Word: probe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...modesty is a virtue. Tod Williams and Billie Tsien's Long Island pool house, for example, combines industrial materials and delicate details. The Clayton County (Ga.) Library delivers a high concept with a relatively low budget. The finest work, from Washington's restored Union Station to the sleek Ford Probe, accommodates both pizazz and gravitas...
...Milken's friends: "From now on he is on his own -- and as determined to prove his innocence as ever." Milken's defense against criminal charges could be hampered by the Drexel settlement, in part because the firm has promised to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney's probe of his transactions. But Stanley Arkin, a Manhattan attorney who specializes in white-collar crime, says separating the cases could help Milken. Says Arkin: "Milken will now be able to defend just his actions instead of those of 10,000 others...
...videotaped tidings that Frederick Joseph handed out to the TV networks last Wednesday evening were not exactly festive. Looking tired and tense, the silver-haired chief executive officer of Drexel Burnham Lambert discussed the settlement that Drexel had reached that day with federal prosecutors to end the largest probe ever of a U.S. securities firm. Declaring that the long-awaited agreement "makes sense from a business and human point of view," Joseph, 51, tried to be upbeat. The deal, he said, would leave the firm "in a very strong financial position, and allows us to refocus our energies on running...
...Drexel employee behind bars. In perhaps its most humiliating cave-in, Drexel agreed to cooperate with the Government investigation of Michael Milken, the financial wizard who created the market for high-yielding junk bonds (total now held: $180 billion) and who remains the ultimate target of Giuliani's probe. Milken, who was not represented in the settlement talks, is expected to be indicted in Manhattan sometime in January...
During the nearly two years that the Government spent preparing its case, Drexel defiantly declared its innocence and launched a major advertising campaign extolling the civic virtues of its junk bonds. Joseph claims that the two-year federal probe cost Drexel $1.5 billion in lost revenues and an additional $175 million in legal and advertising fees. Since November, the firm has bargained for an agreement that, as chairman Robert Linton put it, "would not make us look like a bunch of thieves...