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Romney and Bain

Welshtaff 2012/07/05 22:19:27

The Mystery of Romney's Exit From Bain







Now there's a debate over when the GOP presidential candidate left
his private equity firm—and what it means.


—By


There is now a media debate over when Mitt Romney left Bain Capital, his
private equity firm—and the meaning of his departure.

The Romney campaign and Bain maintain that he said
au revoir in February 1999, when he took over the troubled 2002 Winter Olympics
in Salt Lake City. On Monday, I reported that documents filed in late 1999 with the Securities
and Exchange Commission—including one signed by Romney—identify Romney as a
participant in a Bain partnership that invested $75 million in Stericycle, a
medical-waste firm that in recent years has been assailed by abortion foes for
disposing of aborted fetuses collected from family planning clinics. The
documents suggest that Romney had not fully removed himself from Bain's business
dealings.


Yet here's how Bain responded to questions from me:



[A] spokeswoman for Bain maintained that Romney was not involved in the
Stericycle deal in 1999, saying that he had "resigned" months before the stock
purchase was negotiated. The spokeswoman noted that following his resignation
Romney remained only "a signatory on certain documents," until his separation
agreement with Bain was finalized in 2002. And Bain issued this statement: "Mitt
Romney retired from Bain Capital in February 1999. He has had no involvement in
the management or investment activities of Bain Capital, or with any of its
portfolio companies since that time."


And the Romney campaign, responding to a Washington Post report on Bain-bought companies
outsourcing jobs, also recently insisted that Romney left Bain in February 1999
and had nothing to do with firms purchased by Bain after that point.




Romney's actual departure date is significant. If
he did fully leave Bain in February 1999, he is better able to argue that he
cannot be held responsible for the firm's actions afterward—though he maintained
his ownership interest in Bain and its various entities for years and,
consequently, benefited from these deals. This past week, the Obama campaign has
been tussling over this issue with FactCheck.org, the independent
fact-checking organization created by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the
University of Pennsylvania. After the Obama campaign launched an ad blasting
Romney as a "corporate raider" who "shipped jobs to China and Mexico,"
FactCheck.org called the ad false, partly because Romney had exited Bain in
February 1999, prior to the deals in question. In reply, the Obama campaign sent
a six-page letter to the group, challenging its determination
regarding Romney's departure. But FactCheck.org reaffirmed its initial conclusion and told the Obama-ites
their complaint was "all wet." Meanwhile, Dan Primack, a senior editor at
Fortune, took issue with my article for noting that the SEC documents
undercut the claim that Romney had no participation in any Bain decisions after
February 1999.


Both Primack and FactCheck.org were
unimpressed by the fact that the Boston Herald reported
on February 12, 1999, that Romney was not resigning but taking a leave, during
which he would provide Bain "input on investment and key personnel
decisions." FactCheck.org pointed out that this story also
noted Romney would "leave running day-to-day operations to Bain's executive
committee," and the group cited an April 4, 1999, Associated Press story
reporting that Romney was overwhelmed by his Olympian task and had no time for
Bain. Primack insisted that the Herald story and a July 19, 1999, Bain
press release referring to Romney as "currently on a part-time leave of absence"
and quoting him speaking for Bain Capital were not all that telling, because
when Romney left for Salt Lake City he probably "assumed that he'd still be
involved in [Bain] decision-making, albeit from a distance," but ended up not
doing that, due to his workload in Utah. Primack said he has "numerous sources,"
including many who were with Bain, who have told him that Romney did not make
any investment-related decisions after February 1999.


What about the various SEC documents—some of which Romney signed—that
identify him as controlling assorted Bain entities and large blocs of
shares in firms in which Bain invested after February 1999? The Obama campaign
letter cited at least 63 SEC filings after March 1, 1999, that describe Bain
entities as "wholly owned by W. Mitt Romney." Both Primack and
FactCheck.org contended that these documents prove only that Romney
continued on as an owner of Bain, not as a decision maker.


