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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Sets Sights On Bankers

JIM KUHNHENN   01/ 8/10 06:25 AM ET   AP

Meltdown Investigation

WASHINGTON — Two blocks from the Treasury, where the government not long ago scrambled to save a collapsing financial system, a team of investigators armed with subpoena powers is preparing the official narrative of the crisis and what went wrong.

As Washington focuses on Congress' regulatory response to the 2008 Wall Street meltdown, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission that Congress created last spring has been an afterthought.

Until now.

On Wednesday and Thursday, the commission will hold its first public hearings featuring a gallery of the nation's top bank executives – Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, John Mack of Morgan Stanley and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America.

"The irony here is it's as if there was an earthquake and the only buildings standing today are the buildings that were at the epicenter of the earthquake," the commission's chairman, Phil Angelides, said in an interview Thursday. "You have millions of people unemployed, millions have lost their homes, and Wall Street is having a record year with record profits and record bonuses. People want to understand why."

Angelides is the Democratic former California treasurer. His vice chairman is Republican Bill Thomas, a former congressman who chaired the House Ways and Means Committee. Together they lead a 10-member bipartisan commission with an ambitious mandate and limited time.

They were interviewed jointly Thursday in a small, spare conference room in an eighth-floor office suite on Pennsylvania Avenue within sight of the White House and the Treasury building.

Despite their different party labels, both men say that because they aim to explain the crises – not issue recommendations on how to avoid the next one – their work should be fairly nonpartisan.

Still, Angelides and Thomas said the commission could also offer proposed remedies or alternatives if there is strong consensus about the causes of the crisis.

The two men shrugged off decisions by President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats to proceed with a regulatory overhaul before the commission's work is done. They said the commission's final findings could still inform future legislation and could be a resource for regulators and for the industry itself.

Thomas in particular displayed impatience with bankers who worry that some additional government scrutiny and transparency will impair the industry.

"We came close to the worst thing in the world," Thomas said. "So whenever you hear from these people, 'Well, this will make us not to do this and not to do that,' I immediately flip it from negative to positive and say, 'Yeah, and so?'"

Both agreed that the crisis was the result of failures by individuals specifically and by the banking system in general. But in featuring the bankers at its first public hearings, the commission is sending a clear message that the first part of the narrative starts with the chief executives.

The commission is modeled on the 9/11 panel that examined the causes of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. But its prototype could be the so-called Pecora Commission, the Senate committee that investigated Wall Street abuses in 1933-34. It was named after Ferdinand Pecora, the committee's chief lawyer.

On this point, Thomas and Angelides part ways.

"Nobody remembers the Pecora Commission," Thomas protested. "The press created the knowledge of the Pecora Commission. C'mon, it's mostly not applicable."

"Here's where I think it is," Angelides countered. "It is different than the 1930s, but I do think there is a raw hunger for people to know."

Congress instructed the new commission to explore 22 issues, ranging from the effect of monetary policy on terms of credit and government fiscal imbalances to bank compensation structures.

Thomas said the commission's inquiry should include a look at the consequences of the 1999 repeal of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act that forced the separation of commercial and investment banks. Without the act, banks were unrestrained, Thomas said.

"It was wide open country, which I think is part of the problem in terms of not having a mental, financial, almost moral, obligation anymore because there is no backstop," he said.

And while Angelides said the commission's job was not to redebate the merits of the $700 billion bank bailout, he also said the commission's inquiry does not end at the height of the crisis in fall 2008.

"We start with the belief that the financial crisis is not a past-tense phenomenon," he said.

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WASHINGTON — Two blocks from the Treasury, where the government not long ago scrambled to save a collapsing financial system, a team of investigators armed with subpoena powers is preparing the ...
WASHINGTON — Two blocks from the Treasury, where the government not long ago scrambled to save a collapsing financial system, a team of investigators armed with subpoena powers is preparing the ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
09:53 PM on 01/09/2010
martin2. You are exactly on mark about the ignoble Bill Clinton. After his presidency he sold himself to the highest bidder while bringing in the sheaves for the "favors" to the financial and other interests. He demeaned the Office of the President.
I recognize that President Reagan went to Japan and received his monetary "thank you" for selling out our country to their manufacturing and trade interests. But Clinton showed not the least bit of inhibition or shame as greed and avarice invaded his soul. Our democracy is forever tarnished.
(I was a long life Democrat until President Obama doublecrossed the poorer and middle class Americans. I wrote my Senator and told him so and why. He still writes me. Obama sends propaganda mass mailings).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greihing
07:10 PM on 01/09/2010
I hope they look into the buyer of the 1.7 milion shares against Bear Sterns just a couple of days before it tanked. I wonder if it was the same guy that also short sold Lehman Bros.

The ability to perfom market manipulation needs to be explored.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
05:49 PM on 01/08/2010
BL813. I can only commisserate with you and your family. We are a nation led by dishonorable leaders. And we appear to be powerless to do anything about it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BK813
06:14 PM on 01/08/2010
Head of nail; squarely hit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TJCole
11:37 AM on 01/08/2010
First Nationalize all these corrupt Major Banks and Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley so we can fix things while doing that, we can then decide who goes to jail...!
11:32 AM on 01/08/2010
Let me guess the chairman is a former Golden Stacks employee?
11:01 AM on 01/08/2010
Gee another 80,0000 jobs lost
i'll love to see how the bankster neocons on the Obammi cabinet try to spin this positive
hat tip to http://iamned-site.blogspot.com

