Read A Conflict of Interest Online

Authors: Adam Mitzner

Tags: #Securities Fraud, #New York (State), #Philosophy, #Stockbrokers, #Legal, #Fiction, #Defense (Criminal Procedure), #New York, #Suspense Fiction, #Legal Stories, #Suspense, #General, #Stockbrokers - New York (State) - New York

A Conflict of Interest (43 page)

BOOK: A Conflict of Interest
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Three weeks ago, right after Labor Day, a headhunter introduced me to a small law firm called Peikes, Schwarz, & Selva. The firm has six lawyers—the three founders, who have some type of insurance-based corporate practice, an associate who helps them out with their deals, and a tax guy. They decided they needed a litigator and, at least according to the headhunter, they were impressed with my big-firm background.

A day after the call I had a one-shot interview, a far cry from the three times I had visited Cromwell Altman just to get my summer position. I met with Donald Peikes, Stephen Schwarz, and David Selva, en masse, in the firm’s only conference room. We talked for close to an hour, about a 70-30 split between them asking about me and my asking about them. When they left, they sent in the tax guy, and after him the associate, each getting a separate fifteen-minute audience with me.

After I’d met everyone at the firm, Schwarz came back alone and made me the offer. He explained that it was an “eat what you kill” kind of place, but I had already been primed by the headhunter that my compensation would be about half of what I had been earning at Cromwell Altman.

I called back the next day and accepted the offer. Don Peikes told me that he was confident I would do well at the firm, and I said I was excited about the opportunity. In truth, the thing I liked best about them was that they didn’t seem to care why I left Cromwell Altman.

My case is sixty-eighth on the docket. That means I’ll be here at least all morning before I get my less than five minutes in front of the judge, and then he’ll almost surely adjourn the motion so we can do it all over again in three months.

The lawyer on the first case on the calendar asks for a three-month adjournment because he’s not prepared. His adversary tells the judge that this is the fourth adjournment request, but the judge responds that he shows only two prior adjournments, as if that made it any better, especially considering that each adjournment is at least two
months. As the only sanction, the judge tells him that it is now being marked “final.”

The judge listens to about three minutes of argument on the next case before telling the lawyers that he’s heard enough to know that the case should settle. He says he’s going to hold the motion in abeyance while the parties meet with a mediator and gives them the same day to return to the court as he did the first case—three months from now.

“Next case,” the judge calls out to his clerk.

“The People of the State of New York against Axion Chemicals,” the clerk shouts out.

Unlike the prior two cases, which had one lawyer per side, this time a scuttle of lawyers rise in two packs and start to move from the gallery and approach the bench.

In the row in front of me are three not too well-dressed men, and my prejudices on these types of things lead me to assume they are the civil servant lawyers employed by the New York State Attorney General’s Office. Out of the corner of my eye I see their adversaries, who are sitting closer to the front, and I swallow hard.

“Appearances,” the courtroom deputy shouts. “Plaintiff first.”

“For the People of the State of New York,” the oldest of the shabby-suit contingent begins, and then rattles off some names.

“And for the defense?” the courtroom deputy asks in the other direction.

“Abigail Sloane of the law firm Cromwell Altman Rosenthal & White.”

As the argument begins, I can piece together that it has something to do with an environmental claim the state had brought involving some type of illegal dumping. The Assistant AG says the case had only recently been filed and requests discovery from Abby’s client before any adjudication on the merits. Abby argues for dismissal now, claiming that a recent decision by the highest court in the state reinterprets the statute on which the charges are based. The representatives of the AG’s office vigorously dispute that assertion.

The judge listens to about ten minutes of this back-and-forth, which is three times more than he gave to the first two matters combined. He
says the issue is “interesting and complex,” so he’ll reserve judgment and file a written decision in the future. In state court, that means nothing will happen in the case for another six months to a year, which I’m sure is exactly the reason Abby filed the motion in the first place.

I use the transition between cases as cover to leave the courtroom. As I’m lying in wait in the corridor, I see the male colleague who stood beside Abby during the argument push the door open for her. She’s saying something to him when she catches my eye.

