Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Whistleblower on the 28th Floor
Episode Date: April 30, 2021Financial expert Ray Dirks (played by Jeffrey Wright) exposed one of the biggest corporate crimes of all time - and yet he was the one who ended up in front of the Supreme Court.Whistleblowers often f...ace intimidation from those they bring to justice, but also face hostility from their co-workers, new employers, the authorities and even the public. Why are we suspicious of "tattletales" and what can we do to make vital whistleblowing easier?Read more about Tim's work at http://timharford.com/ Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Pushkin
Ray Dirk's was an insurance company analyst.
Equity funding was an insurance company.
The year was 1973.
The company's bosses were hosting Dirk's to lunch in their
boardroom, high up in a Los Angeles skyscraper. A mundane, everyday event? No. The air in the boardroom
was thick with tension. Ray, it's the 28th floor. But don't worry, the windows are locked.
Ray, it's the 28th floor. But don't worry, the windows are locked.
If that was a joke, Ray Dirk's wasn't laughing.
He'd heard those rumors about his hosts being linked to the Mafia.
They had every reason to be glad he fell out of a window.
Equity funding's bosses had been perpetrating one of the biggest, most audacious frauds in
corporate history. And Ray Dirk's
was on to them.
Because a few weeks earlier, the company had made a fatal mistake.
They had fired an employee who knew all about the scam.
That employee was called Ron Seacrest, and he was furious.
He decided to take revenge, but who should he talk to?
Seacrest knew he had to choose carefully.
The fraud was so huge, so audacious, he feared that nobody would believe him.
Except, perhaps, for one man.
Ray Dirk's analysed insurance companies and advised investors on choosing stock.
But Dirk's wasn't your smooth, talking, clean, cart wall street type. Dirk's was tubby
and dishevelled, excitable, cynical, and disarmingly candid. He had a reputation for being
unconventional and a tenacious investigator. Dirk's Met-Secrist for lunch.
Equity funding would soon be in legal trouble.
But what's odd is that so too would Ray Dirk's,
the man who would expose the fraud,
his fight to clear his own name
would go all the way to the Supreme Court.
I'm Tim Halford, and dilemma. The University Professor approaches a student.
He wants to tell the student about a research project. It's on the effects of
extended sensory deprivation, specifically on how it affects brain functioning.
He's performed his experiment on a few participants already that all panicked, and their cognition
was temporarily impaired.
Some had hallucinations, too even asked him to stop the experiment.
But he didn't.
It was just too interesting to see what would happen.
The professor explains that he needs to recruit more participants so he can continue his investigation,
but he's worried that the University's ethics committee isn't going to approve his request,
and you might well think he's worried with good reason.
Now, put yourself in the shoes of the student, hearing this rather unnerving story.
The professor explains that the committee can be swayed by testimonials about the research,
so could you please do the professor a favour and write a statement to convince other students
to take part?
You'll need to sound enthusiastic.
Be sure to use words like exciting and superb.
If it goes well, he'll have more opportunities in future. He might even be able to pay you.
Here's the dilemma. Would you contact the University's Ethics Committee to report the professor?
He's offering you money for a fake testimonial in support of a project that's clearly unethical.
When researchers asked some students in Amsterdam that hypothetical question, nearly two-thirds
said, yes, absolutely, they would blow the whistle.
But then, with a different set of students, the researchers staged this experiment for
real.
How many actually blew the whistle? Not two-thirds.
Not even close. It wasn't even one in ten.
The take-home message from this research seems to be that we talk a big game about our
moral standards, but we fall short in practice. But there's another way of looking at it. Perhaps. When it really matters, we're not cowards or hypocrites.
Perhaps we're wise, because story after story tells us that whistle-blowing is often far
more trouble than it's worth.
The insurance analyst Ray Dirk's first learned the scale of wrongdoing at equity funding
over lunch with disgruntled Ron Seacrest in New York.
His jaw was soon on the floor.
The details of the fraud are intricate.
You can read them in Dirk's book, The Great Wall Street Scandal.
But they boiled down to a simple and astonishing fact.
Roughly half of equity funding's life insurance customers were fictional.
The company simply invented people and put them in their computer system.
Then they sold on the future income stream from these fake policies to a reinsurance company.
It didn't cross anyone's mind that the re-insurance company to
investigate if these policies referred to real people. Why would it?
Selling on the policies gave equity funding cash today in return for promises of payments tomorrow.
