Stanford's wife sues lawyer for $200m
HOUSTON (Bloomberg) — Susan Stanford, the estranged wife of accused Ponzi scheme mastermind Allen Stanford, is suing her former divorce lawyer for failing to tell her of a verbal offer to settle her divorce for $200 million last year.
Susan Stanford wants lawyer Nancy Rommelmann to pay her that amount now for alleged negligence and breach of fiduciary duty for not passing along the offer at a January 2008 hearing. Stanford is asking for "$200 million plus" in damages, interest and attorneys fees in a complaint filed last week in state court in Houston, according to the court's website.
"If the plaintiff had been made aware of the substantial sum offered as settlement in her divorce proceedings, she would have readily accepted," Susan Stanford's current attorney, Michael P. Mallia, said in the complaint. By the time his client learned of the offer, "the substantial community property assets at issue in her divorce proceedings had been seized or frozen", he said.
Susan Stanford filed for divorce in November 2007, more than a year before the US Securities and Exchange Commission seized the financier's assets on accusations he ran a $7 billion scheme involving the sale of certificates of deposit through his Antiguan bank.