Money | Jon Corzine Corzine Blew Off Risk Officer CRO Michael Roseman went to board of directors with fears By Kevin Spak Posted Dec 6, 2011 8:31 AM CST Copied In this Oct. 20, 2009 file photo, then New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine answers a question during an interview with the Associated Press, in Trenton, NJ. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File) Jon Corzine can’t say that nobody warned him that his bets on European debt might ruin MF Global, because his chief risk officer did just that—repeatedly. Michael Roseman told Corzine that the company didn’t have the cash to handle the risk it was taking on, and that a credit downgrade would have dire consequences, sources tell the Wall Street Journal. He even took the rare step of taking his concerns to the board of directors. But Corzine dismissed Roseman’s doomsday scenarios as unlikely, and told the board that if it didn’t trust his bets, he’d leave the company. The board sided with Corzine, letting him balloon the company’s exposure to European sovereign debt from $1.5 billion in late 2010 to $6.3 billion just before its October bankruptcy. Roseman ultimately left the company in March. Read These Next Salesforce CEO's ICE joke leaves employees fuming. A federal judge backed Mark Kelly in his fight against Pete Hegseth. Elon Musk responds to the mass exodus at xAI. He evaded arrest for 16 years, but his luck ran out at the Olympics. Report an error