would have had a chorus of supporters among the political classes.  Instead, she made the mistake of being a self-made billionaire, and now the journalists and the political classes are making sure that she is railroaded into a prison cell.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: ahole; anticapitalist; heretodaygonetoday; looser; marthastewart; moby; mobydick; mobytroll; strikeupthebanned; thisaccountisbanned; vikingkitties; vkpac; zot
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To: UCANSEE2
They 'knew' this case could lead to the center of their spider den, and they didn't want that.

So, sacrifice the lamb.

You speak as though she's innocent. She's not, and is certainly no "lamb."


Show 'em my motto!

21 posted on 03/09/2004 11:29:48 AM PST by rdb3 (The Servant of Jehovah is the Christ of Calvary and of the empty tomb. <><)
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To: Truth29
And that makes you happy?
22 posted on 03/09/2004 11:32:40 AM PST by Hildy (A kiss is the unborn child knocking at the door.)
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To: Chameleon
But where Martha Stewart really went wrong was when she lied and conspired against the feds. Lie to them, and they take it personally. Federal prosecutors always roll hard on someone that they can prove is lying to them.

The law against lying to the Feds, when not under oath is preposterous. They insist on working from notes and not using recording devices of any kind. Everyone is at the mercy of any agent 'remembering' things to suit his prior suspicions.

If there is ever any reason for federal agents to want information from me, I will stand mute until before a Grand Jury and give my answers there.

So9

23 posted on 03/09/2004 11:38:01 AM PST by Servant of the 9 (Goldwater Republican)
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To: g_f_axelsen
She also made the mistake of lying and cheating.
24 posted on 03/09/2004 11:39:16 AM PST by philosofy123
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To: g_f_axelsen; meowmeow; Constitution Day; 4mycountry; Poohbah; Grampa Dave; an amused spectator; ...
Welcome to FR. Cry me a river for Martha.

miserable failure
miserable failure
miserable failure
miserable failure
war criminal

25 posted on 03/09/2004 11:45:32 AM PST by VRWCmember (Dick Gephardt is a <a href="http://www.michaelmoore.com" target="_blank">miserable failure </a>)
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To: g_f_axelsen
I remember when in America when the rich were free to lie to the police and federal investigators.

But today our freedoms are gone. Pretty soon, no one will be free to lie, cheat and steal.
26 posted on 03/09/2004 11:46:08 AM PST by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: g_f_axelsen
The Martha verdict appears quite popular with the political classes and the vaunted "man on the street," not to mention the nation's mainstream journalists.

All I've seen from the media is that she shouldn't have to go to jail. She's one of their own.

27 posted on 03/09/2004 11:48:23 AM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: g_f_axelsen
Hitler made the mistake of over extending his resources on two fronts.

CG
28 posted on 03/09/2004 11:48:38 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (Of course I'm armed. Isn't everyone?)
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To: Hildy
Happiness has nothing to do with appreciating that someone will pay their full debt for their actions. In the same vein, sadness will not acquit her of her crimes.
29 posted on 03/09/2004 11:48:55 AM PST by Pan_Yans Wife (The soul unfolds itself, like a lotus of countless petals. --- Kahlil Gibran)
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To: Truth29
If Martha Stewart ever gets locked up, she will come to grievous bodily harm or worse.

If Martha gets locked up, she will be at some private prison on a 9 hole golf course. I don't think she will be seen cavorting with many little people.

30 posted on 03/09/2004 11:50:24 AM PST by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: Hildy
"And that makes you happy?"

Not at all. I am pointing out that the likely consequences of her conviction will go far beyond what is being talked about in the media - never mind the economic distruction this decision is causing. She is being described in the same league with the WorldCom and Enron looters who stole millions and billions from their companies. Stewart did nothing corrupt regarding her company at all. This whole case is about a stock trade and her conviction for covering up the circumstances of the trade.

31 posted on 03/09/2004 11:50:46 AM PST by Truth29
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To: Truth29
Oh, I agree with that.
32 posted on 03/09/2004 11:51:38 AM PST by Hildy (A kiss is the unborn child knocking at the door.)
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Here is the headline you WON'T see.

