The Informant: A True Story
The Informant: A True Story book cover

The Informant: A True Story

Paperback – July 3, 2001

Price
$11.13
Format
Paperback
Pages
656
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0767903271
Dimensions
5.2 x 1.4 x 8 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

"The Informant is epic in scope, a tale of human foibles--of greed, deceit, and arrogance--and also of the search for truth. Eichenwald has told it masterfully, with the narrative drive of a novel. I guarantee it'll keep you reading late into the night."-- Jonathan Harr, A Civil Action"The Informant is superb reporting in the service of a great story, one with the drama and suspense of a Le Carré novel. Set squarely in the American heartland, delving into the inner sanctum of a global corporation, it explores the shifting boundaries of truth and deception, loyalty and betrayal. It is a remarkable achievement."-- James B. Stewart, Den of Thieves and Blind Eye"The twists and turns of this nonfiction work leave many thrillers in the dust. Eichenwald's spare prose and journalistic eye for detail make the pages fly."-- David Baldacci, Absolute Power and Saving Faith"I would say The Informant reads like Grisham, only nobody ever could have invented these characters. A tale this riveting and this strange could only have been built from truth."-- Sherry Sontag, coauthor, Blind Man's Bluff From an award-winning New York Times investigative reporter comes an outrageous story of greed, corruption, and conspiracy--which left the FBI and Justice Department counting on the cooperation of one man . . . It was one of the FBI's biggest secrets: a senior executive with America's most politically powerful corporation, Archer Daniels Midland, had become a confidential government witness, secretly recording a vast criminal conspiracy spanning five continents. Mark Whitacre, the promising golden boy of ADM, had put his career and family at risk to wear a wire and deceive his friends and colleagues. Using Whitacre and a small team of agents to tap into the secrets at ADM, the FBI discovered the company's scheme to steal millions of dollars from its own customers. But as the FBI and federal prosecutors closed in on ADM, using stakeouts, wiretaps, and secret recordings of illegal meetings around the world, they suddenly found that everything was not all that it appeared. At the same time Whitacre was cooperating with the Feds while playing the role of loyal company man, he had his ownagenda he kept hidden from everyone around him--his wife, his lawyer, even the FBI agents who had come to trust him with the case they had put their careers on the line for. Whitacre became sucked into his own world of James Bond antics, imperiling the criminal case and creating a web of deceit that left the FBI and prosecutors uncertain where the lies stopped and the truth began. In this gripping account unfolds one of the most captivating and bizarre tales in the history of the FBI and corporate America. Meticulously researched and richly told by New York Times senior writer KurtEichenwald, The Informant re-creates the drama of the story, beginning with the secret recordings, stakeouts, and interviews with suspects and witnesses to the power struggles within ADM and its board--including the high-profile chairman Dwayne Andreas, F. Ross Johnson, and Brian Mulroney--to the big-gun Washington lawyers hired by ADM and on up through the ranks of the Justice Department to FBI Director Louis Freeh and Attorney General Janet Reno. A page-turning real-life thriller that features deadpan FBI agents, crooked executives, idealistic lawyers, and shady witnesses with an addiction to intrigue, The Informant tells an important and compelling story of power and betrayal in America Kurt Eichenwald is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and a New York Times bestselling author. He previously wrote about white-collar crime and corporate corruption for the New York Times for twenty years. A two-time winner of the prestigious George Polk award for excellence in journalism and a finalist for the 2000 Pulitzer Prize, he has been repeatedly selected by TJFR Business News Reporter as one of the nation's most influential financial journalists. He is the author of Serpent on the Rock and Conspiracy of Fools . Eichenwald lives in Westchester County, outside New York City, with his wife and three children. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1The large gray van, its windows tinted to block the glances of the curious, pulled away from the Decatur Airport, heading toward Route 105. Inside, four foreign visitors watched as images of the modest town came into view. Working-class houses. An Assembly of God church. A man-made lake. The vast fields of corn that could be seen from the air were no longer visible, replaced instead by an entanglement of industrial plants and office buildings.These were the sights of a thousand other blue-collar neighborhoods in a thousand other Midwestern towns. Still, on this day, September 10, 1992, it was hard not to feel a slight sense of awe. For years, world leaders had seen these images, perhaps from this very van, in a virtual pilgrimage of power. In the last few months alone, this road had been traveled by Mikhail Gorbachev, the former Soviet leader, and by Dan Quayle, the American vice president. Those men, like leaders before them, had been drawn to this out-of-the-way place in the center of America largely by one company and often by one man: Archer Daniels Midland and its influential chairman, Dwayne Andreas.Few Americans were familiar with who Andreas was or what he did. But among the world’s moneyed and powerful, he and his grain processing company were known well. In Washington, anyone who mattered was acquainted with Andreas—or more likely, with his money. For decades, he had been one of the country’s foremost political contributors, heaping cash almost indiscriminately on Democrats and Republicans—this year alone, Andreas money would be used by both George Bush and Bill Clinton in their battle for the presidency. The largesse helped transform Andreas into one of Washington’s most important men, even as he remained comfortably ensconced in its shadows. But it also thrust him into controversy. It was the $25,000 from Andreas that operatives of President Nixon laundered into the bank account of a Watergate burglar. Following the wide-ranging investigations that stemmed from the Watergate scandal, Andreas was tried and acquitted on charges of violating campaign-finance laws—but that was for the $100,000 he gave to Nixon’s 1968 rival, Hubert Humphrey.The foreign visitors traveling to ADM on this day hoped for an opportunity