When tomorrow came, equity covered its bills by inventing yet more customers and selling their policies
for more upfront payments.
It was a giant Ponzi scheme, and like every other Ponzi scheme, it couldn't go on
forever.
But the bosses knew that, and they had a plan, a clever one.
Equity funding was a publicly traded company.
By mass producing fake customers,
the C-suite suits made it look like
the company was growing quickly,
and that made investors excited.
The company's share price went up and up.
The bossy has used equity funding shares
to buy steaks in other companies,
genuine companies with real customers.
Just think about it, the Hutzper is breathtaking.
Over lunch, Seacrest calmly recounted what he'd experienced working at Equity Funding.
Late one afternoon, he'd been asked by a colleague to work late on a project,
some filing, special filing. Several managers sat around in a conference room
inventing fake names and giving them fake life insurance.
Secrest was pressed into service. He was bewildered. The others laughed at his confusion,
the new kid who didn't get the joke. Ron Secrest told his story for four hours. He left Ray Dirk's with a dilemma.
Dirk's remember was a well-respected analyst. People listened to him, investors paid for his
company's advice, and some of his company's clients had shares in equity funding. Shares that
would be worth much less if what he'd heard was true, perhaps even worth nothing at all.
Nevertheless, if what he'd heard was true, perhaps even worth nothing at all, his clients deserved to know.
But this was just one man's story with no real evidence.
Should he really pass on rumours?
Perhaps not, but how else could he investigate?
Dirk's decided to confide in a few trusted contacts.
He got very different responses.
His contact at the Boston
company told him they didn't really believe the story but better safe than
sorry. They decided to sell all their shares. Another gave him a warning.
Ray, you could ruin your reputation telling wild stories. You need to confirm
this first. Get on the next plane to Los Angeles and confront Stanley
Goldblum in person.
Stanley Goldblum was the boss of equity funding. He was a towering, weightlifting fanatic,
not a man you want to cross. But so it was that the chubby, bespectical
dirks found himself in a Los Angeles hotel breakfast room
in his dated brown suit, gazing nervously up at a thunder-faced, Stanley Goldblum.
Neck muscles rippling. Stanley, how are you? Not good! Our share price has just
gone down 17% on a single trade. Oh, that'll be the Boston company selling up.
I had no idea they owned so many shares.
Who else did you talk to?
These rumors are preposterous, said Goldblum.
But he made an offer.
Come to the office, he said, talk to whoever you want.
Dirk's spent the morning being shuffled from meeting to meeting.
Over lunch on the 28th floor, Goldblum tried to gauge how convincing his colleagues had
been.
What do you think now?
Well, do you guys certainly seem to make a strong case.
What are you planning to do next?
I don't know, I'm going to go back to my hotel room and think about it.
Dirk's did just that.
He sat in his hotel room and thought.
He called a reporter at the Wall Street Journal.
Then he talked to more ex-employees of equity funding.
He talked to more investors.
He talked to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the industry regulator.
He talked to equity fundings auditor and he talked to the company's former auditor who'd
been taken off the job, perhaps for starting to suspect too much.
That person had an alarming question.
Where are you staying?
I met the Beverly Wilson.
Oh, how many people know you're there? A lot of people.
Okay, if I were you, if you're own personal safety, I would move out right now.
Dirk's wasn't about to take chances. He walked a block down the street to another hotel
and checked in under a different name.
under a different name. Corsionary Tales will return shortly.
Cheryl Eckhard was a quality assurance manager at the pharmaceutical company, Blackshoe
Smithcline.
In 2002, she was sent to check out some worrying reports about a factory in
Cedra, Puerto Rico. She was shocked by what she found.
Water sources were contaminated. Environments weren't sterile. The factory's managers
were cutting corners all over the place. One morning, the factories director of manufacturing pulled Cheryl Eckart aside.
He wanted to know why she was showing up every morning, obviously close to tears.
Eyes swollen from crying.
Could she stop?
It was making everyone feel awkward.
You know I do cry.
I cry at night.
I cry in the morning.
And what I don't understand is why I'm the only one.
Why aren't you crying?
The Cedra factory in Puerto Rico
felt like a nightmare to Eckhard.
She spent eight painstaking months documenting
all the problems there.
She wrote up a comprehensive report
and sent it to her bosses at GlaxoSmithCline.
