There's certainly no love lost between Wall Street and
Welch told The Wall Street Journal that Spitzer "sure as hell took some swings at a lot of people," including Welch's former GE colleague Ken Langone, who is currently the target of an increasingly vicious Spitzer investigation over compensation packages he okayed while serving as a board member of the
While Welch concedes that Spitzer has "probably done some good" by busting securities industry malfeasance and exposing deeply rooted conflicts of interest, he also recalled an chance meeting at Fox News studios where Spitzer launched into a "message" for Langone.
"He met me in the hallway and we started chatting. And then he just started rolling [sic]," Welch told The Journal. Asked whether he thought the AG seemed like a man possessed, Welch replied with a laugh: "I'd say he felt very strongly."
Welch also said that Spitzer, who since breaking the mutual fund scandal open in 2003 has returned approximately $3.5 billion to investors, should to try, rather than settle, at least some of his cases.
"I'd like to see him really try and win them. He's gone to trial against a couple people that stood up to him and he lost," Welch said, perhaps referring to former
The staff of Money Management Executive ("MME") has prepared these capsule summaries based on reports published by the news sources to which they are attributed. Those news sources are not associated with MME, and have not prepared, sponsored, endorsed, or approved these summaries.