Securities Class Action Report

A User's Guide to the Class Action Industrial Complex

WSJ Calls Out Bernstein Litowitz

Today’s Wall Street Journal ran an opinion piece entitled Pay to Play Torts: Pension middlemen get investigated; lawyers get a pass. The column echoes many of the concerns outlined in this blog:

The Louisiana State Employees’ Retirement System is among the most litigious in the nation. John Kennedy, the state treasurer who helps decide when Louisiana’s major pension funds should bring a law suit, has received tens of thousands of dollars in political donations from Bernstein Litowitz, which has offices in New York, New Orleans and San Diego and was the country’s top-grossing securities class-action firm in 2008. The law firm has represented Louisiana’s public pension funds at least 13 times since 2004, and its partners donated nearly $30,000 to Mr. Kennedy’s two most recent campaigns, even though he ran unopposed both times.

In Mississippi, the state attorney general determines when the public employees retirement fund should bring a securities class action and which outside firms will represent the fund. Would you be shocked to learn that AG Jim Hood has frequently chosen law firms that have donated to his campaigns?

Mr. Hood is also partial to Bernstein Litowitz. On February 21, 2006, he chose the firm to represent the Mississippi Public Employees Retirement Fund in a securities class action against Delphi Corporation—just days after receiving $25,000 in donations from Bernstein Litowitz attorneys. The suit was eventually settled, and the lawyers on the case received $40.5 million in fees. Mr. Hood’s campaign would appear to deserve a raise.

 

 

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Filed under: Law & Politics, Opinion, ,

One Response

  1. [...] to the politicians tasked with running those same pension systems (e.g. here, here, here and here).  Mr. Coffey’s former firm (and others cut from the same cloth as Milberg) have collected [...]

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