to meet Andreas but were uncertain if they would. At this point, they were scheduled only to speak with others in ADM management, the people who ran its day-to-day business.If all went well, the visitors expected the meeting to last some time. After all, before the day’s end, there were several important things that they needed to learn. But there was also one important thing that they needed to steal.The van turned onto Faries Parkway, heading directly toward ADM’s homely, sprawling complex. Yellow flowers planted along the side of the road did little to soften the effect of the property’s jagged barbed-wire fence. At the main gate, the driver gave a nod to the guard before turning right toward the squat, nondescript building that housed ADM’s top brass. The van came to a stop beside the seven-foot bronze statue of Ronald Reagan, mounted on a two-ton granite base, that Dwayne Andreas had erected to commemorate a 1984 visit by the then-president.Hirokazu Ikeda stepped down from the enormous vehicle, trailed closely by Kanji Mimoto, both senior executives from Ajinomoto Inc., a giant Japanese competitor of ADM. Two other Ajinomoto executives followed—one Japanese, one European. Shading their eyes from the morning sun, the men headed into the building’s lobby and introduced themselves to a receptionist. She placed a call, and within seconds a young, energetic man came bounding down a hallway toward them. It was Mark Whitacre, the thirty-four-year-old president of ADM’s newest unit, the Bioproducts Division. He was a man whom in recent months they had come to know, if not yet to trust.Whitacre smiled as he stepped into the lobby. “Welcome to Decatur,’’ he said, shaking Ikeda’s hand. “And welcome to ADM.“Thank you, Mr. Whitacre,’’ Ikeda said in halting English. “Happy to be here.Whitacre turned and greeted Mimoto, a man closer to his own age who spoke English fairly well. The other two men were strangers; they were introduced to Whitacre as Kotaro Fujiwara, an engineer at the company’s Tokyo headquarters, and J. L. Brehant, who held a similar job at its European subsidiary.With introductions complete, Whitacre escorted the executives down the hallway toward ADM’s huge trading room, the corporate nerve center where it purchased tons of corn, wheat, soybeans, and other farm products for processing each day. On the front wall of the vast room, a screen flashed up-to-the-minute commodity prices. At row after row of desks, an army of traders barked buy and sell orders into telephones.Around the edges of the room were various executive offices, most with the doors open. Whitacre stopped at one office and tapped on the door frame.“Terry?’’ he said. “They’re here.Terry Wilson, head of the company’s corn-processing division, looked up from his desk and smiled. The expression was more a re- flection of strategy than delight; he was hoping to finish with the Ajinomoto executives quickly, in time for an early afternoon round of golf. Like many American businessmen, Wilson often felt frustrated with the Japanese. In negotiations, they seemed loath to horse-trade; they would listen but often retreated into ambiguity, making no specific commitments. Such tactics were considered a sign of virtue in Japan, the vague responses praised as tamamushi-iro no hy¯ogen o tsukau, or “using iridescent expressions.’’ Whatever its elegant description in Japanese, for Westerners like Wilson, a hard-drinking ex-marine, the approach was tiresome. He was not looking forward to it today.Wilson stepped from behind his desk, past a television that was broadcasting the day’s news.“Mr. Ikeda, Mr. Mimoto, it’s been a long time,’’ he said. “You’ve come on a day with such nice weather, it’s a shame you’re not here to play golf.The men chatted about their golf games as Whitacre led them to the executive meeting room, where they found their places around a conference table. A kitchen staffer appeared, serving iced tea, water, and orange juice. As everyone settled in, Whitacre walked to a wall phone and dialed 5505—the extension for Jim Randall, the president of ADM.“Jim, our guests are here,’’ Whitacre said simply. He hung up and returned to his seat.Everyone knew this could be a tense moment. Randall had been at the company since 1968. His skills as an engineer were indisputable; his hands-on role kept the huge processing plants running. Still, the sixty-eight-year-old Randall was no Dwayne Andreas. As much as Dwayne’s smooth and polished style made him the perfect Mr. Outside for ADM, Randall’s gruff, plainspoken approach ensured that he would remain Mr. Inside. He often rubbed people the wrong way, whether he was boasting about his sports cars or ADM’s market dominance. The visitors today expected to hear about the company’s might; they knew that ADM’s invitation to visit was partly for the purpose of scaring them.Randall walked into the room a few minutes later, introduced himself, and took his place alongside Wilson and Whitacre. Instantly he took control of the meeting and the conversation, describing how ADM was transforming itself into a new company.Over slightly less than a century, ADM had grown into a global giant, processing grains and other farm staples into oils, flours, and fibers. Its products were found in everything from Nabisco saltines to Hellmann’s mayonnaise, from Jell-O pudding to StarKist tuna. Soft drinks were loaded with ADM sweeteners and detergents with ADM additives. Americans were raised on ADM: Babies drinking soy formulas were downing the company’s wares; as toddlers, they got their daily dose of ADM from Gerber cereals. The health-minded consumed its products in yogurt and canola oil; others devoured them in Popsicles and pepperoni. While most people had never heard of ADM, almost every American home was stuffed with its goods. ADM called itself “the Supermarket to the World,’’ but in truth it was the place that the giant food companies came to do their grocery shopping.Now, Randall said, ADM was entering a new era. Beginning three years before, in 1989, ADM had taken a new direction, creating the Bioproducts Division. No longer would the company just grind and crush food products. Instead, it was veering into biotechnology, feeding dextrose from corn to tiny microbes. Over time, those microbes, or “bugs” as they were known, convert the sugar into an amino acid called lysine. As people in the business liked to say, the bugs ate dextrose and crapped lysine. In animal feed, lysine bulked up chickens and pigs—just the product needed by giant food companies like Tyson and Conagra.Until ADM came along, the Japanese largely controlled the market, with Ajinomoto the undisputed giant. Start-up costs alone kept out potential competitors—tens of millions of dollars were required just to develop the proprietary, patented microbes needed to ferment lysine. But ADM abounded in cash; it had already invested more than $150 million in the new business. Now, the world’s largest lysine plant was in Decatur, ready to produce as much as 113,000 metric tons a year. And running it all was Whitacre, a whiz-kid scientist who was almost certainly the first Ph.D. ever employed at ADM as the manager of a division.