Informant
Page 1
CONTENTS
PROLOGUE
BOOK ONE
VERGE OF TRUTH
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
BOOK TWO
HONOR AMONGST THIEVES
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
BOOK THREE
NOTHING SIMPLE IS SIMPLE
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
EPILOGUE
NOTES AND SOURCES
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
More praise for
THE INFORMANT
“READS LIKE AN ED McBAIN CRIME NOVEL . . . within a few pages the reader is hooked. I knew how the story ended, but I still couldn’t put the book down.’’
—New York Times (daily review)
“A REMARKABLE, FASCINATING AND FAST-PACED BOOK . . . The strange details that emerge would be laughable in the context of a novel. In The Informant, they just leave a reader breathlessly amazed.’’
—Portland Oregonian
“A NEAR MASTERPIECE . . . thrilling, far-reaching, and significant . . . a fast-paced, accessible, race car of a book.’’
—Salon.com
“I WOULD SAY THE INFORMANT READS LIKE GRISHAM, ONLY NOBODY EVER COULD HAVE INVENTED THESE CHARACTERS. A tale this riveting and this strange could only have been built from truth.”
—Sherry Sontag, coauthor, Blind Man’s Bluff
“SUSPENSEFUL . . . a book that can double as an attractive movie proposal.”
—Washington Post
“A GRIPPING READ . . . ONE OF THE MOST COMPELLING BUSINESS NARRATIVES SINCE BARBARIANS AT THE GATE. The Informant offers an inside picture of a part of the corporate world that outsiders almost never see—one full of covert meetings, secret codes, and industrial espionage. Usually the pulp of airport fiction, here such shadowy doings become the stuff of sound investigative nonfiction . . . A great cops-and-robbers drama—leavened by occasional touches of screwball comedy . . . This is box-office material, and Eichenwald has written a book that reads a lot like a screenplay.”
—Business Week
“A THRILLER, filled with espionage, double-crosses, and deceit, where nothing is quite what it first seems.’’
—Dateline NBC
“A COMPELLING NARRATIVE . . . a business book for Grisham readers.’’
—Chicago Tribune
“A FASCINATING TALE . . . a cohesive narrative of a corporation that placed itself above the law, an ambitious executive who preferred lies over the truth, and determined FBI agents whose hard work was nearly jeopardized not only by their informant but also by their bosses at the Department of Justice.’’
—St. Petersburg Times
“THE INFORMANT IS SUPERB REPORTING in the service of a great story, one with the drama and suspense of a Le Carré novel. Set squarely in the American heartland, delving into the inner sanctum of a global corporation, it explores the shifting boundaries of truth and deception, loyalty and betrayal. It is a remarkable achievement.”
—James B. Stewart, author, Den of Thieves and Blind Eye
“A MESMERIZING STORY . . . a thrilling read.’’
—Washington Monthly
“WHAT A STORY—AND WHAT AN INFORMANT.’’
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“IN THIS TRUE ACCOUNT THAT HAS MORE SPY ACTION THAN SOME TOM CLANCY NOVELS, we get double-crossing, dirty dealing, lying, conniving, and wiretapping . . . The Informant is more deceitful and more spellbinding than many works of fiction.”
—Bookpage
“A REAL PAGE-TURNER.’’
—Ira Glass, host, This American Life
“THIS GRIPPING STORY of the price-fixing case against Archer Daniels Midland is the next A Civil Action.’’
—The Industry Standard
“THE INFORMANT IS EPIC IN SCOPE, a tale of human foibles—of greed, deceit, and arrogance—and also of the search for truth. Eichenwald has told it masterfully, with the narrative drive of a novel.”
—Jonathan Harr, author, A Civil Action
“LIKE EVERYONE ELSE WHO HAS RAVED about The Informant, I could not stop reading it . . . Like John Grisham’s The Firm, The Informant is destined for the big screen . . ”
—ABA Journal
“THE TWISTS AND TURNS OF THIS NONFICTION WORK LEAVE MANY THRILLERS IN THE DUST. Eichenwald’s spare prose and journalistic eye for detail make the pages fly.”
—David Baldacci, author, Absolute Power and Saving Faith
“A DILLY OF A BOOK . . . reads like John Grisham on acid, and once begun, you can’t put it down.”
