CIA OPERATIVES MOONLIGHT IN CORPORATE WORLD
by Eamons Javers
Politico.com
Monday, February 1, 2010
This article is adapted from the author’s forthcoming book, ‘Broker,
Trader, Lawyer, Spy: The Secret World of Corporate Espionage.’
In the midst of two wars and the fight against Al Qaeda, the CIA is
offering operatives a chance to peddle their expertise to private
companies on the side – a policy that gives financial firms and hedge
funds access to the nation’s top-level intelligence talent, POLITICO
has learned.
In one case, these active-duty officers moonlighted at a hedge-fund
consulting firm that wanted to tap their expertise in "deception
detection," the highly specialized art of telling when executives
may be lying based on clues in a conversation.
The never-before-revealed policy comes to light as the CIA and
other intelligence agencies are once again under fire for failing to
"connect the dots," this time in the Christmas Day bombing plot on
Northwest Flight 253.
But sources familiar with the CIA’s moonlighting policy defend it
as a vital tool to prevent brain-drain at Langley, which has seen an
exodus of highly trained, badly needed intelligence officers to the
private sector, where they can easily double or even triple their
government salaries. The policy gives agents a chance to earn more
while still staying on the government payroll.
A government official familiar with the policy insists it doesn’t
impede the CIA’s work on critical national security investigations.
This official said CIA officers who want to participate in it must
first submit a detailed explanation of the type of work involved and
get permission from higher-ups within the agency.
"If any officer requests permission for outside employment, those
requests are reviewed not just for legality, but for propriety,"
CIA spokesman George Little told POLITICO.
There is much about the policy that is unclear, including how many
officers have availed themselves of it, how long it has been in
place and what types of outside employment have been allowed. The
CIA declined to provide additional details.
Generally, federal employees across the vast government work force are
allowed to moonlight in the private sector, but under tight guidelines,
that can vary from agency to agency, according to the federal Office
of Government Ethics.
"In general, for most nonpolitical employees, they may engage in
outside employment, but there are some restrictions," said Elaine
Newton, an attorney at the Office of Government Ethics. She explained
that agencies throughout the federal government set their own policies
on outside employment, and that they all typically require that the
employment not represent a conflict of interest with the employee’s
federal job and that the employee have written approval before taking
on the work.
But the close ties between active-duty and retired CIA officers at
one consulting company show the degree to which CIA-style intelligence
gathering techniques have been employed by hedge funds and financial
institutions in the global economy.
The firm is called Business Intelligence Advisors, and it is based
in Boston. BIA was founded and is staffed by a number of retired
CIA officers, and it specializes in the arcane field of "deception
detection." BIA’s clients have included Goldman Sachs and the enormous
hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors, according to spokesmen for both firms.
BIA has employed active-duty CIA officers in the past, although BIA
president Cheryl Cook said that has "not been the case with BIA for
some time."
But the ties between BIA and the intelligence world run deep. The
name itself was chosen as a play off CIA. And the presence of so many
former CIA personnel on the payroll at BIA causes confusion as to
whether the intelligence firm is actually an extension of the agency
itself. As a result, BIA places a disclaimer in some of its corporate
materials to clarify that it is not, in fact, controlled by Langley.
BIA’s clients can put the company on a retainer for as much as $400,000
to $800,000 a year. And in return, they receive access to a variety
of services, from deception detection to other programs that feature
the CIA intelligence techniques.
In one presentation in 2006, BIA personnel promised to teach managers
at a leading hedge fund some of the CIA’s own foolproof techniques.
The presenters that day at SAC Capital Advisors in Stamford, Conn.,
included two women with backgrounds in intelligence. One spent 20
years with the CIA, specializing in polygraph, interviewing, and
deception detection. The other had more than 25 years of interrogation
experience.
In their intensity, they reminded one person in the room of Clarice
Starling, the no-nonsense FBI agent played by Jodie Foster in the
movie "The Silence of the Lambs": "You could tell they knew exactly
what they were doing."
