New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo said American International Group
Inc. has agreed to freeze the $19 million plus other benefits provided for
former CEO Martin Sullivan in his employment package.
In a letter Wednesday, October 22, to current AIG chairman and CEO Edward M.
Liddy, and at a press conference, Cuomo said AIG also has agreed that no funds
would be distributed out of the $600 million deferred compensation and bonus
pools of AIG’s Financial Products subsidiary, which was the source of the credit
default swaps that have caused the insurer’s current problems.
“It is my understanding that Joseph Cassano, the former head of the
subsidiary, has a share totaling approximately $69 million of these funds,” said
Cuomo in his letter. “In addition, after Cassano, five other top executives in
AIG Financial Products have a combined share in these funds totaling
approximately $93 million.
“The American taxpayer is now supporting AIG, making the preservation of
these taxpayer funds a vital obligation and a priority responsibility of your
company,” Cuomo said in his letter. “Taxpayers are, in many ways, now like
shareholders of your company, and the new AIG has a responsibility to them in
the first instance.”
At the press conference, Cuomo was asked whether he would pursue payments
that have been made to former chairman and CEO Maurice R. Greenberg. Cuomo
responded, “We have a separate case pending against Mr. Greenberg, and that’s
been an ongoing matter.”
At the conference, Cuomo said, “My position is, until the taxpayers recoup
their investment in AIG, which is now $120 billion, plus interest, there should
not be any contemplation of … executive bonuses, because I find it hard to
conceive of a situation where executives could justify performance bonuses for
management that virtually bankrupts the company. I don’t want to add insult to
injury.”
Cuomo said his first step would be to freeze compensation and bonuses. Step
two, he said, “which is more ambitious,” is to determine “to what extent you can
actually recapture money that has already been paid,” which is an issue that is
now being reviewed under New York's Uniform Fraudulent Conveyance Act.
“Everyone’s talking about toxic assets,” he said. “But let’s also realize
there were toxic practices that created the problem of the toxic assets.”
Last week, Liddy agreed to help Cuomo recover bonuses and other payments to
former executives. Liddy also agreed to end “all junkets and perks” for
executives, canceling scores of planned AIG events that would have cost the
company more than $8 million.
Filed by Judy Greenwald of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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