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The U.S. Department of Labor reached a settlement
in three related lawsuits with trustees of three pension fund plans, based in
Utica and Massena, which result in $3 million being repaid to the plans.
The defendants in the three separate lawsuits,
which were filed concurrently June 12, 1998, in the Federal District Court in
Binghamton, and the amounts they agreed to pay the pension plans are:
- trustees Sam Marchio, Gerald Spiridilozzi, Carmen Nicotera,
Richard Alexander, Jack Endryck and Tony Korrie, $930,000 to the Laborers Local
35 pension fund;
- trustees Carl Spatol, Edward Morgan, Richard Buck and Harold
McElwain, $960,000, to the Carpenters Local 120 pension fund; and
- trustees John Agati, Sam Agati, Robert Ashley, Lanny Miller,
Fred Rexford, and Hugh Schickel, $1,110,000, to the Laborers Local 322 pension
fund.
In addition, trustees of the pension plans agreed
to pay the Labor Department Section 502(1) penalties amounting to $600,000 for
their alleged violations of federal pension law.
The settlements also require the trustees to use
the funds investment managers with full power and discretion to manage
all the assets of the trusts held for investment purposes. The funds to which
the recoveries will be paid are non-contributory defined benefit plans
established through collective bargaining agreements between the three unions
and various employer and employer associations.
According to the departments lawsuits, the
pension plan trustees allegedly violated their fiduciary duties when they
caused their respective plans to make numerous purchases from the same
broker-dealer of a class of collaterialized mortgage obligations (CMOs) and
real estate mortgage investment conduit bonds (REMICs), known generally as
Z-Bonds and a highly volatile class of CMOs and REMICs with high sensitivity to
interest rate changes. By the end of plan year 1994, each plan held a
significant number of these financial instruments. Ultimately, the Z-Bonds were
sold by each of the plans at a significant loss.
The departments complaints alleged that the
trustees purchases of these Z-bonds were imprudent because, when the
investments were made, they lacked a sufficient understanding of them and of
their inherent risks. The lawsuits also alleged that the trustees failed to
adequately investigate the bonds, failed to consider the purpose of these bonds
relative to the funding needs of the plans, and failed to adequately monitor
the plans investments.
The settlements are the result of an investigation
carried out by the Boston Regional Office of the Labor Departments
Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, which enforces the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act.
(Herman v. Agati, et al) Civil Action #98 CV
930 (Herman v. Spatol, et al) Civil Action #98 CV 931 (Herman v.
Marchio, et al) Civil Action #98 CV 932 |