The tactics that BIA officials such as these teach hedge fund clients
are based in a program it calls "Tactical Behavior Assessment.".
Unlike polygraph machines, the TBA technique allows examiners to work
without hooking up their subject to a series of wires. The subject
never knows he’s being scrutinized.
Polygraph machines work by measuring a person’s physical responses,
such as heart rate, that indicate stress. Analysts using the machine
need to sit with their subject for a long time. They have to establish
a person’s physiological baseline, so they begin with a "control"
conversation about neutral topics, before they can begin grilling
the subject. Conducting an interview and doing a thorough analysis
of polygraph results can take hours.
TBA focuses on the verbal and nonverbal cues that people convey when
they aren’t telling the truth. Psychologists familiar with the method
say it works because human beings just aren’t hard-wired to lie well.
Holding two opposing ideas in your brain at the same time – as you have
to do in order to tell a lie – causes a phenomenon they term "cognitive
dissonance," which creates actual physical discomfort. And when
people are uncomfortable, they squirm. They fidget ever so slightly,
they pick lint off their clothes, they shift their bodily positions.
Agents look for the physical indicators of lying. They watch for a
person shifting anchor points. If the person is leaning forward on
one elbow, does he switch to the other one? Interrogators watch for
grooming gestures such as adjusting clothes, hair or eyeglasses. They
look to see if the person picks at his fingernails or scratches
himself. They watch for the person to clean his surroundings – does
he straighten the paper clips on the table or line up the pens? If
he does, he could be lying.
To obtain verbal clues, agents listen for several kinds of statements.
They’ll listen for qualifying answers, phrases that begin with words
like "honestly," "frankly" or "basically." The agents will be listening
for detour phrases like "as I said before …" They’ll want to hear
if the person invokes religion – "I swear to God" – or attacks the
questioner: "How dare you ask me something like that?"
Other red flags: Complaints -"How long is this going to take?"
Selective memory -"To the best of my knowledge." Overly courteous
responses -"Yes, sir."
BIA doesn’t just offer training, though. For a fee, its officers do
the analysis themselves.
Often, BIA deploys its CIA-trained operatives to analyze quarterly
corporate-earnings calls. Those conference calls are an important
Wall Street ritual that serves as a direct line from the corporate
boardroom to the trading floor.
Companies use the calls to put the best spin on the events of the
quarter and give investors a sense of the way ahead. Analysts for
top-of-the-line investment houses use them to ask probing questions
of senior management.
And BIA uses them to figure out if the company may not be disclosing
the truth – all with the help of the CIA-trained analysts.
In one particular instance in August 2005, Hong Liang Lu, the chairman
and CEO of a company called UTStarcom, walked through the numbers
with a telephone audience of Wall Street investment bankers. With
his slicked-back hair, rimless glasses and wide smile, Lu projected
an image of intelligence and competence.
And as he began the call, Lu couldn’t know that it also was being
patched into a room thousands of miles away where interrogators
trained in CIA-style techniques would analyze each inflection in Lu’s
voice. The analysts were human lie detectors, working for BIA. They
were trying to find out whether Lu was telling the whole truth about
UTStarcom’s financial health.
When they came to their conclusion, they’d report it to BIA’s client,
an enormous hedge fund. The secret intelligence they produced would
help the hedge fund decide whether to buy or sell UTStarcom stock. If
the intelligence analysts did their jobs, the hedge fund would be
far ahead of the rest of the market.
The information they gleaned from this phone call could be worth
millions of dollars.
The company Hong Liang Lu ran sells broadband, wireless and hand-held
Internet equipment and technology around the world. It had generated
more than $700 million in revenue that quarter, and although it
was still losing money, that performance was good enough to bring it
close to profitability. The company thought the results were positive,
and the CEO seemed optimistic.