— Liz Smith, in her syndicated column
“A COHESIVE, JAW-DROPPING NARRATIVE . . . a compulsively readable legal procedural, The Informant has earned comparisons to the works of John Grisham. But with its dizzying array of subplots, twists, and political maneuvers, the book is more like Grisham’s entire oeuvre compressed into six hundred pages.”
—The Onion
“CRITICS ARE THRILLED with this revival of a genre they claim has been all but dead since the early ‘80s: investigative nonfiction set in corporate America. By all accounts, Eichenwald’s tale of the Archer Daniels Midland price-fixing scandal, which he covered for the New York Times, is a gripping read.’’
—Slate
“THE INFORMANT IS MASTERFUL . . . a suspenseful, engrossing story . . . were this story told as fiction, no one would believe it.
—The DailyDeal.com
“A TERRIFIC BOOK . . . a transfixing tale . . . mesmerizes you immediately with a well-crafted filigree of detail . . . the book resembles a tightly constructed novel. It’s full of parallel plots that develop independently, occasionally crisscrossing or passing in the night until the inexorable collision.”
—Star Tribune (Minneapolis, Minn.)
THE
INFORMANT
* * *
A TRUE STORY
* * *
KURT EICHENWALD
BROADWAY BOOKS NEW YORK
To ADAM, RYAN, and SAM,
my wonderful and beloved boys.
And to my wife, THERESA,
Always.
You too must not count overmuch
on your reality as you feel it today,
since, like that of yesterday,
it may prove to be an illusion tomorrow.
—LUIGI PIRANDELLO
Six Characters in Search of an Author
AUTHOR’S NOTE
This book is based on about eight hundred hours of interviews with more than one hundred participants in these events, as well as tens of thousands of confidential corporate and government records, including secret grand jury testimony. Much of the dialogue comes from publicly unavailable transcripts of secret recordings made by a cooperating witness with the FBI over more than two years. Other conversations are based on contemporaneous records of the events or the best recollections of participants. While I have disguised the identities of one witness and of some people mentioned in passing on the tapes, everything else in this book—no matter how unbelievable—is real.
Every scene, every name, every crime.
And every lie.
THE MAIN CHARACTERS
WITH THE ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND COMPANY
DWAYNE ANDREAS, chairman and chief executive
MICHAEL “MICK” ANDREAS, vice-chairman
JAMES RANDALL, president
TERRANCE “TERRY” WILSON, president, corn processing
> BARRIE COX, vice president, food additives
G. ALLEN ANDREAS, vice president and chief executive, ADM International
RICHARD REISING, general counsel
MARK CHEVIRON, head of security
REINHART RICHTER, president, ADM Mexico
HOWARD BUFFETT, assistant to the chairman
JAMES SHAFTER, of counsel
RONALD FERRARI, former product manager, protein specialties
IN THE BIOPRODUCTS DIVISION
MARK WHITACRE, president
MARTY ALLISON, vice president
SIDNEY HULSE, vice president
DAVID PAGE, director of market development
ELIZABETH TAYLOR, secretary
ON THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD
BRIAN MULRONEY, former prime minister of Canada
F. ROSS JOHNSON, former chairman, RJR Nabisco
JOHN DANIELS, former chairman, Archer Daniels Midland
RAY GOLDBERG, professor of agriculture, Harvard Business School
ADVISORS TO DWAYNE ANDREAS
ROBERT S. STRAUSS, partner, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Washington, D.C.
ZEV FURST, principal, First International
WITH THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION, WASHINGTON, D.C.