“We’re going to be the largest biochem company in the world,’’ Randall said. “It just makes so much sense for us. We have the raw materials available, we have cheap utilities. It’s just a natural.The Japanese executives listened skeptically but said little. If ADM could produce that much lysine, it would have to gobble up much of the existing market. Building such a huge business struck them as irrational, foolhardy. ADM would have to keep large portions of the plant idle while waiting either for the market to grow or competitors to leave the business. Still, the executives didn’t mind hearing the boasts. They knew that listening as ADM rattled its saber would give them the chance to learn other, truthful information about the company.As Randall spoke, Whitacre and Wilson did their best not to cringe. For all of Randall’s swagger, they knew the most important fact about ADM’s new effort was being left untold: The company couldn’t get the damn plant to work. The bugs went in the vats, the dextrose went in the bugs and out came—very little. In recent months, a virus had turned up repeatedly in the giant fermenters where the lysine was produced, killing the bugs before they produced much of anything. While ADM was producing enough to have a presence in the market, the virus contamination had cost as much as $16 million so far in lost production time alone. And the pressure was really on: Dwayne Andreas had recently suggested shutting down the plant and trying again with a test model. Meanwhile, Dwayne’s son, Mick, who ran much of ADM’s daily business, had been pounding Whitacre for weeks to fix the problem. But after each attempted solution, the virus returned. It was not something to mention to ADM’s chief competitor.Ten minutes into his monologue, Randall pushed himself back from the table.“That tells you about our plant, in a nutshell,’’ he said. “Now, Mark’s going to give you a tour, and we’ll see you back here later for lunch.The Ajinomoto executives thanked Randall and followed Whitacre out the door. He escorted them to his Lincoln Town Car for the short drive to the plant. There, everyone donned hard hats and safety glasses.They started the tour in the upstairs lab, where a handful of tiny flasks were being automatically shaken. Inside each of them was a mixture of dextrose and soy flour feeding a small number of microbes. Even as the group walked past, the microbes were multiplying rapidly. The irony was that those tiny cells of bacteria were the multimillion-dollar heart of this giant operation. They were ADM’s proprietary biological secret that had allowed the company to break Japan’s control of the business.Fujiwara and Brehant asked questions and jotted down notes. The group left the lab, walking past the control room and into the main area of the plant.The Ajinomoto executives hesitated, awed. In front of them was a plant unlike any they had ever seen, a vast acreage of fermenters. Dozens of them were spread across the plant, stainless-steel giants rising ninety feet toward the ceiling.The group headed out onto the plant floor, then down a metal staircase. Fujiwara and Brehant walked near the plant manager as he described the operations. Whitacre and Ikeda were a few steps back.Mimoto, already behind the rest of the group, slowed his pace. He waited until he felt sure that no one was looking. Quickly, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a plastic bag, removing the moist handkerchief inside. He placed the handkerchief on the staircase banister, rubbing it as he walked down the steps. Before anyone noticed, he slipped the handkerchief back into the bag, sealed it, and casually placed it back in his pocket.Mimoto knew that the multimillion-dollar bacteria used by ADM to produce its lysine was growing everywhere in this plant, even places where it could not be seen. He could only hope that, with the handkerchief, he had successfully stolen a sample of it for Ajinomoto.Weeks later, Whitacre was at his desk when the intercom buzzed. It was Liz Taylor, his secretary who sat just a few feet outside his office.“Yeah, Liz, what’s up?“Somebody’s on the phone for you, but I can’t pronounce his name. But he sounds Asian.Whitacre picked up the telephone.“Mark Whitacre.“Hello, Mr. Whitacre?’’ Liz was right. The caller’s Asian accent was thick. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From an award-winning
  • New York Times
  • investigative reporter comes a gripping account of one of the most captivating and bizarre tales in the history of the FBI and corporate America.
  • It was one of the FBI's biggest secrets: Mark Whitacre, a senior executive at Archer Daniels Midland--America's most politically powerful corporation--became a confidential government witness. Putting his career and family at risk, Whitacre, along with a small team of agents, tapped into secrets at ADM that led the FBI to discover the company's scheme to steal millions of dollars from its own customers.But as the FBI and federal prosecutors closed in on ADM, they suddenly found that everything was not all that it appeared. While Whitacre was cooperating with the Feds and playing the role of loyal company man, he also had his own agenda. Whitacre became sucked into his own world of James Bond antics, imperiling the criminal case and creating a web of deceit that left the FBI and prosecutors uncertain where the lies stopped and the truth began.Meticulously researched and richly told,
  • The Informant
  • re-creates the drama of the story, beginning with the secret recordings, stakeouts, and interviews with suspects and witnesses to the power struggles within ADM and its board--including the high-profile chairman Dwayne Andreas, F. Ross Johnson, and Brian Mulroney--to the big-gun Washington lawyers hired by ADM, and on up through the ranks of the Justice Department to FBI Director Louis Freeh and Attorney General Janet Reno.A page-turning real-life thriller that features deadpan FBI agents, crooked executives, idealistic lawyers, and shady witnesses with an addiction to intrigue,
  • The Informant
  • tells an important and compelling story of power and betrayal in America.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Fascinating story, brilliantly written

