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Authors: John Clarkson

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BOOK: Among Thieves
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“Wait, you're telling me they can ensure that a stock goes down?”

“Not really. But they can sometimes influence a stock price more than you think. Don't get me wrong, it's hugely risky. But guys like Crane, they do anything they can to stack the deck. They systematically attack companies in ways to drive down the price of the stock. Naked shorting on a massive level to pull down the price. Poisoning the well with lies and rumors. Any kind of deception they can come up with. Bribes, threats. Collusion with law firms to wage class action suits. Manipulating the media. It can get really bad.”

Beck thought about that for a moment and began to see what he might be dealing with now.

“Bad how?”

“Traders that reckless, guys who go all the way out on a limb, they lose perspective. I'm sure I don't know everything he's doing. There's tons of dirty stuff that could be going on.”

“And how do you know all this?”

“I've been around for a long time. I worked at other financial services companies. I know how things work. There's always some group, some people who go too far. In terms of Summit, I know all the gossip, the rumors. People talk to me.”

Looking at her, seeing how agitated she was, Beck decided she was telling the truth.

“So are you saying that you tried to do something about all the shit Crane was doing? That's what he meant by interfering with his business?”

“Yes. But don't get the wrong idea. I'm not stupid. I didn't threaten to blow any whistles. I mean, one thing I know is that it's impossible to stop these guys. Or at least impossible for me. Maybe some big FBI SEC investigation could do something, but I wouldn't depend on that. No way.”

“So what did you do exactly?”

Olivia sat back in her chair, crossed her long legs, and then her arms. It wasn't her intention, but crossing her arms emphasized the fullness of her breasts. Beck actually looked down to stop from being distracted.

“It really wasn't all that much. A couple of days before Crane attacked me, I saw Milstein sitting at his desk, looking older, more worn out than I'd ever seen him. I guess I felt sorry for him. That's a stupid mistake, I know, but I walked in and asked him how things were going.”

“What'd he say?”

“He said, there'd been better days. I asked him if I could do anything. He said no. And then, I just said, ‘You know, there's not a lot that's wrong with this place. Most people are doing the right thing. Maybe you should do something about the ones keeping you up at night.'”

“Meaning Crane.”

“Yes.”

“And he knew who you meant?”

“Of course.”

“And what did he say?”

“He just said, ‘I wish it was that easy.'”

“Meaning?”

Olivia shrugged. “Meaning he needs the profits Crane is generating, even though it causes him a lot of worry.”

Beck thought about it for a moment. It didn't seem like much, but if Crane was unstable, maybe the threat of having his operation shut down would have been enough to push him over the edge.

“But why would Milstein tell Crane what you said?”

“I'm not sure he did. He might have said something to one of the other partners. I don't even know if it was that. Look, it's my job to assess risk, monitor positions. I haven't been totally quiet about Crane, but it's not like I got up on a table and yelled, This has got to stop.”

“But you think it was you going to Milstein that set him off?”

“Yes. “

“Anything else?”

“What do you mean?”

“Anything else that might have set him off?”

“Of course. Guys like Crane are way off the risk charts. They're under huge pressure. Things can blow up any minute. Maybe a big position went south. Who knows?”

“How much money is this guy playing with?”

“I don't know his exact positions, but I'd say well over a hundred million. That's not the leveraged money. That's the principal.”

“How much is well over a hundred?”

“Call it a hundred fifty.”

“And how much of that goes in his pocket?”

“Not just his, all the partners.”

“How much?”

“It's the usual setup. Two and twenty.”

“What's that?”

“Two percent management fee. Twenty percent of the profits.”

Beck calculated two percent of 150 million, frowning at how big the number was.

“Yeah,” said Olivia, “three million in management fees, minus expenses. And if there are profits, then the numbers go up very fast.”

“How much is fast?”

“Crane is swinging for the fences, so thirty percent easy. Fifty would be more like it. Twenty percent of seventy-five million? Say fifteen million or so. For as many years as they can run it. Fifteen million in pure profit, since the fees are more than enough to cover expenses.”

“Spread around to how many?”

“Not many. That much money goes a long way in a firm the size of Summit.”

Beck thought about what people would do with that much money at stake. Breaking a couple of fingers by accident and screaming threats didn't seem so hard to believe now.

“So after the blowup, what happened?”

“He sort of used up all his anger and then walked out of my cubicle.”

“Did he say anything about your hand?”

“No. It was like he couldn't have cared less. I doubt he even realized he broke two of my fingers.”

“So then what did you do?”

“I put on my coat, picked up my purse, got to an elevator as fast as I could. Went downstairs to the guy at the main security desk, but it was after normal work hours and there was just this young guy there. I didn't bother with him. What was he going to do? My hand hurt so much I felt like I was going to pass out. I went out, hailed a cab, and went to the hospital.”

“Didn't shut down your computer, turn out the lights…?”

“No. Just got the hell out of there.”

“And then what?”

“The closest emergency room is Lenox Hill. I got lucky. There was a hand surgeon available. He set my fingers. Told me I might get away with no surgery. I went back a week later, and he said everything was good.”

“Did you tell them what happened?”

“Yes. I told the triage nurse. She said she'd report it. Told me to just worry about my hand. I don't know what she did or when, but by the time everything was done, the police hadn't shown up. There was no way I was going to sit around waiting for them. So I left. The next day, I called the precinct. I went in and filed a complaint.

“Of course, Crane denied everything. Filed a counter complaint and is suing me for false whatever, and I got fired. I talked to an assistant DA. Basically, he said I had no witness, so no case.”

Olivia looked down at her lap, perhaps to hide her expression.

