THE quick “not guilty” verdict reached Tuesday afternoon by a Brooklyn jury in the federal criminal trial of two former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers was at once surprising — for its failure to comport with the zeitgeist — but also entirely understandable, based on a close reading of the prosecution’s arguments and the evidence the judge allowed to be introduced. “There was a reasonable doubt on every charge,” one juror told The Times afterward. “We just didn’t feel that the case had been proven.”
In short, the prosecution blew it — on two counts. First, in devising the original indictment for conspiracy and securities fraud against the two defendants, Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin, it relied on damning snippets of lengthy e-mail messages that when viewed in their entirety proved to be highly ambiguous. Second, the prosecution made a reductionist opening argument claiming the men were nothing more than out-and-out liars, needlessly raising the bar in terms of what it had to prove to jurors.
In that opening speech, Patrick Sinclair, the assistant United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, tried to head off all the confusing Wall Street jargon soon to be unleashed by claiming the defendants had simply been deceitful. He accused them of lying about the size of their personal investments in the funds and in their dealings with nervous investors who were considering getting out when subprime mortgages — in which the funds had invested heavily — began to rapidly lose value in March 2007.
“They did the best thing that they could think of to keep those investors in the fund and with any luck keep their bonuses coming: they lied,” Mr. Sinclair told the jury. “They lied over and over again to lull those investors into a false sense of confidence and make them think that these failing funds continued to be a good investment when the exact opposite was true.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/12/opinion/12cohan.html?th&emc=th