My stomach is in knots, and I wonder if I’m going to be able to confront her without becoming sick. But as she approaches, those feelings dissipate, and I realize that I’m going to be able to go through with it.

It’s been nine months since I last saw Abby. She looks harder than I remembered. She’s still beautiful, of course—looks like hers don’t vanish quickly. She’s cut her hair short, which is ironic because I’ve let mine grow.

Abby actually jumps back a bit when I say hello, confirming that she hadn’t seen me in the courtroom. She displays no hint of pleasure in this reunion. If anything, she seems annoyed that I still exist.

“Sean, do you mind going on ahead of me?” she says to her colleague.

Since I left Cromwell Altman, I’d composed a myriad of monologues in my head about what I would say to her if given the opportunity. Some were little more than rambling diatribes, filled with curses and promises that she’d rot in hell for what she did to me. In others I went even further, vowing some type of revenge, although I could never figure out exactly what form it would take. In my better moments, I took the high road, telling her about how happy I was with Elizabeth, and about our new child on the way—serving the revenge fantasy up cold, as the saying goes.

Now, in the moment of truth, I’m overwhelmed by the realization that nothing either she or I say is going to matter. For better or worse, we’re both where we are, and we both know it’s because of what she did.

“Fancy seeing you here,” I say when Sean is far enough away not to be able to hear.

“What do you want?” she says, bitterness in every syllable.

“I want to talk to you. Given everything, that doesn’t seem to be too much to ask.”

“I don’t want to talk to you, Alex.”

“I can’t believe you’re still so angry. I mean, after what you did I should be the angry one.”

“What
I
did?” she says, her voice rising to the point that I can feel the eyes of others in the corridor on me, as they turn to wonder what the commotion is about. “You have no idea, do you?”

I take a step back, but she holds her ground. At first her face screams her contempt, but then it slackens, and I now see in her eyes that she feels sorry for me.

“I didn’t tell the firm about us,” she says with a trace of pity in her voice. “Your wife did.”

“Elizabeth? No, that doesn’t … Aaron told me it was an anonymous call.”

“It was, Alex. But then she called me. She told me she’d known for a while, and wanted to get you away from me. I told her that you’d ended it with me already, and that it had only been once.”

“What did she say?”

“She said that … she said that she didn’t care, and told me that someday I’d have a family and I’d understand, and I should stay away from you.”

61

I
go directly home from court, the trip reminding me of my walk home from Cromwell Altman on New Year’s Day. Once again, my thoughts are consumed with what I’m going to say to Elizabeth.

My desire to confront her is powerful. Not only did Elizabeth ruin my career at Cromwell Altman, but she allowed me to believe it was actually Abby who had done it.

When I enter our apartment, Elizabeth is sitting at our dining room table. Her hands rest on her swollen belly. She’s a little less than a month shy of her due date, but Charlotte came two weeks late, so I’m not expecting anything to happen for a while still.

She jumps up, startled that I’m home in the early afternoon. “Did something happen at work?”

I pause, simply to freeze the moment. I know everything will be different after I tell her.

“I saw Abby Sloane in court today.” I wait a beat, trying to ascertain what Elizabeth looks like when she lies. Then, almost involuntarily, I deny myself the opportunity. “She told me it was you who told the firm about Abby and me.”

I expect an apology, but Elizabeth doesn’t offer one. To the contrary, she looks at me through defiant eyes, seemingly without any remorse for what’s she’s done.

“Why, Elizabeth? You know everything I sacrificed to become a partner at Cromwell Altman. How could you feel justified to take that away from me?”

“That place,” she says, unable even to bring herself to mention the firm’s name, “made you lose sight of what’s important—your family. Alex, I know it’s hard to see it now, but I did what I did to protect our family. You included.”

“How can you say that? I’m earning less than half what I did at Cromwell Altman. Who’s going to pay for private school for Charlotte? For a baby nurse? For this apartment?”

“We’ll be fine financially. It’s not like you’re working for minimum wage. You’re still earning more than most people. A lot more. Besides, you know that I never cared about the money.”

“You certainly spent it.”

