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    Operation Broken Trust: Such An Apt Name

     

    If you've been skeptical about the DoJ’s hype on ‘ever-widening investigations into financial fraud that caused the financial crisis’, it appears that to date your cynicism has been justified. 

    On Dec. 6 U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder held a news conference to praise the results of Operation Broken Trust, part of Obama's Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force  which he called “a critical step forward in law enforcement’s work to protect American investors.”   Operation Broken Trust began Aug. 16 and  Holder announced that it’s resulted in 231 cases against 343 criminal defendants as of Dec. 1. All told there were 64 arrests, 158 indictments or complaints, 104 convictions and 87 sentencings, according to the Justice Department’s tally. Holder also credited the operation with 60 civil suits against 189 defendants.  He hearts the many agencies involved in the operation.

    He calls the financial losses the criminal cases alone “staggering” at $8.3 billion.  Of course, if you divide that amount by the number of cases and defendants, you get…well, chickenfeed as compared to the trillions of dollars of  fraud at the heart of the recent economic meltdown.

    Now we all want the public to have more faith that they are playing on level playing fields when they invest, so it’s hard to complain that investigations and prosecutions are happening, and they are netting some sick fraud schemes and Bad Folks.  But by and large, when I started poking around for opinions about the scope and verisimilitude of the operation as to targets, I found barely disguised mockery, frustration, anger, and dismissal from the folks who believe that the Big Guns in the field of economics are vocal about the need for true investigations and prosecutions of The Big Players in order for the economy to recover: Joseph Stiglitz, William Black, Chris Whalen, James Galbraith, and many others.

    So if this all looks like a pose, it seems to be.  We want to know why none of the Big Banks have been touched, and only relative Small Fry are in the task force’s cross-hairs.  While discussing Broken Trust, Phil Trupp writing at Huffpo claims that so far the investigations ‘would make Machiavelli smile’.  His story of a recent SEC prosecution is discouraging, to say the least:

    “For example, one of the putative insider scores recently hailed by the SEC was the indictment of a group of blue collar railway workers** who, observing various teams of "suits" taking notes and huddling with rail executives, formed an investment club and bet the railroad operation was up for sale. They were right, and the workers made about $1 million on their hunch. The SEC said these employees were privy insider information. Soon afterward, New York Times columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin wondered if the SEC might be Goliath stomping on an innocent David. Just exactly what constitutes insider trading, Sorkin asked? He believes the rail workers were acting on the obvious and playing a hunch -- hardly a criminal offense.”

    Gotta go out and get those rail workers, though.

     Jesse Eisenger of ProPublica quotes lead prosecutor of Enron, John Hueston as asking,  

    “Have they committed the resources in the right place? Do these scandals warrant apparent national priority status?  Nobody from Lehman, Merrill Lynch or Citigroup* has been charged criminally with anything. No top executives at Bear Stearns have been indicted. All former American International Group executives are running free. No big mortgage company executive has had to face the law.

    How about someone other than Fabrice Tourre, known as the Fabulous Fab, at Goldman Sachs? How could the Securities and Exchange Commission merely settle with Countrywide’s Angelo Mozilo, and for a fraction of what he made as chief executive?

    The world was almost brought low by the American banking system, and we are supposed to think that no one did anything wrong?”

    Eisenger continues:

    “The most popular reason offered for the dearth of financial crisis prosecutions is the 100-year flood excuse: The banking system was hit by a systemic and unforeseeable disaster, which means that, as unpleasant as it may be to laymen, it’s unlikely that anyone committed a crime.

    Or, barring that wildly implausible explanation (because, indeed, many people saw the crash coming and warned about it), the argument is that acting stupidly and recklessly is no crime.

    As I ride the subway every morning, I often fantasize about criminalizing stupidity and fecklessness. But alas, it’s not to be.

    Andrew Ross Sorkin at the Times seems almost amused by Holder’s claim that Wall Street and corporations are taking heed of Holder’s strong message:

    “It all sounded quite important, and the program’s slogan is pretty catchy. But after you get past the pandering sound bites, a question comes to mind: is anyone in the corner offices of Wall Street’s biggest firms or corporate America’s biggest companies paying any attention to Mr. Holder’s “strong message”?

    Of course not. (I actually called some chief executives after Mr. Holder’s news conference, and not one had heard of Operation Broken Trust.)

    That’s because in the two years since the peak of the financial crisis, the government has not brought one criminal case against a big-time corporate official of any sort.

    Instead, inexplicably, prosecutors are busy chasing small-timers: penny-stock frauds, a husband-and-wife team charged in an insider trading case and mini-Ponzi schemes.”

