Boesky, at the time worth $130 million, was convicted of insider trading. He helped finger Michael Milken, who was worth $700 million when he was released from prison after serving two years of a ten-year sentence. Meanwhile the 1986 class is having trouble finding jobs, and when it comes time for them to invest in their children's education, a good portion of their income will still be paying for the S & L deficit -- which was partially caused by Milken's junk-bond trading. It all fits.
Den of Thieves is basically a biography of Boesky, Milken, Dennis
Levine, and Martin Siegel -- all convicted for Wall Street crimes. Author
James Stewart, an editor at the Wall Street Journal, makes Oliver Stone
look like he was guilty of understatement in his movie "Wall Street."
ISBN 0-671-63802-5
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