“I liked it. I’m not going to deny that it was nice having money. But it’s more than a fair trade-off to have my family back. And, Alex, that’s what happened.”

That the ends justify the means is an often heard argument in criminal defense, and yet, with the exception of self-defense, it is almost never exculpatory. Rather than debate Elizabeth on this issue, however, I ask a different question.

“How long did you know about Abby and me?” I ask.

“I suspected for a while. I’ve seen you on trial before, but this time you weren’t just working all the time—you seemed happy about it, like you couldn’t wait to go to the office. Your parents died within months of each other and you didn’t seem to lose a step, and that’s just not normal, Alex. I figured something else had to be going on with you. Then after the trial ended … it was like a switch flipped. All of a sudden you announce that you’re taking some time off, and I was really excited about it, but then you were walking around here in a trance … and no matter how hard I tried to talk to you about what was going on, whether it was the fact that Michael had been arrested or something else … I just couldn’t get through to you. So … I checked your BlackBerry. Because yes, I think I have the right to know what’s going on with my husband. And it’s not like your password was hard to crack. I was hoping it was going to be
Elizabeth,
but I knew it’d be
Charlotte
.”

“I still don’t understand why. Why go to the firm? Why not just tell me?”

“Because that wouldn’t have worked, Alex. Maybe it would have been enough for you to stop with Abby, but that was never the real
problem. That was more of a symptom than anything else. If you stayed there, in time, things would have gone back to being just like they were. And I don’t mean the infidelity. I mean you wouldn’t have seen what was happening to yourself. To us.”

“So you made the decision that my career should be over? Just like that?”

“I know you want me to say that I’m sorry, but I can’t. I won’t. I did what I needed to do to keep our family together. You know the way we’re always telling ourselves we’d do anything to protect Charlotte? This is
anything
. You owed it to Charlotte as well as to me to work harder on our marriage when things got tough. You don’t just … fuck whoever you happen to be working with.”

“So, that was my punishment for sleeping with Abby once? I lost my career? That seems a bit disproportionate, don’t you think?”

“Don’t insult me, Alex. It wasn’t the sex. You know that. Even if you’d never slept with her, it would have been the same problem. She was your person, not me. Besides, I don’t really know what proportion means in this context. Desperate times …” She shrugs, leaving unsaid the rest of the quotation, about desperate measures.

Then she smiles. It’s completely incongruous with the topic at hand. It’s warm and loving.

“The main reason I can’t be sorry, Alex, is that it worked. At least I think it did. I’m happy. You’re happy. We’re going to have a baby. You have a job that pays enough for us to live well. It’s like Howard said, we just needed to get over that hump.”

I suspected at the time that it was marriage counselor propaganda, but Howard told us that statistics show most couples endure at least one major crisis in their marriage, something significant enough to cause one or both of them to consider divorce. Those who survive it, he claimed, end up having happier marriages than those who never faced the test in the first place.

In my mind I can see myself storm out, but I don’t know where I’d go, and after all Elizabeth and I have gone through, and with a baby coming, that doesn’t make the most sense. It’s more than that, though,
that keeps me here. Cromwell Altman is all in the past, and my future sits in front of me, her hands on her belly.

“I love you, Alex,” Elizabeth says, now crying. It’s a heart-breaking sight, my nine-month pregnant wife sobbing about her love for me. “That’s why I forgave you for what you did—because
I love you
. I don’t think it’s too much to ask for you to do the same.”

62

A
nother one came for you today,” Elizabeth says the following day, pointing to the foyer. I walk in that direction, stopping by the console table where our mail is deposited. It’s on top of a small pile, as always in a flimsy, nearly transparent envelope. I know what it is even before seeing Ohlig’s name and prisoner ID number in the upper-left corner.

Since his sentencing, Ohlig has written to me on a weekly basis, sometimes even more than that. The letters are always typed on an old-fashioned typewriter—apparently computers are not standard issue in maximum security—and errors are marked by x’s blackening out the words underneath, often with handwritten words in pencil on the line above. They tend to be dated seven to ten days prior to when they arrive. I assume the delay is a result of the prison’s review process, but I really don’t know for sure.

BOOK: A Conflict of Interest
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