Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, had already had a pretty good week as he and his family traveled to Hartford last Thursday for a Bruce Springsteen show.
The day before, he sued Bank of America, seeking $1 billion in a mortgage-related case. And Rajat K. Gupta, the most prominent defendant in his sweeping crackdown on insider trading, received a two-year prison sentence.
But at the concert, things got even better for Mr. Bharara, who has made no secret of his fierce devotion to Bruce.
Before ripping into âDeath to My Hometown,â a rollicking Celtic-inspired anthem, Mr. Springsteen shouted, âThis is for Preet Bharara!â (Here is a YouTube clip; Mr. Springsteen name checks Mr. Bharara at about 22 seconds in.)
The song's lyrics, which are about the effect of the economic crisis, apply to Mr. Bharara's line of work. As much as anyone else, the prosecutor, who was featured on the cover of Time magazine earlier this year with the headline âThis Man Is Busting Wall Street,â has become the public face of the government's efforts to prosecute white-collar crime.
Sounding angry, Mr. Springsteen sings:
Send the robber barons straight to hell.
The greedy thieves who came around
And ate the flesh of everything they found.
The rest of the stanza, though, hits on a criticism of Mr. Bharara and his Justice Department colleagues:
Whose crimes have gone unpunished now,
Who walk the streets as free men now.
Critics have faulted the Obama administration for not prosecuting the banking and mortgage-industry executives. Mr. Bharara and others have countered that much of the behavior was unethical and irresponsible, but not necessarily criminal. And they also point out that they have brought thousands of mortgage-fraud cases, including civil actions against some of the country's biggest banks.
So was M r. Springsteen's dedication meant as praise or criticism? It is unclear, but presuming that Mr. Springsteen knew that Mr. Bharara was at the show, it is unlikely he would have criticized him. (Mr. Springsteen's has a famously fraught relationship with Chris Christie, the Republican governor of New Jersey and a well-known Springsteen fanatic. At concerts, Mr. Springsteen has refused to acknowledge the governor, according to this article in The Atlantic.)
A spokeswoman for Mr. Springsteen declined to comment on whether the singer knew that Mr. Bharara was at the show.
The prosecutor did give a brief interview to a reporter at The Daily News who attended the Hartford concert. He said that when Bruce gave him a shout-out, âAll I could think was, my son for the first time thought his dad was really cool.â
Mr. Bharara, 44, grew up in Springsteen country. Born in India, Mr. Bharara came to the United States with his parents as an infant. He was raised in Eato ntown, N.J., in Monmouth County, just a short drive from Mr. Springsteen's hometown of Freehold, N.J. Earlier this year in an appearance on âThe Charlie Rose Show,â Mr. Bharara was asked about his passion for Mr. Springsteen.
âIf I could cite to Jon Stewart who I think expressed it best what is great about Bruce Springsteen - I`ll never forget what he said somewhere after coming back from the Springsteen concert he said to his studio audience. He said, âDo you like joy? If you like joy, you should go see a Springsteen concert,'â Mr. Bharara said. âAnd I think separate and apart from all those other things you are talking about and the way he talks about America and the way he talks about people and the way he talks about justice, there is a lot of joy.â
There has been little joy this week in Monmouth County, much of which runs along the coast and was among the hardest hit by Hurricane Sandy. At a concert in Rochester on Wednesday, Mr. Springsteen ex pressed deep sadness over the damage wrought by the storm. âWe're a band that you can't separate from the Jersey Shore,â he said. âA glorified bar band at your service.â
On Friday, Mr. Springsteen will headline a telethon to aid victims of the hurricane. As for Mr. Bharara, he has been without power at his home in Westchester County and at the United States attorney's office in Lower Manhattan, which has been closed all week.
In an e-mailed statement, Mr. Bharara expressed sympathy for the storm's victims.
âIn the wake of such devastation, it's heartening to see people come together to, as Bruce would say, take care of our own,â Mr. Bharara said. âThat's what good people always do.â