LOUIS FREEH, Director
WILLIAM ESPOSITO, Assistant Director, Criminal Investigative Division
NEIL GALLAGHER, Deputy Assistant Director of the Criminal Investigative Division
EDWARD HERBST, Supervisory Special Agent
ALIX SUGGS, Supervisory Special Agent
WITH THE RESIDENT AGENCY, DECATUR, IL
BRIAN SHEPARD, Special Agent
WITH THE RESIDENT AGENCY, CHAMPAIGN, IL
JOE WEATHERALL, Special Agent
WITH THE FIELD OFFICE, SPRINGFIELD, IL
ROBERT HERNDON, Special Agent
DONALD STUKEY, Special Agent in Charge (SAC)
JOHN HOYT, Assistant Special Agent in Charge (ASAC)
DEAN PAISLEY, Supervisory Special Agent
KATE KILLHAM, Supervisory Special Agent
KEVIN CORR, Principal Legal Advisor
THOMAS GIBBONS, Special Agent
WITH THE FIELD OFFICE, CHICAGO, IL
MICHAEL BASSETT, Special Agent
ANTHONY D’ANGELO, Special Agent
ED WORTHINGTON, Assistant Special Agent in Charge (ASAC)
ROBERT GRANT, Supervisory Special Agent
WITH THE FIELD OFFICE, MOBILE, AL
CRAIG DAHLE, Special Agent
WITH THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, WASHINGTON, D.C.
JANET RENO, Attorney General
JAMIE GORELICK, Deputy Attorney General
SETH WAXMAN, Associate Deputy Attorney General
IN THE ANTITRUST DIVISION, WASHINGTON, D.C.
ANNE BINGAMAN, Assistant Attorney General
GARY SPRATLING, Deputy Assistant Attorney General
IN THE ANTITRUST DIVISION, MIDWEST FIELD OFFICE, CHICAGO, IL
JAMES GRIFFIN, Chief
MARVIN PRICE, Assistant Chief
ROBIN MANN, attorney
JAMES MUTCHNIK, attorney
WITH THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, SPRINGFIELD, IL
FRANCES HULIN, United States Attorney
BYRON CUDMORE, First Assistant United States Attorney
RODGER HEATON, Assistant United States Attorney
JOSEPH HARTZLER, Assistant United States Attorney
WITH THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, CHICAGO, IL
SCOTT LASSAR, First Assistant United States Attorney
IN THE FRAUD SECTION, WASHINGTON, D.C.
MARY SPEARING, chief
DONALD MACKAY, attorney
JAMES NIXON, attorney
PETER CLARK, attorney
WITH THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, ZURICH
FRIDOLIN TRIET, Investigating Magistrate
WITH THE LAW FIRMS
AT WILLIAMS & CONNOLLY, WASHINGTON, D.C.
AUBREY DANIEL, partner
BARRY SIMON, partner
AT SIMPSON THACHER & BARTLETT, NEW YORK, NY
RICHARD BEATTIE, chairman
CHARLES KOOB, partner
REPRESENTING THE INDIVIDUALS
JOHN BRAY, King & Spaulding, Washington, D.C.
REID WEINGARTEN, Steptoe & Johnson, Washington, D.C.
JAMES EPSTEIN, Epstein, Zaideman & Esrig, Chicago, IL
BILL WALKER, solo practitioner, Granite City, IL
JOHN DOWD, Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Washington, D.C.
SHELDON ZENNER, Katten Muchin & Zavis, Chicago, IL
WITH AJINOMOTO INC., TOKYO
KAZUTOSHI YAMADA, managing director
HIROKAZU IKEDA, general manager, feed additives
KANJI MIMOTO, deputy general manager, feed additives
KOTARO FUJIWARA, engineer
WITH THE EUROPEAN DIVISION, EUROLYSINE
ALAIN CROUY, president
JACQUES CHAUDRET, vice president
WITH A EUROPEAN AFFILIATE, ORSAN
PHILIPPE ROLLIER, president
WITH KYOWA HAKKO KOGYO CO. (BIOKYOWA), TOKYO
MASARU YAMAMOTO, general manager, bioproducts
WITH SEWON CO. LTD./MIWON (SEWON AMERICA), SEOUL
JHOM SU KIM, president, Sewon America
WITH CHEIL JEDANG LTD., SEOUL
JOON MO SUH, executive
WITH KROLL ASSOCIATES
JULES KROLL, principal
ANDREW LEVETOWN, investigator
THE INDUSTRY CONSULTANT
DAVID HOECH, president, Global Consultants, Hallandale, FL
THE ASSOCIATES
GINGER WHITACRE, wife of Mark Whitacre
RUSTY WILLIAMS, groundskeeper for the Whitacre family
BEAT SCHWEIZER, money manager
DR. DEREK MILLER, M.D.