Were this a review of a novel, I would criticize it for an overcomplicated, convoluted and essentially unbelievable plot. But it is a true story, one that will rivet your attention and leave your head spinning.
The basic story, that the large agri-business Archer Daniels Midland - ADM - was caught in an international price-fixing scam for food additives would merit coverage in Business Week but little else. The key to the story is the informant himself, Mark Whitacre, the President of one of ADM's largest and most successful divisions. Manipulative, deceitful, delusional, sociopathic ... these are accurate but inadequate descriptions of the man who sucked ADM, the FBI and the DOJ into a five-year whirlwind, played out on the headlines of every newspaper in the country; he will suck you in, too.
Who hasn't wondered what kind of knucklehead responds to those crazy scam letters and emails from Nigeria? Actually, so many Americans with access to large amounts of cash responded in the 1980s and 1990s that the FBI had to set up a special liaison office in Lagos to deal with them. Meet Mark Whitacre: brilliant biochemist, builder and President of a hugely successful division of a multi-national corporation; and hopelessly entangled by his crazy belief that he could hit the jackpot by aiding corrupt Nigerian officials. And more, much, much more.
The story will sweep you along, from one unbelievable plot twist to another, not reaching a crescendo until the very end. Great fun. But also a great testament to the American justice system. Battered on all sides by the media and politicians and wealthy corporate defendants and with an utterly unreliable witness, the FBI and the DOJ persevere and see their case through to what seems like a very satisfactory conclusion, all the compromises and plea bargains notwithstanding.
Eichenwald deserves great credit: not only for his real-time coverage of the story in the New York Times and the writing of this brilliant book, but also for the fact that he nearly simultaneously was covering the astonishing demise of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields in the Serpent On The Rock, another amazingly readable true story of human frailty.
29 people found this helpful
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The Great Pretenders