She expected them to thank her and
swiftly put things right. Instead, they made her redundant. Nothing personal, I said, just
downsizing. So, Cheryl Eckhard, blew the whistle. She went to the FDA, the Food and Drug Administration,
the US regulator. Armed with Cheryl's information, the FDA rated the factory in Cedra and seized millions of dollars worth of
substandard drugs
Cheryl knew she'd done the right thing
But now she had another reason for crying at night
You lose your friends because your friends are people from work. It's difficult to survive financially
and emotionally.
That's an all-too-typical experience for whistleblowers, according to Kate Kenney,
a professor at the National University of Ireland in Galway. Professor Kenney studied what happened
to dozens of whistleblowers. It's common for them to be shunned by former friends. They find it hard
to get another job in the same industry.
And that can be true, even when whistle blowing
is basically their job description.
Martin Woods had worked for the British police
for nearly two decades when he decided to move into banking.
Banks employ anti-money laundering officers to look for suspicious
transactions, and when Woods started work for the London branch of Wacovia, an American bank,
it didn't take him long to find some. High-value deposits made in travellers' checks with sequential
numbers, were the customers really just innocent tourists? It seemed unlikely.
In fact, they were working for a drug cartel.
Drugs sell on the streets for cash.
But it's hard to use big wads of banknotes
to buy things in the regular economy.
The cartels need to launder that money
into respectable looking entries
in the books of the global financial system.
It turned out they'd la laundered over $300 billion through
Ocovia. They'd used it to buy things like a MacDonald Douglas DC9 airplane,
which was seized on a Mexican runway carrying five tons of cocaine.
But when Martin Woods started to report these dodgy-looking travellers' check transactions,
were his bosses happy?
No, he says, they were not.
Martin, this is a disaster and it's all your fault.
Wait, what's my fault?
I'm not going to get my bonus this year.
At Wokovia, the boss explained, the departments that make the money give scores to the departments that provide support services, bonuses depend on the scores, and the compliance department had topped the scorecard for years.
It was getting stellar scores, it seems, because it was giving the money-making department what it wanted, and what the money-makers wanted from compliance was not asking too many questions.
So now that I've started to do a proper job, they're giving the compliance department lower schools.
Exactly, Martin, and that affects my bonus. You see?
The bank was eventually fined, but for Woods himself, working life soon became intolerable. The researcher Kate Kenney says whistleblowers often find themselves being targeted for the
tiniest breaches of company policy.
When Woods went to the hospital with a slipped disc, Wachovia said he hadn't called in
sick in the precise manner specified in his employees' handbook.
They also told him off for helping the British police to investigate a corrupt African politician.
That's a disciplinary offense.
Dollar accounts have nothing to do with you.
There are U.S. matters.
The police phoned me from Mauritius.
It was morning in London.
They needed help right then.
The U.S. was still in bed.
Fielding their car was a disciplinary offense.
Because the police rang me up and I answered the phone.
Yes. The stress drove Woods to the verge of breakdown. He quit his job, sued Wacovia,
and settled out of court. When he applied for other jobs, he didn't have much luck. When
other people see what happens to whistleblowers, it naturally makes them more cautious.
Wood says he's often had conversations like this. activity. When I… Oh, don't do that. I like my job.
I want to keep it.
Those people didn't go into their anti-money laundering career, intending to turn a blind
eye.
Like the students in the research experiment, they probably thought they would blow the whistle.
But when faced with the choice for real, they chose a quiet life.
Lots of employees at Equity Funding had wrestled with that dilemma too.
Remember, Equity Funding had been making up fake clients.
Raider exacerbated that about a hundred of the company's employees must have known,
or at least had their suspicions.
Yet only Ron Seacrest had done anything about it, and only
because he had been fired.
Why didn't the others blow the whistle?
Some felt they didn't know enough to be sure.
Some just wanted to keep drawing their paychecks.
Some were uncomfortable enough to quit the company, but not to kick up a fuss.
One employee told Dirk's that he'd wrestled with his conscience and eventually asked the
minister at his church for advice.
You should think of your family.
You mean I should keep on working for this company?
For now but look for another job when you find one, leave.
Should I report on what I know?
You should think of your family.
A handful of employees did try to report their suspicions to various regulatory bodies,
but it seems the regulators never took them seriously.
And that's not surprising, because the claims about the fake insurance policies were so
mind-boggling.
It would be like somebody coming to an analyst who follows automobile companies and saying
Chrysler doesn't put engines in their automobiles. They use big rubber bands.