She looked up. “I never set foot in that office again. Barred. I'm not sure if I'm actually fired or suspended until all the legal stuff is resolved, but I don't have the money to fight it. And Crane put out the word that I should be banned from working at any other firm. Filed complaints with FINRA and the SEC. I tried everything, believe me. I tried multiple times to get a hold of Milstein.”

“Did he ever contact you?”

“No.”

“So nobody helped you, you're screwed, and Crane is still just fine.”

She stared at Beck. He had put it so bluntly and succinctly that she turned away, her face lit by the guttering fire. He wasn't sure what she didn't want him to see: anger, fear, tears. Whatever it was, he didn't press her.

Beck shifted his gaze to the view out her windows. A red tone had seeped into the winter sky. Beck had missed the sunset, but imagined how stunning sunsets would look from Olivia Sanchez's window.

Neither of them said anything for a few moments.

Finally, Beck said, “I'm sorry about what happened to you.”

She turned back to face him. “So am I.”

Beck paused, exhaled, said, “So you called Manny.”

“Yes.”

“What did you ask Manny to do?”

“To help me.”

“How?”

“I didn't ask him to do anything specifically. I just told him about this guy who was ruining my life. I told him I couldn't afford defending myself against his lawsuits. That I needed to stop him from blacklisting me. That I needed to get back to work.”

Beck pressed. “How did you think Manny could accomplish all that?”

She looked at Beck, defiance coming into her voice, as she finally admitted it. “You know how. I wanted him to threaten Crane. To confront him and scare the shit out of him. I wanted Manny to do what I couldn't.”

“You wanted Manny to do to Crane what he did to you.”

Beck's comment confused her. Then angered her. But she didn't shrink from the answer.

“Yes. Yes, I wanted him to threaten to kill Crane if he kept trying to hurt me. Okay. I admit it.”

Beck nodded. He let what she'd said sink in for a moment.

“This threat of Crane's to kill you, did you believe him?”

“At the time, it terrified me.”

“You actually believed some Wall Street hedge fund guy would kill you?”

“I don't know. It sounded real.”

Beck nodded. “What about Manny? Do you think Manny is capable of killing someone?”

Olivia cleared her throat. She didn't want to say it, but finally she answered, “I think it's a matter of record.”

Beck shifted around on the couch. Looked at the fire. At the red sky darkening. At Olivia Sanchez. Then he asked, “Whose money is it?”

“What do you mean?”

“The money Crane is investing. Who is the client?”

Olivia looked down. Then directly at Beck, but this time she didn't say anything.

Beck said, “Shit. That's what you're not telling me.”

“I can't tell you what I don't know for sure.”

“Are you saying you don't know? You, the person in charge of monitoring risk?”

Olivia's expression tightened. She looked away. Stared at the fire. Finally, she said, “I don't know all the details. The money belongs to a Russian named Leonid or Leonard Markov. There may be some other money in Crane's hedge fund, but it's mostly Markov's. There's a lot of privacy issues involved. Client's identities and who owns what are kept confidential. But like I said, I hear things. What I hear is, Markov's an arms dealer. He supposedly has all kinds of connections to the government. The U.S. government. Maybe other governments. I don't know. Now, it might not be just Markov. Crane has a reputation of dealing with shady types. I know that he swaggers around like he has friends that…”

“That what?”

Olivia didn't back down. She looked straight at Beck, “That could or would kill people.”

So there it was. Beck grimaced. “Christ.”

“But I don't know if that's true, or just a bullshit macho image Crane likes to project.”

“Uh-huh.”

“What was I supposed to do? Just let that bastard threaten me; let them take away my job and slink away?”

Beck didn't answer.

“Look, Crane is full of shit. You're right. He's no gangster. No tough guy. He's walking around like a big man because he knows some unscrupulous people. I just figured he'd fold in two seconds if he saw a real tough guy.”

Beck made sure to speak very calmly. “Olivia, a real tough guy, a man like your cousin, doesn't go around threatening people. It doesn't happen that way.”

Olivia started to explain more. “I didn't, I mean, I didn't tell him to…”

Beck raised a hand. He had the picture now. “All right, all right. Take it easy. I'm not out to make you feel any worse than you do now.”

“Well, you are. I thought you would understand.”

“That's the problem. I do understand. Now I get it.”

“Get what?”

“Why Crane went off like that. You say he's running money for unscrupulous people. Maybe a guy with connections to who knows? He's taking big risks. If he gets shut down, and loses a ton of money, what's going to happen to him?”

“I don't know.”

“Maybe what he said would happen to you.”

Olivia looked down, shaking her head, “Dear God.” She paused. “So what do I do? Is there anything you can do? Or do I just forget about it? When this mess blows over, I'll just start again. I really can't fight this. I mean, you don't think Crane is actually going to make good on his threat, do you?”

“Crane isn't your problem now. At least not your main problem.”

Olivia looked confused. “Who is?”

“Manny Guzman. You don't just put him back in a box. Something has to be done about this.”

“What do you mean?”

“Manny is not going to let this slide.”

“Even if I ask him to?”

“It's too late for that.”

“You can't tell him.”

“No,” said Beck. “And I can't not tell him what's going on here.”

Olivia stood up and turned to the window, the red winter light making her skin seem to glow deep bronze. She turned back to Beck.

“This is a nightmare.”

“All right, take it easy. Let's go back to what you want. You want Crane off your back. You want to be able to earn a living, someplace. Not Summit. That's a dead end, but you want to get back to where you were.”

“Yes. And I don't want Manny involved. Or hurt. Or … anything.”

“Yeah, okay. Well let's take it one step at a time.”

“Meaning?”

“For starters, we don't talk about this anymore.”

“What? What do you mean? Why?”

“Why do you think?”

Beck watched her consider the question. He watched her deep brown eyes flecked with gold move up and down as she processed everything.

“I think you mean the less I know the better.”

BOOK: Among Thieves
6.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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