One reads repeatedly that this work of non-fiction reads more like a novel. Unfortunately, it is assembled like a novel, but written like a script. As a prolific reader of NON-fiction, I find it feels a bit too much like Grisham. In this, the author may have taken a trait from his main character.

As a financial professional, especially as one involved in the Anti-Money Laundering (AML) profession, I found the final creshendo of apparently true-to-life plot components laughably parochial. The only shock to those readers from the financial industry will be that the main character and others fell for such nonsense as the Nigerian email scam. In fact, according to this thesis, one could argue that the Nigerian email scam nearly brought down a Fortune 500 company, or at least that it cost ADM the capital pilfered from its coffers by their sucker employees who fell for the silly scam.

The early 90's were a different time in the anti-fraud and anti-money laundering industries. Still, characters who are of some business stature seem, by the narrative, to be oblivious to their massive crimes of embezzelment and money laundering. The FBI here seems likewise unable to comprehend or anticipate the dynamics and motivations of garden-variety embezzlers. I wonder if they were as fooled as the book portrays by the silly, run-of-the mill shareholder ripoffs which took place. The complexity bar has certainly been raised by the players of today.

A great deal of effort has gone in to bringing the story to print. Eichenwald seems to have written a script rather than a book. The form constantly tries to convince you that you are watching it on film. Editing could use some red pens here. Too much detail drags the story and lets us forget the faces of some of the many characters.

Still, Eichenwald proves once again that the truth is much stranger than fiction. This fact is illustrated also in other Amazon reveiws herewith, which appear to include those of a few of the subjects of the book itself. They seem to write true-to-form of the descriptions of Eichenwald.

I have a feeling there could be a sequel.
18 people found this helpful
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but I could not recommend it to anyone

The thousands and thousands of irrelevant and uninteresting details in this book convinced me that the author was thinking more about the possibility of a film than he was in holding my attention. There was not a page when he did not tell you the weather, what a door was made of, the kind of pictures on the walls, or what the characters ordered for breakfast. I have read 3/4 of the book and will skim as quickly as possible the last 1/4, but I could not recommend it to anyone.
11 people found this helpful
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Got Greed?

In short, this is a terrific book - a complex and absorbing read that has all the adrenaline and page-turning mojo of John Grisham's or Joseph Finder's best, while at the same time exposing graft, greed, corruption and bureaucratic bungling that, were this not a true story, would be discarded as being too unbelievable. It is also an exceptional character study, well drawn, sensitive, and convincing - one of those rare books that will have you telling friends and family "You've got to read this book."