    Jonathan Weil writing for Bloomberg spent time digging into the criminal prosecutions, and found some irregularities, and noticed that some of the cases had begun well before the creation of the task force.  He says: By all outward appearances, it seems the Justice Department either doesn’t want to prosecute systemically important frauds, or doesn’t know how. Or maybe it’s both. It wasn’t always this way. More than a thousand felony convictions followed the savings-and-loan scandal of the 1980s and early 1990s. Some of the biggest kingpins, such as Charles Keating of Lincoln Savings & Loan, went to jail. With this latest financial crisis, there’s been no such accountability. Operation Broken Trust may be a fitting name. Unfortunately it’s for all the wrong reasons. The public already knows not to trust the government. Flimflam P.R. stunts such as this one at least offer us a useful reminder of why.”

     

    * ProPublica highlighted on November 18 that the SEC will investigate Citigroup’s CDOs as part of the run-up to the financial crisis.

    ** All bolds mine.

    (to be cross-posted at MyFDL.com)

     

     

    Comments

    "Citigroup Hires Peter Orszag, Former OMB Chief"

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/12/10/ciitgroup-hires-peter-ors_n_794880.html

    Ha Ha Ha!


    SSSSSsssssshhhhhhhhhhhhh!!! He's actually a plant, working for Holder's DOJ. It's a "continuing investigation," you see. The investigation ain't scheduled to end until about the time Holder becomes VP at Goldman Sachs.


    Somewhat related ... not entirely sure how this works ... but I think Bernie Sanders is doing a filibuster over the tax agreement. He's been talking forever and keeps referring to things with a "I'll get more into that later".

    His speechifying is great ... he's nailing fact after fact. On c-span


    Thanks, kgb.  I put up that video on somebody's blog in which he said he'd do 'anything' to block the damned bill!  He never said 'Yes' when he was asked directly about filibustering, but that dear old wag!


    Justice just rolled all of its usual investigations into penny ante ponzi schemes together and called it an operation.  Wake me up when some indictments come down from the insider trading investigation.  Though I'm not holding my breath, insider trading is tough to prove and everybody learned from Martha that when the FBI asks you questions it's best just not to answer.


      We won't need to wake you up; nobody's going to jail this time.  Even insider-trading is small potatoes compared to the massive fraud committed on the Americans and the world,

    SIDESHOW!


    William Cohan, the reporter, former Wall Street investor and NYT columnist said the way to stop fraud on Wall Street with one regulation is each firm's top 100 exec's in pay must collateralize their entire net worth in a CDO, and if the firm goes under these CDO's get collected on first and foremost, and the executives are wiped out, before the stockholders or bond holders.

    The only broken trust there is is the broken trust of the Obama base for Obama, and you could throw Holder in too. Once you lose trust, you never get it back.


    We might not agree with Cohan altogether on some issues, but this is a pretty fun fix, all right, NCD.

    Main problem with the losing trust piece is that so many people haven't a clue about what's going on.  Have any idea how many newspapers, for instance, are playing it straight on Broken Trust and 'insider trading investigations'?  Waaay too many, and they don't do follow-up, so it sounds good---and tough; 'New Sheriff in Town' crapola..  I don't guess I think the Obama base has quite broken yet myself, but Lord love a duck, there are two more years to go.  What else can he needlessly negotiate away? 

    But we'll see his approval ratings haven't moved much for now.  Hmmm.  All we can do for now is be active in the ways we can, and see what percolates, I guess.  Bernie may have juiced up things a bit, anyway.  Goddam dear Socialist!  Keep the faith, brother; we gotta keep each other going.


    Are we supposed to think that nobody did anything wrong?

    No. Some one is doing something wrong all the time on Wall Street. When the market's going up, down or flat. So of course we should think that somebody was doing something wrong .But that doesn't mean that's what  caused  the financial crisis. Nor that  prosecuting them will either fix the current financial crisis or prevent the next one.

    There are very smart people on either side of  every major financial  transaction. If one side were actually doing anything illegal the other side would be a lot better equipped to detect that than the SEC or the DOJ . And to call in the cops. (unless they could somehow make some money from not calling them in.)

    Our problem is not Wall St, crooks  acting individually or in a conspiracy. It's generation after generation of  honest conservative academics who  preach the supposed  virtues of the self - regulating market.

     Which only exists in their imagination..

     

     

     

     


    LOL!  You kinda skirt around all the fraud that caused the housing bubble, don't you?  And the clouded MERS mortgages that are tanking housing prices again?  Unless the rules are changed, regulators empowered, and fraudsters prosecuted to the full extent of the law, there won't be any confidence rebuilt in the system. 

    They may be shrewd, but not necessarily smart, those hedge-funders and casino gamblers, Flavius.  ;o)  And many have already found their ways around the minimal fin-reg rules that the White House allowed to be enacted. 

    You may not have noticed how neo-Liberal economics sorta ran with those self-regulating market ideas, but it's time to reign them in.  And this administration was all down with 'enforcing regulatory laws that already exist.  This is a sham, a pretense; a cynical ploy to pretend that Wall Street will quake at our rigorous attempts to hold Wall Atreet fraudsters accountable.  Phooey; Obama is interested in protecting the banks and the big corporations.  God save us all.

    But you're right: There is no Invisble Hand, and can we let go of freaking Adam Smith, who essentiall protected the aristocracy for capitalism?


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