Aug 14 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc Chief Executive
Lloyd Blankfein and other bank officials won the dismissal of a
shareholder lawsuit accusing them of tolerating poor mortgage
practices and quitting a federal bailout program early to boost
executive pay.
U.S. District Judge William Pauley in Manhattan said the
shareholders failed to show there were "red flags" to put bank
directors on notice of "broken controls" in Goldman's mortgage
servicing business, including that workers at its Litton unit
may have been "robo-signing" documents.
Pauley also cited a similar lack of red flags to suggest
directors knew Goldman was packaging troubled loans in
residential mortgage-backed securities, including loans the bank
sold "short" in a bet they would lose value.
The judge also said the plaintiffs did not show that
directors acted in bad faith in letting Goldman repay $10
billion taken from the Troubled Asset Relief Program early, in
June 2009, freeing the bank from restrictions on executive pay.
Pauley said the plaintiffs cannot amend their complaint
alleging breaches of fiduciary duties, saying an earlier amended
complaint failed to fix defects he had previously identified.
Lead plaintiffs included the Retirement Relief System of the
City of Birmingham, Alabama, pension fund, as well as Michael
Brautigam, an Ohio resident and Goldman shareholder.
Brian Brooks, a partner at Smith, Segura & Raphael
representing the plaintiffs, did not immediately respond to
requests for comment.
Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally declined to comment.
The case is a derivative lawsuit brought on behalf of
Goldman, seeking changes in governance and internal controls,
and with any payout going to the Wall Street bank rather than to
shareholders.
Pauley said 15 current and former Goldman executives and
directors had been named as defendants. Among these were Chief
Operating Officer Gary Cohn, Chief Financial Officer David
Viniar, and former director Rajat Gupta, who was convicted in
June of insider trading in a separate case.
Goldman still faces other shareholder litigation. In June,
for example, Pauley's colleague Paul Crotty said shareholders
may pursue claims that they lost money after Goldman concealed
conflicts of interest in how it put together several
collateralized debt obligation transactions.
Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice said it ended a
criminal probe into Goldman activity that predated the financial
crisis, while the bank said the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission ended a civil probe into a sale of $1.3 billion of
subprime mortgage debt.
The case is In re: Goldman Sachs Mortgage Servicing
Shareholder Derivative Litigation, U.S. District Court, Southern
District of New York, No. 11-04544.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel)
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