Title: AVOIDING%20CONFLICTS%20OF%20INTEREST%20LESSONS%20FROM%20CALIFORNIA
1AVOIDING CONFLICTS OF INTERESTLESSONS FROM
CALIFORNIAS FAULT LINES
- Presentation to the
- Board of Retirement of the Fresno County
Employees Retirement Association - October 19, 2006
- Jeffrey R. Rieger, Esq.
- Reed Smith, LLP
2Why Conflict-Of-Interest Rules?
- A person cannot serve two masters
simultaneously. . . The duties of public office
demand the absolute loyalty and undivided,
uncompromised allegiance of the individual that
holds the office. - People v. Honig 48 Cal.App.4th 289 (1996)
3Conflict of Interest Laws Affecting Public
Officials
- Common Law
- State Constitution
- Uniform Prudent Investor Act
- State Statutes
- Case Law
4Common Law
- The most fundamental duty owed by the trustee
to the beneficiaries of the trust is the duty of
loyalty. This duty is imposed on the trustee not
because of any provision in the terms of the
trust, but because of the relationship that
arises from the creation of the trust. A trustee
is in a fiduciary relation to the beneficiaries
of the trust....In some relations the fiduciary
element is more intense than in others it is
peculiarly intense in the case of a trust. It is
the duty of a trustee to administer the trust
solely in the interest of the beneficiaries. He
is not permitted to place himself in a position
where it would be for his own benefit to violate
his duty to the beneficiaries. - Source I. W. Fratcher, Scott on Trusts,
170 (4th ed. 1987).
5California Constitution
- Exclusive Benefit Rule The assets of the
retirement system are trust funds and shall be
held for the exclusive purposes of providing
benefits to participants and their beneficiaries
and defraying reasonable expenses of
administering the system. - Primary Duty Rule Retirement Board has sole,
exclusive fiduciary responsibility over the
assets and administration of the retirement
systemboards duty to its participants and their
beneficiaries shall take precedence over any
other duty. - Prudent Person Rule Members of the retirement
board shall discharge their dutieswith the care,
skill, prudence and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a prudent
person acting in like capacity and familiar with
these matters would use in the conduct of an
enterprise of a like character and with like
aims. - Source CA Constitution, Article XVI,
Section 17
6Uniform Prudent Investor Act
- Duty of Loyalty. Establishes trustees duty of
loyalty, to administer the trust solely in the
interest of the beneficiaries. - Conflicts of Interest. Establishes rule against
self-dealing. Trustee has duty not to use or
deal with trust property for the trustees own
profit or for any other purpose unconnected with
the trust, or take part in any transaction in
which the trustee has an interest adverse to the
beneficiary. -
- Source California Probate Code Section
16045 et seq.
7Case Law
- A trustees duties include the duty of loyalty,
the duty to avoid conflicts of interest, the duty
to preserve trust property, the duty to make
trust property productive, the duty to dispose of
improper investments, and the duty to report and
account. -
- City of Atascadero v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner Smith, Inc. 68 Cal. App. 4th 787
(1996).
8CA Statutes Political Reform Act of 1974
- No public official may make, participate in
making or in any way use or attempt to use
his/her official position to influence a
governmental decision in which he/she knows or
has reason to know he/she has a disqualifying
conflict of interest. A public official has a
conflict of interest if the decision will have a
reasonably foreseeable material financial effect
on one or more of his/her economic interests,
unless that interest is indistinguishable from
the public generally. - Source Fair Political Practices Commission
Regulation 18700
9Consequences of a Conflict of Interest Under the
Political Reform Act
- You are disqualified from participating,
influencing and voting. - If you are disqualified, you announce your
potential conflict of interest and leave the room
when the agenda item is up for discussion. - In limited circumstances, however, you may speak
as a member of the public.
10CA Statutes Government Code Section 1090
- Officials shall not be financially interested in
any contract made by them in their official
capacity, or by any body or board of which they
are members. - Limited to public contracts narrower than the
Political Reform Act treatment of governmental
decisions. - The term contract is interpreted broadly to
include the negotiations, discussions,
reasoning, planning and give and take that go
beforehand in the making of a decision on a
contract. Chapman v. Superior Court 130
Cal.App.4th 261 (2005). - There are circumstances where disqualification of
an official is not required by the Political
Reform Act, but the contract is prohibited under
Section 1090.