Though Primack did cite sources (anonymous sources), much of his and
FactCheck.org's respective arguments relied on assumptions and
interpretations of the existing record. An example: In 2007, R. Bradford Malt
told the Washington Post that Romney finally resigned from Bain in 2001
and reduced his role to that of a passive investor in 2001. To some that could
mean Romney was somewhat active prior to this change in status. But
FactCheck.org noted, "[W]e read that to mean only that Romney went from
being an absentee owner to being a passive investor." (FactCheck.org
also checked in with Malt, who, no surprise, said that Romney was "not involved
in the management or activities of Bain Capital" after February 1999.)


These rebuttals did not take into account all the
evidence. For instance, neither one directly referred to those SEC filings—such
as this May 10, 2001, document—that describe Romney as a member of the
"management committee" of Bain funds. Perhaps he was a member in name only, but
if so, wouldn't he still bear some responsibility for these entities' actions,
especially when he was signing his name to their deals and reaping the
benefits of ownership? (This particular filing notes that he and another member
of the management committee controlled 1,376,377 shares of DDi, a manufacturer
of circuit boards.)


And neither Primack nor FactCheck.org addressed the matter of Bain
Capital NY. In 2001 and 2002, Romney filed Massachusetts state disclosure forms
noting he was the 100 percent owner of this Bain venture. But Bain Capital NY
was incorporated in Delaware on April 13, 1999—two months after Romney's
supposed retirement from the firm. Was Romney uninvolved with the incorporation
of a new Bain entity—which only he owned—after his departure? Perhaps.


In its letter to FactCheck.org, the Obama campaign contended that
"the statement that Gov. Romney 'left' Bain in February 1999—a statement central
to your fact-check—is not accurate, Romney took an informal leave of absence but
remained in full legal control of Bain and continued to be paid by Bain as
such." No one disputes that Romney retained ownership and legal control of Bain.
For that alone, he might be considered partly accountable for its actions. But
is it believable that while he remained Bain's owner and possessed full legal
control of assorted Bain entities, he never took an interest in what the firm
and its funds were doing?


The Romney campaign and Bain insist that Romney had
not a thing to do with Bain after February 1999, though he signed filings and
pocketed millions. But they won't answer specific questions about Romney and
Bain during this period—just as Romney won't come clean on his tax returns. (See
this Vanity Fair blockbuster report on Romney's personal
finances and what is still unknown about them.) He remains the opaque
quarter-billionaire—with mystery surrounding his wealth and the business career
he touts as a steppingstone to the presidency. He has yet to be fully
vetted.


Read More: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/07/myster...

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Opinions

  • Jackie G - Poker Playing Pa... 2012/10/25 01:05:28
    Jackie G - Poker Playing Patriot
    If you think ROMNEY is responsible for a company he left 12 years ago, but OBAMA isn't for past 4 yrs of the Economy, you're an IDIOT
  • Schläue~© 2012/07/05 23:15:09
    Schläue~©
    +1
    Not surprising that this came from David Corn who is a Mother Jone's Librul hack that spends time chasing his tail and never catches it.
  • Mary Ann 2012/07/05 22:57:15
    Mary Ann
    +1
    and your point is?
  • Red Branch 2012/07/05 22:34:57
    Red Branch
    +1
    If the media had only asked the tough questions about Obama. The media trashed Palin to make it look like they were doing something. Now it is Romney's turn because he is running against the bamster.
  • SW Red Branch 2012/08/07 12:13:57
    SW
    Are you kidding? The same media on which we had to hear Rev Wright qoutes 24 hours a day durning his primaries? The same media obsessed with ACORN (not mentioning McCain was Keynote Speaker for..) and Soylandra (Deal that Bush started --media doesn't mention that too much)... The Media is TERRIBLE to Obama and tiptoes around Robme like he's a princess.
  • Red Branch SW 2012/08/20 14:31:03
    Red Branch
    The real problem with Soylandra is that Obama gave them about $537 million in his effort to create green jobs and Soylandra collapsed 6 months later. Obama gave them that money even though he advisors advised that he not give them one cent.

    Wright was an America hating racist. The media sat on that story for months and only reported on it when it could no longer be contained.
  • Kane Fernau 2012/07/05 22:34:27
    Kane Fernau
    +2
    Romney is a Natural Born American citizen, Obama is ineligible
  • SW Kane Fe... 2012/08/07 12:14:34
    SW
    If that were true they would have proven it. Give it up birther.

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