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Too Big To Jail? Executives Unscathed As Regulators Let Banks Report Criminal Fraud

Huffington Post Investigative Fund   First Posted: 7/3/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 5/25/11 05:20 PM ET

Too Big To Jail

Republished from the Huffington Post Investigative Fund.

The financial crisis has spawned hundreds of criminal prosecutions for alleged fraud. Yet so far, defendants have been mostly minor players such as real-estate agents, mortgage brokers, borrowers and a few low-level bank employees. No senior executives at large financial institutions face criminal charges.

That's in stark contrast to prosecutions during the savings and loan scandal two decades ago, when the government's strategy targeted and snagged some of banking's most powerful players. The approach back then succeeded in sending scores of S&L executives to prison, as well as junk-bond king Michael Milken and business tycoon Charles Keating Jr.

One explanation for the difference may be that key bank regulators -- who did the detective work during the S&L crisis and sent more than 1,000 criminal referrals to prosecutors -- have this time left reporting fraud up to the banks themselves.

Spokesmen for two chief regulators, the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision, say that they have not sent prosecutors a single case for criminal prosecution.

An OTS spokesman said the agency, much like the banks themselves, does not see much evidence of criminal fraud inside the financial institutions. The spokesman, Bill Ruberry, citing the agency's enforcement director, said, "There may be some isolated cases, but certainly there's no widespread patterns."

That surprises William K. Black, a former OTS official who helped coordinate criminal investigations during the S&L crisis.

"Dear God," Black said when told bank regulators haven't made any criminal referrals. "Not a single one?"

Black sees many signs the the government is less aggressive than during the S&L era -- and could result in more bad behavior.

"This crisis was not bad luck," he said. "It was done to us. When you bring those convictions, you hope that at least for a while to deter."

Banks have reported massive amounts of fraud to the Treasury Department but have not held themselves -- or their top executives -- responsible, instead pinning blame on borrowers, independent mortgage brokers, and others.

That may account for the dearth of prosections against big fry. For instance, in California, among states where the mortgage meltdown hit hardest, the Huffington Post Investigative Fund identified 170 mortgage fraud prosecutions in federal courts. Only two are against employees of a regulated lender.

An Investigative Fund analysis shows that two-thirds of the 170 prosecutions are against mortgage brokers, real-estate professionals or borrowers -- the same groups blamed by the banks when they report suspicious activities to regulators.

Besides the absence of criminal referrals, other plausible factors for the lack of major prosecutions may include a skittishness among prosecutors about filing cases they could have trouble winning, and a severe decline in investigative resources. The FBI dramatically shifted resources away from white-collar crime after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

To be sure, there are also notable differences between the S&L and current financial crisis, in the behavior of lenders during both periods, and between civil allegations of fraud and proving that someone committed a crime -- all of which could account for the lack of big prosecutions.

But interviews with several law enforcement authorities suggest another explanation: A lack of active assistance to prosecutors by bank regulators who played key roles during the S&L crackdown. Those regulators sent detailed reports to prosecutors of known and suspicious criminal activity.

"Only the regulators can make a lot of these cases," Black said. "The FBI can make a few, but the regulators are the ones that understand the industry."

Under intense political pressure in the late 1980s, the Justice Department and thrift regulators developed a strategy to thoroughly investigate failed S&Ls for evidence of fraud and to focus their resources on the highest ranking executives.

In the early years, between 1987 and 1989, there were more than 300 prosecutions. Some bank executives were already behind bars. In 1989, Woody Lemons, chairman of Vernon Savings and Loan in Texas, was sentenced to 30 years.

In June 1990, then-OTS director Timothy Ryan told Congress that his agency had established criminal-referral units in each of 12 district offices. In addition, more than 30 OTS employees were assigned as full-time agents of grand juries or assistant US attorneys to help prosecutions. And the agency prioritized prosecutions to a Top 100 list, targeting senior S&L executives and directors.

While data on criminal referrals during the S&L crisis is spotty, the Government Accountability Office reported that in the first ten months of 1992 alone -- a random snapshot -- financial regulators sent the Justice Department more than 1,000 cases for criminal prosecution.

One study showed that 35 percent of criminal referrals in Texas -- ground zero for the S&L problems -- were against officers and directors.

This time, prosecutors are relying more heavily on banks to report suspicious activity to the Treasury Department. Banks are required to report known or suspected criminal violations, including fraud, on Suspicious Activity Reports designed for the purpose. In effect, the reports, which can be many pages in length, provide substantive leads for criminal investigations.

Black scoffs at the strategy of leaving it to banks to ferret out all the fraud. "Institutions will not make criminal referrals against the people who control the institutions," said Black.

A white-collar criminologist and law professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, he argues that there's ample evidence of fraud. Insiders working for lenders openly referred to loans they made without proof of income as "liar loans." Many banks actively sought inflated appraisals in their rush to make as many loans as possible. As previously reported by the Investigative Fund, such lending practices contributed to the demise of Washington Mutual.