Mark Whitaker, the "informant", was a young, high flying, near genius senior executive - a division president in global food processing mega-giant ADM. Whitaker reports an attempt at corporate espionage and extortion from a Japanese competitor, and ADM brings in the FBI to track it down. Soon the case moves from extortion to price fixing, and Whitaker as turned informant, an unprecedented boon for the Feds to have someone on the inside with this much clout and credibility. But as a convoluted story unfolds to the FBI Special Agents working the case, inconsistencies and developments of increasing incredulousness start stacking up, Whitaker's motivations come under scrutiny. Clearly there is more to this guy than he is telling, and a hidden agenda - perhaps multiple hidden agendas - which always seem to be just inches out of the FBI's grasp. The intensity ratchets up as the stories of ADP and Whitaker and the boldness and stupidity of their respective scams escalate, reaching a climax as mind-boggling as the journey there.

Author Kurt Eichenwalt, a reporter for the New York Times, does a remarkable job taking an extremely complex case, arcane anti-trust law, and Mr. Wizard-class science, and making it readable, understandable, and most important, entertaining. And give him credit for keeping politics and political commentary to a minimum - yet whether you're Democrat or Republican, Liberal or Conservative, expect to shocked - if not sickened - at the decidedly unhealthy bond between big business and the politicians whose hands are in their pockets. Sure, you'd be naive not to know corruption at the highest levels is far too common, but the blatant audacity depicted here is beyond frustrating - and all too relevant today as more and more corn-based ethanol finds its way into our gas tanks.

"The Informant" should be required reading for every Business and Law School, but is at the same time deserves broad appeal on the strength of the characters, the painstaking research and detail which adds depth and credibility without adding tedium, and a plot with more twists than a whole season of "The Twilight Zone." There's something for everyone here, and is perhaps the best non-fiction business book of all time, this one should definitely be on your "must read" list.
10 people found this helpful
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1 star

I rarely buy a book, preferring libraries or loaners from friends. I enjoyed the This American Life segment about this story and wanted to read a book on a 24-hour flight. So I bought the book and I've been trying to finish it for over 12 months (very unusual for me and I read all kinds of books). This book is very detailed, which some people might like, but it's way too detailed and the tone is very dry and makes the whole story uninteresting. I don't get a sense of excitement, interest or enthusiasm from the author. Often I get so excited/interested/invested in a book, that I struggle to balance comprehending and the pace of my eyes floating over the text. This hasn't happened for me with this book. I'm disappointed that I bought it and didn't just borrow it from the library, I always finish books, but... this one is a tough read. But.. since I bought it, I'll keep trying to make myself finish it.
9 people found this helpful
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Fantastic!

What a fantastically heavily researched book and the author must by now be quite used to commendation of his smooth and flowing style. Reading like a thriller, this incredible story is breathtaking and has the reader shaking their head. I certainly did and so did others I've spoken to whom have read it. The Informant is primarily Mark Whitacre. To this reader, a pathological liar and deeply disturbed individual. He has the FBI and so many others running in circles. There is price fixing taking place between ADM, other various US corporations as well as Japanese and Korean companies. Lysine, Citric Acid, MSG and many others are all at play here in this saga of greed both corporate and individual. And, once again as has been seen over the years law enforcement agencies are tied up many times in their own MO's rather than working together cohesively. In this case, thankfully, things came together. The I's were dotted and the T's crossed to allow justice to exact at least some good measure of its power. A fantastic read.
6 people found this helpful
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very long, confusing, tedious and boring

This book is a muddling account of the ADM price fixing scandal. It is very long, confusing, tedious, and often boring. The story line is so strange and unclear at times. This book in no way is as good as his book about the Enron scandal. I was very disappointed in it.
6 people found this helpful
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IntriguingTale of Criminal Conspiracy

The Informant is a fast-paced recounting of corporate greed that is exceeded only by personal avarice and delusions of invincibility that constitute the hubris of the main character. The reader is immersed in the details of a scheme by one of the world's largest agricultural companies, ADM, to control prices on a variety of essential products. Not expecting a mole in their midst, they proceed to fix prices with their global counterparts. While ADM schemes to commit a [...] on the general public, there is a scheme afoot to [...] ADM.