-----

No, Ken Lay apparently committed the "crime" of being wealthy and well-connected.
33 posted on 03/09/2004 11:52:49 AM PST by xusafflyer (Keep paying those taxes California. Mexico thanks you.)
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To: g_f_axelsen
A "billionaire" ???- On paper maybe and in the past.
34 posted on 03/09/2004 11:54:24 AM PST by Helms (The Media Elites and DNC nearly cost us Our Country)
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To: 11th Earl of Mar
I remember when in America when the rich were free to lie to the police and federal investigators.
But today our freedoms are gone. Pretty soon, no one will be free to lie, cheat and steal.


Yeah. There's at least one rich guy who thought that since he got away with murder, he could get away with stealing his satellite TV service, too! ;)
35 posted on 03/09/2004 11:57:39 AM PST by Fawnn (Canteen wOOhOO Consultant and CookingWithPam.com person)
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To: Truth29
Stewart did nothing corrupt regarding her company at all.
---

Do you really believe that Martha never did this type of activity before as a broker or within her own company? I highly doubt it.
36 posted on 03/09/2004 11:59:19 AM PST by xusafflyer (Keep paying those taxes California. Mexico thanks you.)
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To: _Jim
Allow me to explain.

Of course she won't keep her mouth shut, after being convicted.

BUT, no one will believe anything she would say now.

And the point was not to keep Martha quiet (the cat was already out of the bag on her using insider info), but to keep the media from investigating or designated branches of the Federal or State government at the behest of the media and public. Since they prosecuted Martha, all need to find out 'why she got away with it' disappeared.

She told the wrong person that "She was so big, no one would actually do anything to her for using that insider info", so it was decided to let the hatchet fall on her neck to prove to her she wasn't that big, and keep investigation of any other insider trading to ZERO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

And it worked.
37 posted on 03/09/2004 11:59:53 AM PST by UCANSEE2 (The LINE has been drawn. While the narrow minded see a line, the rest see a circle.)
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To: g_f_axelsen
All she had to do was tell the truth. She would've gotten a slap on the wrist and it would be yesterday's news. I keep telling my daughter, just tell the truth. It can't be worse than me finding out you lied later.
38 posted on 03/09/2004 12:01:24 PM PST by Not A Snowbird (You need tons click "co-ordinating")
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To: g_f_axelsen
Furthermore, according to the record, Stewart unsuccessfully tried to reach Waksal herself, another example of what the Times calls the "cozy world." So, according to the Gray Lady's editorial board, if well-known corporate CEOs talk to one another (or at least have the phone numbers to the executive suites), that constitutes an "unfair advantage" that permits such people "to benefit from insider information," a state of affairs that meets with the Times' sternest disapproval.

However, let us put the shoe on a different foot. One of us worked as a newspaper journalist and at times had direct contact with reporters from the New York Times. Indeed, as those on the "outside" soon discovered, there was a "cozy relationship" between people in political power and journalists from the Times, Washington Post, and the national network news outlets like ABC and CBS. Such relationships permitted reporters from those news organizations to gain access to people who would not give the time of day to the rest of us.

I can't stand the woman. Don't like her one bit. That being said, this article is exactly right. Stewart did nothing that any other person out on the street would have done. Someone tells me that the owner of the company is selling their stock? Of course I'm going to sell my stock. And any hear that would tell you different are lying to your face. 'Cozy relationships' exist in every aspect of life. Stewart's action of selling the stock hurt no one

39 posted on 03/09/2004 12:01:28 PM PST by billbears (Deo Vindice.)
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To: 11th Earl of Mar
"If Martha gets locked up, she will be as some private prison on a 9 hole golf course."

Not from what I have been hearing from the FoxNews "experts." They maintain she will get no special treatment and if she makes the mistake of still being "arrogant" or abusing any of her privileges like 10 minutes of phone time a day, things will go very hard for her.

40 posted on 03/09/2004 12:01:47 PM PST by Truth29
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