11Consequences Of A Section 1090 Violation
- Civil and criminal sanctions against an
interested official for willful violations may
include a fine, imprisonment in state prison,
restitution of any financial gain obtained from
the contract, and disqualification from holding
public office. - Finnegan v. Schrader 91 Cal. App.4th 572 (2001)
(member of sanitary district board later hired as
district manager was required to return all of
the over 70,000 he received in compensation
under the illegal contract). - The challenged contract is void, from the date it
was entered into.
12Exceptions for Remote and Non-Interests
- The prohibition of Section 1090 does not extend
to an official who has only a remote interest
or a non-interest in the contract. - Exempt remote interests are specified in the
statute - E.g., employment by non-profit entities, small
holdings in large companies by non-directors/offic
ers, competitively bid contracts, childrens
interests, compensation from a government entity,
etc.) - Where only a remote interest exists, the public
entity is not prohibited from entering into the
contract, so long as - the interested member discloses his or her
interest - the interest is noted in the public record
- the interested member does not participate in the
process or vote on the contract
13Exception for Non-Interests
- The prohibition of Section 1090 also does not
extend to an official who has a non- interest
in the contract. - Exempt non-interests are defined in Section
1091.5, including that of a recipient of public
services generally provided by the public body or
board of which he or she is a member, on the same
terms and conditions as if he or she were not a
member of the board. - It is also a non-interest if your only interest
comes from your government salary, per diem or
expense reimbursement.
14The San Diego Quake State Criminal Charges
- Six former board members of SDCERS are charged
with three counts of felony conflict of interest.
The six defendants are the Citys former - Human Resources Director
- Treasurer
- Assistant Auditor
- Management Analyst
- President of the Municipal Employees Association
- President of the Firefighters Association
15The San Diego Quake State Criminal Charges
- The core allegations are
- In 2002, the City, the employees unions and the
City retirement system entered into a triangle
deal to boost benefits for active employees,
contingent upon relieving the City from (1) an
immediate balloon payment due to the retirement
system and (2) paying the true actuarial cost of
the increased benefits. As a consequence, the
retirement system became severely under-funded. - Each of the six defendants participated in
designing and negotiating the deal and as
retirement board members voted in favor of
under-funding the pension system. - Each of the six defendants personally benefited
from the deal.
16The San Diego Quake Federal Criminal
Indictments
- Three former retirement board members and its
former Administrator and General Counsel are
charged with a total of 20 counts of felony
conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud and to
deprive the retirement system, its members and
the citizens of San Diego of the honest services
of their public officials, causing significant
harm to the financial integrity of SDCERS. - The allegations concern the same 2002 deal,
known as Managers Proposal Two, as in the
state criminal charges.
17The San Diego Quake Federal Criminal
Indictments
- The core allegations are
- Defendants conspired to under-fund the system,
boost their own personal retirement benefits and
employment security and conceal the true facts
from other board members. - The key material fact alleged The firefighters
union president, a retirement board member,
increased his own personal benefits. - The key wrong alleged Defendants deprived the
system and citizens of the honest services of
their public officials to be performed free from
corruption, fraud, undue influence, conflict of
interest, and deceit.
18The San Diego Quake Federal Criminal Indictments
- Honest Services Fraud -- 18 U.S.C. 1341 and
1346 - For the purposes of this chapter i.e., mail
and wire fraud statutes, the term, scheme or
artifice to defraud includes a scheme or
artifice to deprive another of the intangible
right of honest services. - Typically involves misuse of an officials public
position for personal gain, calling into question
impartiality of performance and breach of the
publics trust - The Government says honest services means
conscientious, loyal, faithful, disinterested,
unbiased service, to be performed free of deceit,
undue influence, conflict of interest,
self-enrichment, self-dealing, concealment,
bribery, fraud and corruption.
19Recent Inductees into the Honest Services Fraud
Hall of Shame
- Randy Duke Cunningham (R-San Diego)
-
- Jack Abramoff
-
20Shock Waves Outside of California, Too
- ING Units Are Hit by New Hampshire Complaint,
Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2006 - Clueless in Billerica, The Boston Globe,
January 13, 2006 - Pension Trustee Voted for Firm Linked to Ally
Millions Invested with Company Tied to GOP
Powerbroker, Chicago Sun-Times,
September 6, 2005 - Theobold Free-Rent Arrangement Revealed, New
Hampshire Business Review, November 11, 2005. - Agencys Ex-Chief Charged in Gift Probe Food,
Travel among Items Man who Led Retirement Fund is
Now Accused of Accepting, Columbus Dispatch,
August 4, 2005 - Ex-Pension Chiefs Severance Pay Probed by
Virginia Legislative Panel, The Washington Post,
July 9, 2005 - Teachers Retirement Deal under Scrutiny, The
Charleston (W. VA) Gazette, February 20, 2005
21Can We Predict When theNext Big One Will Hit?
