Word: settlements
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...billions of dollars in revenue for Drexel, made hundreds of millions for himself and ranks as the most influential financier of the decade, rushed to the offices of his attorneys. In less than an hour, the group issued a statement: "Michael Milken is not a party to the Drexel settlement. His attorneys are continuing to defend him against any charges that might be brought...
...cold. Said one of 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...
Christmas was just around the corner, but the 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...
...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...
...Israel. Yet the danger in a dramatic reversal of policy is that it creates expectations that cannot be fulfilled. The gap between what the Palestinians want and what the Israelis may give is as wide as ever. Perhaps most tragically, the P.L.O. may have evolved toward negotiating a settlement at a time when Israel is moving away. Despite what the Palestinians may believe, no recent U.S. President has been willing to muscle Israel to the bargaining table...