Word: burnham
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Government investigators are now probing a complex network of companies and S&Ls that invested deeply in junk bonds, mostly handled by Drexel Burnham Lambert, and carried out elaborate deals to swap the bonds and other assets. Some of the bonds were used to artificially shore up ailing thrifts or were sold in multimillion-dollar lots to cooperating S&Ls. Federal investigators are giving particular scrutiny to Silverado, Charles Keating's Lincoln S&L in California, CenTrust Bank in Miami, and San Jacinto Savings in Texas. Each had extensive business dealings with Drexel and with one another...
Many correspondents painted a benign picture of the financial wizard whose acumen, and sometimes shady practices, powered the 1980s takeover wars. While Milken earned more than $1 billion as the guru of the now defunct Wall Street firm Drexel Burnham Lambert, friends argued that accumulating vast wealth was never his main goal. Wrote CBS president Laurence Tisch, who said he has known Milken for almost 20 years: "I have rarely dealt with a more dedicated and faithful professional or one more sensitive to the needs and goals of his clients or more mindful of the needs of society at large...
When he gets out, Milken can go back to tending a world-class fortune that began with a $25,000 salary when he joined Drexel Burnham Lambert in 1970. While he was head of Drexel's junk-bond department, his compensation zoomed from $45.7 million in 1983 to more than $550 million in 1987, the highest annual paycheck in corporate history. All told, he earned $1.1 billion during those golden years...
...John Burnham Building, San Diego, Calif.: An Aeneas Holdings joint venture in this court and office building has climbed in value from $890,000 to $4.4 million over a year and a half...
...last week a hounded and weary Milken, who had vowed to fight a 98-count indictment that the Government brought against him last year, agreed to settle the largest securities-fraud case in U.S. history. Faced with the threat of expanded new charges, the former head of Drexel Burnham Lambert's junk-bond department struck a tentative deal to plead guilty to six criminal counts and pay a $600 million penalty. Milken, who earned $550 million from Drexel in 1987, would be paying the heaviest fine ever levied against an individual. "This was Michael's decision," said a person close...