- No.
- (But we can try to help with some practical,
everyday concerns you may have.) - HOWEVER
-
22BIG DISCLAIMER!!
- THE FOLLOWING IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE AS TO ANY
SPECIFIC FACT SITUATION. THIS IS ONLY GENERAL
GUIDANCE AS TO THE LIKELY STATE OF THE LAW
GENERALLY ON THESE SUBJECTS. IN MAKING ANY
DECISIONS AFFECTING YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS, YOU SHOULD
NOT RELY UPON ANYTHING SAID IN THIS PROGRAM, BUT
INSTEAD SHOULD SEEK INDEPENDENT LEGAL COUNSEL TO
ADVISE ON SPECIFIC SITUATIONS. -
23Predictable Fault Lines for Pension Officials
- Wearing two or three hats
- Negotiating for benefit increases
- Increasing ones personal benefits
- Communicating with the plan sponsor, unions, and
retirees over actuarial funding, contribution
rates, quid pro quos - Not disclosing everything
- Pay to play, soft dollars, kickbacks, etc.
among consultants, administrators and investment
managers
24TAKEAWAY LESSON
- UNCOMMON GAIN
- LEADS TO
- UNCOMMON PAIN!
25How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q As an elected Trustee or system
Administrator, do I have an impermissible
conflict of interest making decisions affecting
contributions or benefits, because I make
contributions and receive the benefits available
to all members of the pension system? - A Not for that reason alone.
26How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q If the Board is considering plan changes (e.g.
assumption rate, interest crediting rate,
amortization periods) that have an impact on all
members, and I am a member of the system, do I
have an impermissible conflict of interest as a
Trustee? - A No, not for that reason alone.
27How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q What if the change affects only a category of
members (e.g. DROP participants) and I am a
member of that particular category? - A Unlikely to create a conflict unless the
category is as small as a single grade/class,
management, or small department.
28How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q Do I have an impermissible conflict of
interest as a Trustee if I am a member of a union
or employee organization within the plan
sponsors agency? Or a prior member? - A Not for that reason alone.
29How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q As a Trustee or administrative staff member,
do I have an impermissible conflict of interest
if I am an officer of a union in the plan
sponsor's agency? Or a prior officer? - A Not for that reason alone.
30How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q As a Trustee or administrative staff member,
may I participate in meet confer over benefits
as a member of either the employers or the
unions negotiating team? Any different if I
participated before becoming a trustee? - A Troublesome. Lets talk more.
31How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q Do I have an impermissible conflict of
interest if I am a member of a Taxpayer
Association or similar group? - A Not for that reason alone.
32How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q What if the Taxpayers Associations official
position includes statements of intent or goals
inimical to the mission of the retirement system?
- A Unlikely, but tell me more.
33How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q Can the Board and/or staff enter into any kind
of discussions with plan sponsors re benefits,
plan design, actuary assumptions, retiree health
coverage, etc.? - A Yesbut!
34How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q Can board members/staff, or any of their
professionals, give advice on actuarial
projections and calculations, tax qualification
questions, investments, etc. to the plan sponsor
or to other political entities? - A Yesbut!
35How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q One of the vendors doing business with the
system has indicated interest in employing me
after I am no longer associated with the system.
To what extent would I have an impermissible
conflict of interest in continuing to serve the
system? - A Very problematic, unless you expressly
disclaim any interest in a future job. You
should avoid any activity relating to that vendor
and make full disclosure of the situation.
36How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q I have an outside business interest that will
benefit indirectly from my serving the system
e.g., I will make good business contacts, enhance
my reputation or gain access to helpful business
leads. As long as I dont use my office to
directly benefit that business interest, do I
have an impermissible conflict of interest? - A A judgment call. See specific state
regulations.
37How High on the Richter Scale?
- Q I am often invited to speak at pension fund
conferences. The system pays for all my travel
and lodging costs, because the meetings are
educational or otherwise directly related to our
business. I also receive my regular pay (if I am
a staff member or an elected trustee) while in
attendance. Deep down, however, my primary
motivation in going to these programs is to
enhance my own personal marketability, rather
than any knowledge I might gain. Does this create
an impermissible conflict of interest? - A This is a close call. At some point, you are
taking public funds to promote personal
interests. Is it worth the risk?