PROLOGUE
June 27, 1995—Decatur, IL
The Country Club of Decatur loomed ahead, and Brian Shepard slowed the pace of his 1994 Dodge Dynasty. Beside him in the passenger seat, Bob Herndon sat in silence, gazing at the club through the windshield. Herndon checked his watch again, although he already knew the time, 6:00 P.M. Right on schedule.
Shepard turned onto the club’s inclined driveway, heading to the parking lot as another car followed him up the hill. Passing the club on the right, the midsize sedans maneuvered into two parking spaces, out of place amid the array of Mercedes and BMWs.
Without a word, Shepard and Herndon popped open their doors and watched as Kevin Corr emerged from the second car. In an instant, Corr joined them, and the three men walked in step toward the club. Despite their differing ages and backgrounds, the three somehow looked strikingly similar. They wore short trimmed hair and dressed in dark suits with dark dress shoes. Their suit jackets fit loosely, masking the stainless steel automatic pistols that they carried.
They turned away from the small crowd milling outside near the pro shop. As expected, most every club member was there, enjoying the food and ambience of a night at the grill. The upstairs dining hall was sure to be virtually empty, a refuge for local businessmen looking for a quiet place to talk. It was perfect for the plan. Tonight there would likely be no witnesses to get in the way.
The three men headed toward the club’s canopy-covered entryway. On the horizon, the sun threw a deep reddish glow across the Illinois countryside. Even here, far from the giant milling factories that dominate Decatur, a pungent aroma hung in the air. Newcomers to town usually found the smell disagreeable. But for Decatur residents, the ever-present odor produced by drying corn feed and toasting soymeal at the powerful Archer Daniels Midland Company had become part of the landscape, no different than the trees or the sky. Locals often joked it was just the smell of money being made.
The men pushed open the club’s glass door, walking left toward the dining hall. The room was not Decatur’s largest meeting place, but it was certainly among the most elegant, with chandeliers, a grand fireplace, and oceans of white
linen draped across circular tables. This night, only one table was occupied, on the far side of the room, where three executives were chatting over drinks. Two of the men were well known in town—even their waitress recognized them as Terry Wilson and Mark Whitacre from the nearby ADM headquarters.
Corr waited in a foyer outside the dining hall as Shepard and Herndon walked briskly toward the businessmen. The diners barely noticed the approaching men until they came to a stop at their table.
“Mr. Wilson? Mr. Whitacre?’’ Herndon said.
The youngest of the diners, a blond man in his mid-thirties with a moustache and a baby face, looked at Herndon with a puzzled expression.
“Yes?’’ he said. “I’m Mark Whitacre.’’
Herndon and Shepard reached inside their jackets, bringing out matching leather cases. Two gold shields flashed in the light of the dining hall.
“I’m Bob Herndon, and I’m an FBI agent. This is Brian Shepard; he’s also an FBI agent. We need to talk to both of you privately, right now.’’
Wilson, in his fifties with white hair, set down his glass of Dewar’s and water. “What’s this all about?’’
“Well, Mr. Wilson, the best thing would be if Agent Shepard and I could talk to you over here,’’ Herndon said, pointing to the foyer where Corr was waiting.
Wilson glanced across the table at his second dinner partner, Steven Yu, a visiting executive from ADM’s division in China. With an almost imperceptible shrug, Wilson excused himself. He and Whitacre began to stand when Wilson abruptly stopped.
“Do I need an attorney?” he asked.
“That’s up to you,’’ Herndon said. “You’re not under arrest, you’re not in custody, you can leave any time. But you may want to hear what we have to say.’’
Wilson nodded. He and Whitacre left the dining hall, leaving behind their bewildered colleague.
As they reached the foyer, Herndon introduced Corr. “Agent Corr, why don’t you find a place to talk to Mr. Whitacre?’’
Corr looked at Whitacre. “Is that all right with you, sir?’’
Whitacre nodded, his face a seeming mixture of astonishment and confusion.
Corr escorted Whitacre outside as Wilson found a seat in the foyer. Herndon and Shepard took chairs on either side. Herndon leaned in just a few feet from Wilson’s face, his elbows resting on his knees.