I would have thrown the guy out of my office if he'd come to see me and tell me that.
It was precisely because he expected that kind of brush off from the authorities
that Ron Seacrest had decided to approach Ray Dirks.
Seacrest had a strategy.
The more that Dirks poked around, he thought, the more equity funding shareholders would start to
hear the allegations. Some would get cold feet and sell, and if the share price started to crater,
the regulators would surely have to investigate. And that's more or less what happened.
regulators would surely have to investigate. And that's more or less what happened.
But if the SEC was grateful to Dirk's, it chose a strange way of showing it.
It formally reprimanded him for insider trading. Corsary tales will return shortly. Where does our moral sense come from?
Why do we instinctively feel that some things are right and others are wrong?
The psychologists Jonathan Hate and Craig Joseph proposed a theory, moral foundations
theory. They think we can trace our moral instincts to a few basic foundations, such as fairness,
loyalty and preventing harm. The whistleblower's dilemma arises when loyalty comes into conflict
with some other moral value. Remember what Cheryl Eckhardt said about blowing the whistle on the substandard pharmaceutical
factory? You lose your friends, because your friends are people from work.
The whistleblower's dilemma is familiar to everyone who's ever been a child.
Tatltael or Snitch is the worst of playground insults. Martin Woods had trouble finding another job after he left Bocovia.
He thinks you can draw a line straight from the playground to our treatment of whistleblowers
in the world of work.
As children we told, don't tell tales and we tell our kids, don't tell tales.
Why do we do that?
We have an anxiety around their social grouping and their social acceptance,
but we're telling them not to like people who tell tales. The whistleblower.
But there must be something else going on because we admire whistleblowers too.
We root for Martin Woods and Cheryl Eckhard, not the bonus chasing boss or the cost-conscious
factory director. We cheer on Ray Dirk's. Though, a must confess, I've stacked
the deck. I deliberately chose to tell the stories of whistleblowers who are easy to
warm to, I could easily have picked some more difficult characters, more awkward, or prickly,
or priggish.
When do we praise a whistleblower for doing what's right? And when do we worry that someone who snitched on others might also snitch on us? It surely comes down to how serious we think the
transgression was that they blew the whistle on. Suppose you were interviewing a candidate
for a job, and you heard they'd called the police on their former boss because he was
extremely drunk after an office party and insisting on driving himself
home. I'd think more of them for doing that. That surely a case where preventing harm
trumps loyalty to the boss. But suppose the job candidate had called the police on their
former boss because he'd jumped a red light on a deserted road when late for a meeting,
and that's someone I might not want on my team.
when late for a meeting, that's someone I might not want on my team. And what if the whistle-blowing case is hard to understand, as many are?
Would I take a chance on employing the whistle-blower if I had some other suitable candidate?
It's easy to see why whistle-blowers might struggle to find employment.
Remember the students in Amsterdam and the experiment with the unethical researcher, when
given a hypothetical scenario, most said that they'd blow the whistle, when actually put
in that position hardly anyone did. We get cold feet because we worry about making trouble
for ourselves or for our families. We don't want to be a tattletail.
But this is a problem, because if we want to find out when organisations are doing things
wrong, we need employees to be brave enough to raise the whistles they're lips.
The economist Luigi Zingales and his colleagues studied all alleged cases of fraud in big US
companies over an eight-year period.
There were over 200 of them, including Enron and WorldCom.
They wanted to find out who brought those frauds to light.
And despite the risks, it turns out that employees were surprisingly important.
They revealed as many of the cases as the company auditors and the regulators put together.
It makes sense. Employees are the ones who have the inside track on corporate malfeasance,
and we want them to come forward when they have concerns. So how could we change the incentives
around whistle blowing? One answer, say some researchers, is to work with the grain of our deep-rooted instinct
to be loyal.
Leaders can choose to create a culture in which whistle-blowing is seen as being loyal to
the company, not disloyal to your immediate colleagues.
There is another obvious way to incentivise people.
Money
Martin Woods remember was a policeman before he worked
for banks. He was used to paying for tip-offs. If we bought information on where the drugs are,
why are we not buying information on where the financial crime is? Why are we not buying
information about where the tax evasion is? Why is that so different? Those are good questions.
occasion is. Why is that so different? Those are good questions. In fact, sometimes we do pay cash rewards to whistleblowers,
and the evidence suggests that those rewards work, according to the economist Luigi Zingales
and his big study of alleged corporate fraud. In some of those cases, there was the chance
of a payoff for information, and employees were three times more likely to
blow the whistle.
