📄 Extracted Text (496 words)
From: '
To: "jeevacatio gniail.com" <jeevacationggmail.com>
Subject:
Date: Sat, 08 May 2010 04:03:49 +0000
Attorney: Halt Palm Beach County case for Rothstein
partner; federal charges looming
By Peter Franceschina
Sun-Sentinel Staff Writer
Posted: 9:48 p.m. Friday, May 7, 2010
• E-mail
• Print
• Share
• Small Type
One of the lawyers who goes way back with Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein is a target of a federal
investigation and expects to be indicted, the former partner's attorney told a judge during a Friday
court hearing.
Howard Kusnick, who first practiced years ago with Rothstein in their small firm in Plantation and later
joined the Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler law firm in downtown Fort Lauderdale, is a target of the federal
investigation that brought down Rothstein, said Kusnick's civil attorney, Rachel Kelman.
The revelation came during a bid to put a malpractice suit against Kusnick on hold. Kusnick and other
members of Rothstein's firm are being sued by auto magnate Ed Morse.
One of the criminal allegations that Rothstein admitted to in January was defrauding Ed and Carol
Morse of $57 million, using fictional court orders involving a Palm Beach County case the couple had
filed against a kitchen designer.
Attorney Bill Scherer, who represents a group of investors, told the judge that based on bankruptcy
records, Rothstein stole about $168 million during the five-year Ponzi scheme.
The Morses' suit alleges five of Rothstein's former law partners mishandled four separate civil cases
on their behalf.
Kusnick's attorney, Kelman, asked Broward Circuit Judge Jeffrey Streitfeld to put the case on hold
because Kusnick wanted to be able to defend against the suit but couldn't do so without compromising
his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. If Kusnick refuses to be deposed in the case, the
Morses could potentially obtain a default judgment against him.
As part of her argument, Kelman told the judge that she learned Thursday that Kusnick is a target of
the investigation, and that Kusnick expects to be indicted.
"It is a concrete concern," said Kelman, who declined to elaborate after the hearing.
"That's so distressing," said Streitfeld, but the judge refused to halt the case.
Kusnick did not attend the hearing and declined to comment when reached by phone. He and
Rothstein formed their Plantation firm in 1991 and dissolved it seven years later, corporation records
show.
While working for Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler in June 2009, the Morses allege Kusnick secretly worked
out a $310,000 settlement paid by the Morses for companies that had done work for the Morses. The
suit alleges that was a breach of fiduciary duty by Kusnick and Rothstein Rosenfeldt Adler.
EFTA00759824
Rothstein's firm imploded last November as Rothstein's $1.4 billion Ponzi scheme came to light.
Rothstein, 47, has pleaded guilty to five federal felonies and faces up to 100 years in prison at his
June 9 sentencing. Last week, Rothstein's chief operation officer, Debra Villegas, was charged with a
money laundering count punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
EFTA00759825
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
6f69bf638c9bf913a71870831cfccef128db74af9f0f93ada9f7d993cd7855ce
Bates Number
EFTA00759824
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
2
Comments 0