Not everyone agrees that such a case can be successful. Benjamin Wagner, a U.S. Attorney who is actively prosecuting mortgage fraud cases in Sacramento, Calif., points out that banks lose money when a loan turns out to be fraudulent. An investor in loans who documents fraud can force a bank to buy the loan back. But convincing a jury that executives intended to make fraudulent loans, and thus should be held criminally responsible, may be too difficult of a hurdle for prosecutors.

"It doesn't make any sense to me that they would be deliberately defrauding themselves," Wagner said.

So far, only sporadic news reports suggest that the Justice Department has ongoing criminal investigations against major banks such as Washington Mutual and Countrywide, as well as investment bank Goldman Sachs.

Fewer Cops on the Beat

The Justice Department, in response to written questions from the Investigative Fund, acknowledged the absence of criminal referrals from financial regulators. A new Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, formed by President Obama last fall, was trying to work out communication problems between Justice and the regulatory agencies, according to the head of the task force, Robb Adkins. Adkins has said that criminal referrals from regulators have been "too often the exception to the rule."

At a Congressional hearing in December, Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer was asked why there have been no criminal cases brought yet against CEOs. "Don't for a moment think [these cases] aren't being investigated," Breuer replied. "They are complicated cases. It took a long time in hatching them and developing them. But they will be brought."

The system that tracks Suspicious Activity Reports, or SARs, detected a dramatic increase in mortgage fraud starting in 2003, when reports of mortgage fraud nearly doubled within a year from 5,400 to 9,500. By 2007, the number had exploded to 53,000. During those same years, many mortgage lenders dramatically lowered their lending standards. Banks often required no proof of income. Borrowers could even get loans without be able to repay them.

Yet in their reports, banks overwhelmingly have blamed others for fraud. Whenever a borrower's income was wrong on a loan application, the banks fingered borrowers 87 percent of the time and independent mortgage brokers 64 percent of the time, according to a 2006 Treasury analysis of the SARs. But the bank's own employees were almost never blamed -- only about four times in every 1,000 reports.

That might explain why so few prosecutions have targeted bank insiders.

Another reason for fewer prosecutions against bank employees is that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has far fewer agents working on the current crisis. Deputy Director John Pistole testified before Congress last year that the bureau had 1,000 people working on the S&L crisis at its height. That compares to about 240 agents working on mortgage fraud cases last year.

The FBI dramatically shifted its resources away from white-collar crime and to terrorism after the Sept. 11 attacks.

"We just didn't have the cops on the beat" during the recent crisis, said Sen. Ted Kaufman, the Delaware Democrat who conducted a hearing on the lack of criminal prosecutions. "I was around during the savings and loan crisis [as a Congressional aide] and we had a lot more folks working it when it went down."

Even with additional funding from Congress, which Kaufman helped push through, the FBI is budgeted to have 377 people working mortgage fraud cases this year, about a third as many as during the S&L investigations.

Charges Harder to Prove?

Charges in the recent banking crisis may be harder to prove, said Robert H. Tillman, who teaches at St. John's University and who analyzed data about S&L prosecutions. Savings and loan executives who were convicted often personally approved large commercial loans for projects doomed to fail. Some would use federally insured deposits to pay themselves excessive salaries or to lend money to their own real estate projects. A few even took kickbacks.

This time, lending executives may have encouraged the making of bad loans, but they generally did not personally approve the loans, Tillman said. They didn't send emails telling the troops to make fraudulent loans but paid big commissions to loan offers who made risky loans. Then the executives were able to reap huge bonuses for making the company look so profitable.

So far, the biggest cases have been civil lawsuits brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission, including most recently a highly publicized securities fraud case against Goldman Sachs and one of its vice presidents, Fabrice P. Tourre. News reports suggest that a referral from the SEC's enforcement division to the Justice Department has led to a criminal inquiry.

Typically, federal authorities deal with massive financial scandals by picking a few cases they are confident they can win, said Henry Pontell, an expert on fraud at the University of California -- Irvine.

This time, the administration may have been more focused on saving failing banks -- and an entire financial system -- than in prosecuting bank executives, Pontell said. Giving billions in bailout dollars to executives who encouraged fraudulent practices not only could complicate a case, it could prove embarrasing, he added.