The book starts out depicting the informant as a great humanitarian who acts out of altruistic goals. As the tale of the Informant proceeds to unfold, we are no longer sure who the good guys and bad guys are. Worse still, at the end of the book, there are many questions as to the appropriateness of the way in which the government deals with the various participants.

Comparisons have been made with A Civil Action. While both are true stories of major litigation, the Informant does not have the excitement of A Civil Action, where the lawyers risk everything to obtain justice. In the Informant, there is no such risk as the large law firms and the government lawyers are getting paid their hourly rates, regardless of the outcome. Nonetheless, the Informant is a very worthwhile and enjoyable read for its insights into the territorial conflicts between the various sections of Federal law enforcement.
6 people found this helpful
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Unbelievable

It is hard to believe that this book is non-fiction. Without a doubt one of the strangest stories to ever grace the business world. Compared to this story, Martha Stewart's tale is mundane and boring. The book's center character is Mark Whitacre. A corporate insider who works with the FBI in a price fixing case against his employer, Archer Daniels Midland Corp. ("Supermarket to the World"). Every blurb on the covers is true. It is a page turner, hard to put down, fascinating, etc. The first two sections (books), are very easy to follow and read. The third section sometimes gets bogged down in details of the in fighting between Justice Department officials on who is going to try the case, but still it is fairly easy to follow if you check the "Cast of Characters" in the first part of the book. I kept this one on my shelf for over a year, figuring that I couldn't keep up with the corporate world of price fixing, trust violations, complex accounting, etc. I was pleasently surprised. It caught me from page one and anyone with a modicum of intelligence will be able to follow the cast, plot twists, details, and investigation with ease. This books ranks with "Barbarians at the Gate", and "A Civil Action", as the best non-fiction "business true-crime" books of the last decade or so. Mark Whitacre has to rank as the weirdest and most unlikely of corporate executives in history and his motives and behavior careen out of control. Their are plenty of lessons to be taught and learned within the pages of this outstanding work for everyone. Especially for those who believe that, due to birth, talent, money, genius, normal rules and law does not apply to them. It surely does and we are left with a sense that these corporate executives, FBI agents, DOJ attorneys, Defense Attorneys, politicians, are no different that the rest of us. They only had the misfortune to believe their own hype. Don't miss this one!!!!
5 people found this helpful
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Comprehensive and thoroughly researched albeit overlongg

When I saw Kurt's new book on ADM I decided that I had to read it. I read his last book on Prudential, "Serpent on the Rock", some years back and to this day I am still haunted by the corruption and deceit that he narrated so well in that exhaustive and harrowing story.
The book on ADM won't disappoint in that regard. Once again a large and influential corporation decides to bypass the law in favour of greed. I just found that the first two parts of the book (the book is divided into three sections) a bit overlong. Essentially they serve to build up the main protagonist, the informant, going through his various emotional vacillations and motivations for essentially spying on his own company for over three years. In that space of time capturing a damning wealth of evidence against ADM, which serves as the cornerstone of the government's case of price-fixing.
While ADM engaged in price-fixing across all its product lines the government's case rested in the main on one product: lysine. That is what the informant was responsible for as a manager of that division. While it was enough of a case on its own it didn't need over 300 pages to explore all the various meetings that took place the world over to bring out the main point: ADM was engaged in price-fixing and it was clearly illegal and they knew it. It would have been enough to tell a little about the informant and the two FBI agents that served as his mentors as it were. Not to say that they coached him, but rather chaperoned him through this emotionally trying period.
From that it would have been quite enough to focus on one price-fixing meeting, what I call the "smoking gun" meeting in which all the competitors got together, agreed that the consumer was the enemy and drafted an agreement to fix prices and volumes the world over. That's all the reader needs to know. That's also all the anti-trust lawyers needed to see and hear. The rest was just padding. More of the same.
The last part of the book, titled "Nothing Simple is Simple" moves at a much more brisk pace and hence is much more exciting to read. Although I would have liked to have known more about what was going in inside ADM from insiders once the cat was out of the bag. All the reader gets is second hand scuttlebutt.
While I concede that Kurt has done an outstanding job compiling this vast amount of material into a tellable narrative that once again serves to shake our confidence in the ability of companies to self-regulate in the face of the need to produce profits, the material nonetheless could have done with some more careful editing to produce a more compelling story.
I am patiently waiting for Kurt to tell the story of Enron, which I hope that he has already started on.
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