But few countries have made concerted efforts to reward whistleblowers.
South Korea is one that has.
Its government pays millions of dollars a year in rewards for tip-offs about everything
from tax dodges to unsafe food to unlicensed medical products.
It seems to work.
In other countries, the rewards tend to be patchier.
They exist in some sectors and not in others.
And that largely comes down to historical luck.
The US, for instance, has a law called the Faltz Claims Act.
It dates back to the Civil War,
and it rewards people for saving the government money by alerting them to suppliers who ripped them off.
So if you work for a company that just happens to sell to the government, then you might
get a reward for blowing the whistle.
What kind of companies sell to the government?
Pharmaceutical companies are one example.
Think of Medicare, the government buys lots of drugs, and if some of those drugs
were made in a factory in Cedra Puerto Rico, say, in a non-sterile environment, with contaminated
water, well the government might reward you for letting them know about that.
Seven years after Glaxo Smith Klein made Cheryl Eckhard redundant. The US federal government, find the company,
and gave Cheryl Eckhard the share she was due
under the Faults Claims Act,
$96 million.
Martin Woods wasn't quite so lucky.
Just two years after he blew the whistle on Wachovia,
the US introduced new laws
to reward whistleblowers in the financial sector. If only he had blown the whistle then,
it had got $12 million. But Wood says he has no regrets.
Now, call me conceited, but I like me. I like what I stand for, I like my profile, my brand, and most of all my integrity.
Woods now works as a consultant and he discovered why he had initially found it so hard to get his
foot in the door with a new employer. He was on a database at the Financial Conduct Authority,
a British regulator. Banks could check the database for information on potential employees.
Woods was flagged as non-routine. But why might a regulator seemingly want to make life difficult
for a whistleblower? Woods had his suspicions.
When you blow the whistle on a bank indirectly, you're also blowing the whistle on regulatory failure.
This was certainly the case as well, with insurance analyst Ray Dirk's.
When the investigation into equity funding had run its course, 22 people faced criminal
charges.
6.
Went to jail, including the fanatical weightlifter Stanley Goldblum.
But everyone knew the SEC would never have uncovered the fraud at equity funding on its own.
A lone idiosyncratic sleuth had shown them up.
Yes, but said the SEC.
Dirk's had talked through the allegations with clients who owned shares in equity funding.
And some of those clients had then sold their shares.
Couldn't you say that was insider trading?
Dirk's was furious at being reprimanded by the SEC.
He took them to court and lost.
He appealed, and after 10 years, got his day in front of the Supreme Court.
The SEC is a government body, and before it can argue in front of the Supreme Court, it
needs the approval of the United States Solicitor General.
There was just one problem.
United States Solicitor General loved what Ray Derrick had done.
So he gave the SEC permission to argue their
case, but added a post-script telling the judges he disagreed with it.
Derk's won his case. But the happy endings are exceptions. When the economist Luigi Zingales
asked whistleblowers if they'd do it all again, most said no. It wasn't worth the stress.
Like the students in Amsterdam, most of us would like to think we'd blow the whistle.
But if we want people to have the courage to follow through, we need to celebrate,
protect, and reward those who blow the whistle.
Key sources for this episode include The Great Wall Street Scandal by Ray Dirk's and Leonard
Gross, Kate Kennis book, whistle blowing and Martin Woods' interview on KYC 360, for a full list
of references, see TimHalford.com.
Corsinary Tales is written by me TimHalford with Andrew Wright.
It's produced by Ryan Dilly and Marilyn Rust.
The sound design and original music are the work of Pascal Weiss, Julia Barton, edited the
scripts.
Starring in this series of cautionary tales are Helena Bonham Carter and Jeffrey Wright,
alongside Nazar Alderazi, Ed Gochen, Melanie Gutridge, Rachel Hanzhaw, Kodna Holbrook-Smith,
Reg Lockett, Masey M Row, and Rufus Wright.
The show would not have been possible without the work of Mia Label, Jacob Weisberg, Heather
Fane, John Schnarrs, Carly McLeory, Eric Sandler, Emily Rustick, Maggie Taylor, Daniela
LeCarn, and Maya Canig.
Corsionary Tales is a production of Pushkin Industries. If you like the show,
please remember to share, rate and review. Thank you.
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