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Republished from the Huffington Post Investigative Fund. The financial crisis has spawned hundreds of criminal prosecutions for alleged fraud. Yet so far, defendants have been mostly minor players ...
Republished from the Huffington Post Investigative Fund. The financial crisis has spawned hundreds of criminal prosecutions for alleged fraud. Yet so far, defendants have been mostly minor players ...
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
07:08 PM on 05/05/2010
The Goldman Sachs White House is petrified of the blow-up of the fraud from the FED to the "too big to fail."
The focus on the little guy(s) keeps a smoke screen and the culture of Fraud creators sit at the helm of the FED.
Socialize the loss and privatize the profits is the Corporate Communist mantra. They've just pulled it off.
10:40 AM on 05/05/2010
Obama will never go after his masters,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realist2008
05:54 PM on 05/04/2010
makes you want China to call in our debt and take excercise Chinese justice on the perpetrato­rs of this financial terrorism. the nation has suffered more because of goldman sachs than the 9/11 disaster. perhaps they were selling short on the trade center collapsing­.
06:37 PM on 05/04/2010
how has the nation suffered from goldman sachs in particular­? i guess more specifical­ly, what did goldman sachs do that was worse than the murder of 3000 innocent people?
09:01 AM on 05/05/2010
...i would be willing to bet their actions have resulted in 3000 deaths either by suicide, heart attack or murder
03:01 PM on 05/04/2010
And yet there is still so much pressure to abandon the idea of a "consumer protection agency"! Isn't that what the SEC is supposed to be? At some point while banks were jacking up interest rates and reducing income requiremen­ts, someone should have put away his box of porn and stepped in to help. But in fairness to the mortgage companies, we were all too excited to hear that we could in fact afford that 400,000 dollar home on our 40,000 a year salary. And when given the opportunit­y to refinance and pull out all that "equity", while actually LOWERING the payment, why it just seemed to good to be true! And guess what:


It was.
jhNY
Mercy.
12:28 PM on 05/04/2010
When given opportunit­y to draft the regulation­s and laws that would constrain them, the writers often define deviancy down for the benefit of their kind, sometimes even to the point of the depth and dimensions of a point.
12:11 PM on 05/04/2010
The government and its law-enforc­ement arm only like to prey on slow-movin­g targets. Can you imagine how the books would be balanced if they went after the big shots? Not only that, but say they decided to arrest and ticket litterbugs­, box-blocke­rs, dog owners who don't clean up their pet's poop, ticket scofflaws, truck drivers with filthy fumes pluming from their semis, and all the other pests who contribute to the degenerati­on of life quality.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:53 AM on 05/04/2010
It seems like the justice department goes after a lot of small-time guys and ceremonial cases. And of course, the SEC is watching fornicatio­n.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mike Keough
11:45 AM on 05/04/2010
Want to be that the bulk of the regulators were appointed during Bush's tenure. You fill an agency with people who don't believe in it's task, whatta ya expect?
11:35 AM on 05/04/2010
Everybody knows if you want to steal big time carry a briefcase not a gun.
jhNY
Mercy.
12:31 PM on 05/04/2010
"Through this world I ramble,
I meet lots of funny men
Some will rob you with a six gun
And some with a fountain pen
Yes through this world I ramble
And through this world I roam
But I ain't never seen an outlaw
Drive a family from their home"
(from memory) "Pretty Boy Floyd" by Woody Guthrie
03:05 PM on 05/04/2010
Absolutely­. And if you pay the police not to be around when the crime takes place, you can get away free and clear. And with that kind of an acheivemen­t to put on your resume, you could land yourself a nice corner office on wall street.
11:24 AM on 05/04/2010
If you want to steal just bribe the government­.

Just make it legal.

How is this not like Al Capone?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Hood
United we stand....
11:16 AM on 05/04/2010
preaching to the chior.....­...we spit on the sidewalk get taised fined and jailed....­....paying fines and going to jail at the rate of one ever 36 seconds on main street....­....for non-violen­t victimless crimes....­....while these people have conspired to steal and divide our nations present and future wealth....­...and pay no penalty...­...that is why they go back to business as usual stealing us blind
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
missouriwatcher
military veteran, veteran teacher, father, grandpa
01:43 PM on 05/04/2010
Seems to me that Marx pretty well hit the nail on the head in his Manifesto. Could that be the reason they didn't want us reading it?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alexander DeWolf
11:15 AM on 05/04/2010
Seems to me that what is playing out now was put into place by the Bush Jr. administra­tion. Question is how do we replace the non-reguat­ion put into place by the prior administra­tion.
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
11:11 AM on 05/04/2010
You know you've finally "made it" in our society when you can commit felonies without repercusio­ns. The list would include CEOs, politician­s, sports stars, media personalit­ies, entertaine­rs, etc.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:03 AM on 05/04/2010
Still wondering why does the SEC exist if they are not doing their job. I guess they were too busy watching p@rn when the Madoff scheme was going on. Lets blame the agency that supposed to perform oversight for this industry for a change. Instead of the senate going on a blame the captialist­s and corporatio­ns all the time. Who is in charge of the SEC anyhow?
11:02 AM on 05/04/2010
Justice is blind...ho­wever she can hear the cha-ching of cash pouring into her bosom, as politicain­s talk out of their rear orifices..­.

Justice and America, the two words just don't match up.