Judge Stern Shoots Down Prospect and Attorney General in St. Joseph Pension Fund Collapse

GoLocalProv News Team

Judge Stern Shoots Down Prospect and Attorney General in St. Joseph Pension Fund Collapse

Max Wistow, Special Investigator
Superior Court was full of charges and counter-charges between special investigator Max Wistow and his partner Stephen Sheehan and the office of Attorney General Peter Kilmartin. This time Kilmartin's team augmented two junior attorneys with a plethora of others including the number two man in the office Gerry Coyne and Assistant Attorney General Rebecca Partington.

In total, Kilmartin's office had five attorneys in the courtroom, but yet still no site of Kilmartin.

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Gerry Coyne, Kilmartin's #2, at the back of the courtroom
It was a bit of another day and another battle over the delays by Kilmartin's office relating to the production of key documents relating to the Attorney General's office approval of the acquisition by Prospect of California of CharterCare in 2014. The deal, approved by Kilmartin, "orphaned" the pension plan of nearly 2,800 plan participants of the St. Joseph Health Services pension plan. The plan went into receivership in August.

The outcome after two hours, Judge Brian Stern shot down yet another effort by Kilmartin's office to limit and slow the production of documents. A GoLocal report on Saturday unveiled that Kilmartin's office, which knew of the failure of the fund in early August prior to the collapse, as of the time of yesterday's hearing had only produced three documents that were not publicly available on the agency's website.

"To be effective subpoenas need to be complied with...to be effective court orders need to be complied with," Sheehan argued to Stern, nearly pleading for the Court to take action against Kilmartin's "nearly endless delays."

Stephen Sheehan ask for sanctions against Kilmartin
Sheehan had asked that Kilmartin be forced to pay a portion of special investigation's legal fee due ($20,000 this month alone relating to forcing the AG to comply with subpoenas and court orders) to the delays and legal maneuvering, but Stern refused to rule on the request.

The other material action in the court was a last-second effort by Prospect to shield over 300 pages of "confidential documents." The request by Prospect's attorney was filed at 11:57 p.m. on Friday night, just before the deadline for Monday's hearing. Stern rejected that motion.


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