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Morally Bankrupt

Greed, Lust, and the Scandal That Shook Big Law

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Morally Bankrupt

Von: Alexander Gladstone, Andrew Scurria
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An explosive investigation into a scandal at a federal courthouse in Texas, revealing how the nation’s corporate bankruptcy system has been compromised at the expense of everyday Americans—told by the Wall Street Journal reporters who broke the story

Most Americans think of bankruptcy as a demise to be avoided at all costs, but major cases can be a golden opportunity for high-powered lawyers and their clients on Wall Street. Steering a distressed company there can allow a firm to engineer big paydays for corporate executives and financiers in deals that often leave their adversaries with pennies on the dollar.

Over the past decade, white-shoe law firms flocked to the Houston court of Judge David R. Jones, the nation’s most powerful and influential bankruptcy judge, where he and his colleagues presided over the restructuring of major American businesses including JCPenney, Neiman Marcus, Chesapeake Energy, Men’s Wearhouse, Chuck E. Cheese, and Regal Cinemas. Judge Jones quickly became known for ruling in favor of the corporate debtors those lawyers represented and the well-positioned private equity firms and hedge funds they struck deals with. Those with elite representation seemed to have the inside track—they kept getting what they wanted while smaller investors, unpaid vendors, and retirees were told that the pie just wasn’t big enough for them to get the piece they were owed.

When a ragtag group of outsiders started digging deeper, they discovered that Judge Jones, who often preached about the “integrity of the process,” was harboring a personal secret that threatened to undermine faith in the federal judiciary. Their stand against the Houston machine would pit them against some of the world’s most powerful law firms and a justice system that had become twisted to benefit the connected few, with ramifications for all Americans.

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