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AIG Would Be 'Hard Pressed' To Join Lawsuit Over Its Federal Bailout

January 9, 2013

by: Mark Memmott, NPR

With the economy on the brink of disaster, American taxpayers bailed out the insurance giant. Now, its former CEO is leading a lawsuit that claims shareholders didn't get fair compensation. But the threat of a public backlash could keep AIG from joining the suit.

Manhattan: The headquarters of American International Group Inc. (AIG).

Shen Hong/Xinhua /Landov

"Chutzpah."

"Outrageous."

"Furious."

Those are just some of the words being used by lawmakers in stories today about the news that directors of American International Group (AIG) are considering whether the company should join a lawsuit against the federal government — which, as The Associated Press reminds readers, spent $182 billion to save the insurer from collapse as the American economy teetered on the brink of disaster in 2008.

But there are reasons to think that AIG will decline to get involved.

The suit, AP writes, was filed in November 2011 by Starr International Co. Inc., "the investment firm of former AIG CEO Maurice Greenberg." It contends that " the government didn't provide shareholders fair compensation when it took a nearly 80 percent stake in the insurer as part of the bailout. In doing so, the government violated the Constitution, Starr claims."

Today, as the Los Angeles Times writes, AIG's directors will consider whether the company should join the plaintiffs.

But New York Times business reporter Michael de la Merced, who has been covering the story, told Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep today that "the board would be really hard pressed to go ahead and join this lawsuit."

AIG/YouTube

The company, he said, has "definitely kept a keen eye on the politics and the public reaction" to its bailout. "You've got to assume they are very cognizant of what might happen" if AIG joined the legal action.

The reason AIG directors are at least going to discuss becoming part of the suit, de la Merced said, is that they want to make sure they're carrying out their fiduciary duty to shareholders. Indeed, in a statement AIG says "it is the AIG Board's obligation and intention to consider seriously Starr's demand and respond to it in a manner that the Board believes is in the best interest of the Company, taking into account all the relevant circumstances."

In recent weeks, the company has been running ads thanking American taxpayers for the bailout. It has reimbursed the government for the bailout. And last month, as the AP notes, "the Treasury Department announced ... that it sold all of its remaining shares of AIG, ending up with $22.7 billion more than it funneled to the company during the height of the financial crisis."

From 'Morning Edition'

Copyright 2013 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Copyright 2013 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
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