We're all getting tired of this 'improving' BS. More jobloss is not improvement.
04:34 PM on 01/08/2010
SPAM!!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
10:57 AM on 01/08/2010
What they should convene is the largest group of highly qualified and highly motivated criminal Prosecutors to go after these goons. Charge them with RICO, seize their assets under that, and then convict them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sama3033
10:42 AM on 01/08/2010
My first response to the headline is is Duh! Who else are they going to look at? - second, that there even is a Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission...I'd never heard of it - probably because it had been buried in some back office, underfunded and forgotten and third, that the commission just needs to walk down to Giethner and Larry Summers offices and ask WTF??????
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10:42 AM on 01/08/2010
"The irony here is it's as if there was an earthquake and the only buildings standing today are the buildings that were at the epicenter of the earthquake," the commission's chairman, Phil Angelides, said in an interview Thursday. "You have millions of people unemployed, millions have lost their homes, and Wall Street is having a record year with record profits and record bonuses. People want to understand why."

actually, what i want is to prosecute these financial TERRORI$T banksters who raped our economy, impose harsh jail sentences, and claw backs just like they are supposedly doing with madoff.

there have been NO prosecutions so far of the banksters who turned our economy into an unregulated casino on the way up, then paid off congress to bail them out with Trillions of our tax dollars on the way down, and are now buying up hyper-deflated assets that they destroyed for pennies as this false wall street recover begins.

This is the largest redistribution of wealth in history to the elite bankster$ and wealthiest few in our country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BK813
04:33 PM on 01/08/2010
I'll go you one better; convict them of treason, because that is exactly what it is. Try them and execute them.

And not this wimpy lethal injection junk either. In the words of the late George Carlin, "Let's bring back boiling people in oil!" Better yet, perhaps we should hang them from the street lights all down Wall Street and leave them there as a warning to other bankers. I bet that would curb the corruption pretty darn fast.

Alas, I know it won't happen, but I can always dream.
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10:40 AM on 01/08/2010
Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack and Citigroup Chairman Richard Parsons didn't show up to meet the president will they show up for this or just flip off these guys too?
10:21 AM on 01/08/2010
if they start with the premise that these boys were selling the equivalent of cattle infected with mad cow disease , or salmonella they will have the right context for their questions.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jeb50
Retired.
10:17 AM on 01/08/2010
Laws are worthless when not enforced. Along with the banker's who caused this collaspe the heads of Treasury, SEC and Fed. should all be brought to court.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
10:14 AM on 01/08/2010
If the facts are uncovered and disclosed we will discover that our financial system and economic possibility is at an all time low. We are in much worst condition than the 1930's. The only force keeping our economy upright is the force of borrowed money. That stimulus is running out. We will see unemployment unparalleled in American history. And our manufacturing keeps deteriorating and our people continued to atrophy from idleness and forgetfulness. My creative, innovative engineering son has been unemployed for over a year. His wife is about to lose her job as the equity group owners sell the exploited company at break-even or profit. They will default on their home mortgage.
The government must swing away from Wall Street and big banks toward producing and rebuilding to benefit a modern society and working productive citizens. In the absence of a private economy, the government must create millions of jobs. Jobless, anchorless people are social dynamite who could replace our democracy. We must act wisely and courageously (with sacrifice) if we are not to face catastrophe.
11:21 AM on 01/08/2010
Applause and more applause. You not only summed up the reasons for our economic disaster with clear analysis, you put heart into it with your son's story. I would love to see your comment expanded and published in a larger format because you write to well. Keep up the good work and fingers crossed for your talented son.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BK813
05:06 PM on 01/08/2010
Two big thumbs up!!! I would also like to see your piece expanded.

My wife and I are suffering much like your son and daughter-in-law. I owned a small business with my parents and our assets were the collateral against the start-up loans. Our sales collapsed with the economy, banks - even the bailed out ones who were supposed to lend to companies like us - won't help us and there is no hope in sight. Now my parents, as well as my wife and I, are in serious trouble financially. To say the wolf is at the door is an understatement. He is in the house, sitting in my recliner, drinking a beer and watching TV.

I remain thankful that my wife still has her job. Unfortunately, it isn't enough to cover everything and we're already 4 months behind on the mortgage, but trying to work things through a forbearance. The problem is that you never get caught up that way, so we will likely be tossed out sometime in the near future.

(More coming)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BK813
05:10 PM on 01/08/2010
(Continued)

To go from being a man who owned his own business, making a modest $42K per year and having a FICO around 785; to being an employee for an electronics store, earning minimum wage plus a paltry commission with a FICO that's likely in the negative teens by now, has been a tough pill to swallow. Yet, just like many others, I have two kids to feed, so I choke down my pride and do what I have to do to survive.

When I hear stories like yours and mine, then start thinking of how the fat cats who caused it, not only got away with it, but were allowed to profit from it to the tune of millions of dollars each; let's just say that rage, contempt and hatred just aren't strong enough to describe my feelings. When will the folks like us ever get the help we need?

Thanks again for your story. I wish your son and his wife the best of luck. Hopefully, all of us will get through this mess in one piece. The sad part is that we have to in the first place.
09:58 AM on 01/08/2010
Example why we the middle class are sc---d.
After leaving office former President Clinton spoke at Goldman & Sacks 1/2 hr fee $400,000
Why was G$S so generous?
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09:57 AM on 01/08/2010
"You have millions of people unemployed, millions have lost their homes, and Wall Street is having a record year with record profits and record bonuses. People want to understand why."

It's WAY behind why, the real question is why there isn't proactive legislation to make sure the financial system never has the ability to do this again. It's proven the system cannot self regulate as Greenspan
stated. It's proven that the system cannot learn and initiate proper fiscal behavior. Still we have an institution run by adolescents who juggle grenades for their own pleasure. Legislation should have begun months ago.