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...savings and loan association, a small loan company and a swimming-pool building company. His associates in various deals have ranged from the late Columnist George Sokolsky to Lionel Executive Paul Hughes, who was named a co-conspirator but not a defendant in the $5,000,000 United Dye Swindle (TIME. March...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Finance: Cohn's Costly Toy | 3/22/1963 | See Source »

Clean Front. Dardi's downfall began in 1953 at a Manhattan cocktail party, where he met Lowell M. Birrell, a charming but ruthless looter of companies who has since fled to Brazil and is under indictment for fraud. Birrell was then in control of United Dye, but he needed someone to give him a clean front. He saw in Dardi qualities that he admired; for one thing, Dardi had been involved in some business deals with another Birrell crony, brilliant and amoral Financier Serge Rubinstein (who was later mysteriously strangled in his luxurious home on Manhattan's Fifth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: The $5,000,000 Swindle | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

Birrell then persuaded the board to permit the transfer of many of United Dye's assets to worthless insurance companies that he controlled. After he had managed to siphon off some $2,000,000 of the company's assets, Birrell sold his 38,500 United Dye shares. They went to another swindler. Alexander Guterma, who installed himself as chairman and Dardi as president...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: The $5,000,000 Swindle | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

...United Dye board, which controlled 90,000 of the 152,000 shares outstanding, then approved an ingenious Guterma plot to print thousands of additional shares and dump them on the public-at a profit. First it proposed a merger with little-known and profitless Handridge Oil Corp., which was controlled by Chairman Guterma and Las Vegas Gamblers Samuel Garfield and Irving Pasternak. Terms: 575,000 new shares of United Dye, worth $18 million, for 575,000 shares of Handridge, whose assets had been bought from Texas Wheeler-Dealers John and Clint Murchison Jr. for a mere $519,000. Remarkably, this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: The $5,000,000 Swindle | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

Stoking the Boilers. The Guterma-Dardi group then attacked the problem of dumping 575,000 new shares of United Dye stock on the market without depressing the price. Instead of selling the new shares through the New York Stock Exchange, they engaged seven boiler rooms to float the stock on the over-the-counter market, got touters to push the stock with false claims. To keep the stock up and lure more gullible investors, United Dye engaged a shady bank in Tangier to buy the old shares listed on the Big Board, which were so thinly held that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: The $5,000,000 Swindle | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

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