Investment analysts from Bank of America, Smith Barney, Deutsche Bank
and other Wall Street powerhouses were the official participants in
UTStarcom’s call. The analysts prepared their best questions to help
them figure out the answer to one big question: Would UTStarcom emerge
as a hot stock in the third quarter?
After some opening remarks, Lu threw open the session to questions from
the Wall Streeters. One of them, Mike Ounjian, a keen-eyed analyst
with Credit Suisse First Boston, asked about potential problems he’d
spotted with how the company’s income was being counted in the books,
a process known as revenue recognition.
There seemed to be a backlog in the recording, and Ounjian wanted
to know why. If the problems were serious, they could affect the
company’s financial results in the next quarter and might cause the
stock price to dip.
"Are there any issues related to recognizing revenues on
these?" Ounjian asked.
The voice of Michael Sophie, then the company’s interim chief financial
officer, came over the phone line: "Yes, with the backlog, the vast
majority of the wireless backlog is clearly PAS [an acronym for one
of the company’s products, Personal Access System]. I think you saw
the announcement at the end of June where we announced on the PAS
infrastructure orders in China. And again, it’s just the timing of
deployment and achieving final acceptance, we’ve also got some CDMA
[an acronym for a type of mobile phone standard] to a lesser extent
in the backlog. … But Q3 is clearly a little more handset-oriented
than we would typically run."
After analyzing the call, BIA’s employees supplied a 27-page
confidential report to their client, and they singled out Sophie’s
response to the question about revenue recognition for particular
attention. They noted that Sophie qualified his response and referred
back to another announcement from the end of June.
BIA called that kind of conversational reference a "detour statement,"
and its analysts were convinced that Sophie was trying to minimize
the delays. "Mr. Sophie avoids commenting on any issues related to
revenue recognition, and his overall behavior indicates that revenue
recognition problems cannot be ruled out."
Overall, BIA’s team rated the second-quarter conference call as
a "medium high level of concern"- the same rating they’d given
UTStarcom’s call the quarter before. This time, though, the BIA
team found more problems, which they listed in a box on the first
page of their report: "Lacks Confidence," "Underlying Concern,"
"Avoids Providing Information."
In their conclusion, the BIA team said they’d found that the executives
were worried about the timing of the company’s profitability date
and the issue of revenue recognition. The report says: "Management’s
behavior indicates that they will post poor third-quarter results,
and it is also highly unlikely they will achieve profitability in
the fourth quarter."
It might not seem like much, one take on whether the company will
do well in the next six months. But to hedge-fund investors – who
are looking for ways to make money off of falling stocks by selling
short – that is valuable information indeed.
BIA’s client had no way of telling whether the deception analysis
report was accurate or not. It was the client’s job to take the
report, combine it with other information known about UTStarcom and
make a bet for or against the company. And there’s no evidence that
UTStarcom officials weren’t being truthful during the call.
With the benefit of hindsight, though, it’s possible to go back and
check the record to find out what did happen to UTStarcom stock in
the weeks after the call.
It turns out that any investor who shorted UTStarcom at the time
BIA submitted its report would have been in a position to reap
substantial gains.
Over the next month or so after the call of Aug. 2, UTStarcom’s stock
price lost about $1 per share, a nice win for any short seller. But
on Oct. 6, 2005, the company released its third-quarter results,
shocking Nasdaq traders with numbers that were below the guidance
executives had offered during the conference call. In October,
UTStarcom said it expected total revenues of between $620 million
and $640 million, compared with its previous target of $660 million
to $680 million. The next morning, investors frantically sold their
shares: more than 23 million transactions took place on Oct. 7, 2005.
A day after the third-quarter results were released, the stock was
down roughly an additional $2, closing at $5.64. It had been at $8.54
when the BIA team listened in on the conference call in August and
flagged the potential problems with revenue recognition.
And what reason did UTStarcom give for its poor third-quarter
performance? It disclosed difficulties with revenue recognition.