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Former head of Hollinger International Inc. sentenced

Former Hollinger International chairman Conrad Black leaves federal court Conrad Black, the former head of Hollinger Inc. (OTC: HLGAF), was sentenced today. Hollinger is the parent company of the Chicago Sun-Times and numerous other newspapers.

The crime: Black was convicted (along with three other former executives of the company) of 3 counts of financial fraud for illegally receiving money from newspaper sales. He and two other executives got at least $32.2 million via their scheme, although the jury determined that Black had illegally received $2.9 million.

The prosecution: Prosecutors wanted Black to go to prison for 19 to 25 years, presumably to both protect the public from him and to deter other executives from committing similar crimes.

The defense: Defense attorneys said Black should get a very lenient prison term, and maybe spend no time in prison. In any event, they said Black shouldn't get any more than the 29-month prison term than his former business partner F. David Radler agreed to when he pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors.

The sentence: 78 months in prison, a $6.1 million forfeiture of ill-gotten gains, and a $125,000 fine. Judge Amy St. Eve handed down this sentence, which included the minimum amount of prison time Black could have gotten.

Continue reading Former head of Hollinger International Inc. sentenced

Conrad Black goes to Alcatraz

No one except Clint Eastwood has ever escaped from Alcatraz. Of course, he did it in a movie. No one ever managed this feat in real life.

Alcatraz closed years ago. But Conrad Black may want to watch a few prison flicks before he's sent up the same river.

Black, the former head of newspaper company Hollinger Inc. (TSE: HLG), was charged with racketeering and misuse of corporate funds. He was found "not guilty" on those charges.

He was convicted of mail fraud and obstruction of justice. Prosecutors said that Black and three associates funneled money from the sales of Hollinger newspapers into accounts which they controlled. The money, as much as $60 million, was to pay for Hollinger not to compete with the firms that bought its newspaper properties. Nice work, if you can find it.

Black now faces up to 35 years in prison, as much as $1 million in fines, and a lot of legal fees. At age 62, the member of the House of Lords may not make it out alive.

Sixty million is a lot to make disappear without people noticing. Black can think of better ways to do it next time while he is on his break from making license plates.

Douglas A. McIntyre is a partner at 24/7 Wall St.

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Last updated: November 27, 2009: 06:39 PM

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