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Nine Stories The Press Is Underreporting -- Fraud, Fraud And More Fraud

First Posted: 10/20/10 12:28 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:05 PM ET

William K Black

If it wasn't already blindingly obvious that pervasive fraud was at the heart of the financial crisis and the ensuing foreclosure catastrophe, you would think that the latest news -- that banks have routinely been lying their heads off in the rush to kick homeowners off the properties they fraudulently induced them to buy in the first place -- would pretty much clinch it.

And yet the mainstream media still by and large hasn't connected the dots.

What we are seeing all around us are the continued effects of a vast criminal enterprise that has never been brought to account, employing a process that, as University of Texas economist James Galbraith explains, involved the equivalent of counterfeiting, laundering and fencing.

So the person with the right expertise to lead us here is a criminologist -- in particular William K. Black, one of the few effective regulators in recent history (during the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s), a notorious knocker of heads and currently professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and author of the book, "The Best Way to Rob a Bank Is to Own One".

I first interviewed Black in April, and recently checked back in and asked him about this ongoing problem of the mainstream media's inability to properly cover this story. He responded with this breathless and breathtaking list of failings (slightly edited for publication):

The things I think are critical and badly underreported are:


1. The astonishing amount of mortgage fraud (literally, millions of cases annually) and how it hyperinflated the bubble and led to the Great Recession.

2. The fact that these mortgage frauds were overwhelmingly due to consciously fraudulent lending practices in which the CEOs of seemingly legitimate entities used accounting tricks as their “weapon of choice" to report higher profits and get bigger bonuses. (George A. Akerlof and Paul R. Romer got it right in the title to their 1993 article: Looting: The Economic Underworld of Bankruptcy for Profit.)

3. The disgraceful lack of prosecutions which has resulted from regulators virtually ending the practice of making criminal referrals and the pathetic March 2007 "partnership" that the FBI entered into with the Mortgage Bankers Association (the trade association of the "perps") that led the FBI and the Department of Justice to (implicitly) define out of existence fraud by the lenders (and to conceive of them as the "victim" -- which they are, but only of their controlling officers). Bush administration attorney general Michael Mukasey in June 2008 notoriously refused to create a national task force against mortgage fraud based on his claim that mortgage fraud was analogous to "white collar street crime."

4. The "echo" epidemics of fraud set off by the primary epidemic of accounting “control fraud". The fraud designed by CEOs in turn kicked off an epidemic of fraud among loan brokers and appraisers. Reporters should explore the concept of the Gresham's-style dynamic in which bad ethics were a competitive advantage and drove good ethics out of the marketplace.

5. The massive foreclosure fraud we are seeing now as another "echo" epidemic. To optimize their accounting control fraud, lenders gutted underwriting. That led to "fraud in the inducement" (vis a vis borrowers), endemic documentation problems, and an extraordinary numbers of defaults. The process required tens of thousands of real estate financing personnel to commit fraud on a daily basis as their core function. Some of these people are unemployed, but many are in the industry and are presently engaged in loan servicing. Now that their job is to foreclose on properties, there is no reason to expect that they would suddenly become honest, and they haven't.

6. The ongoing massive cover up of losses on bad assets, particularly by the “too big to fail” institutions, which I call “systemically dangerous institutions” (SDIs). Those institutions, along with Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke and Congress (at the behest of the Chamber of Commerce and with no opposition from the Obama administration) in April 2009 forced the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to change the rules so that the banks do not have to recognize their losses unless and until they sell the bad assets. The implications of this cover up are large (and rarely reported). At the very least, it means that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's propaganda campaign about TARP saving the world at virtually no cost (perhaps even a "profit") is nonsense -- despite its success in influencing the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times. Consider:

A) The repayment of TARP funds does not mean the banks are healthy. Their asset values are often grossly inflated, which means their net worth is grossly inflated. That means that the claims that we have increased net worth requirements (and that Basel III will further increase net worth requirements) are false. Net worth requirements have meaning only if the accounting is honest


B) The repayment of TARP funds does mean that the banks are freed from any meaningful restraint on senior officer compensation. Note that absent the accounting lies the banks would often be reporting losses (and failure to meet required capital requirements, or outright insolvency) and could not pay their senior officers bonuses and would be subject to mandatory closure under the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) law.

C) No commercial entity would have ever signed the TARP deals on the terms that the U.S. drafted for itself. The U.S. provided not only fresh money but an unlimited de facto guarantee (along with permitting phony accounting). If the U.S. had negotiated competently it would have owned virtually all the shares of every TARP recipient (which, of course, was a political impossibility).

D) The accounting lies are stalling the recovery. Markets cannot clear promptly when one creates an incentive to hold massively overvalued assets for years.

E) The losses are still there, but the taxpayers are on the hook via Fannie and Freddie and the Fed (which has taken over a trillion dollars in toxic collateral at grossly inflated values).

7. The continued absence of effective regulation. It should be scandalous that President Obama left in charge, or even promoted, the anti-regulators who permitted the Great Recession. The (failed) anti-regulator of Fannie and Freddie, for example, remains FHFA's acting director. This is significantly insane as a matter of both economics and politics. (The administration doesn't even seem to realize the issue of integrity.)

8. The crises of state and local government and the lack of a rational basis for Republican and Blue Dog opposition to the proposed revenue sharing component of the stimulus bill. The compounding insanity of the administration failing to fight for its concept and failing to make explicit how badly its removal would harm the recovery, employment, and vital government services.

9. The insanity of accepting mass, long-term unemployment rather than having the government provide productive jobs for everyone willing to work (as the employer of last resort).

I have nothing to add.

Crossposted from NiemanWatchdog.org.


*************************

Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail, bookmark his page; subscribe to RSS feed, follow him on Twitter, friend him on Facebook, and/or become a fan and get e-mail alerts when he writes.

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09:28 AM on 11/04/2010
One of Obama's needed immediate actions should be the creation of a DOJ criminal task force to root out and prosecute this type of fraud. Banks should be required to immediately file proof of ownership of mortgages (all legal transfers of title) of record as required by law; they should have 60 days to make these filings. If they cannot file proof of ownership of the mortgage, they must notify mortgagee that they cannot show show ownership and stop collecting payments.
02:36 AM on 10/27/2010
when a country believe fraud is better than honesty, it is over.
07:10 AM on 10/24/2010
These are all well and good. But there are two more stories the press isn't reporting.

1. Headline news on YAHOO this morning (10/24/10) says that a Saudi oil processing plant has closed down because of electrical problems. This is the usual warning of a new round of excuses for why gas prices at the pump will begin escalating to undetermined heights over the next few months. Just remember, you read it here first.

2. Medicare thinks people in general are stupid. Only a doctor, another person who doesn't know you, has never met you, has the knowledge in his brain as to whether or not you are actually ill enough to enter a hospital through the emergency room. YOU are not that smart. You may have a profusion of blood in your urine and be in tremendous pain but Medicare classifies you as an "outpatient" (per Medicare and per hospitals) if you enter an emergency room on your own and will NOT pay any on your hospital bill! Period. Private insurance pays immediately, Medicare pays nothing! Who NEEDS that kind of care?
I'm 67 years young and my last hospital visit was about 35 years ago! My last doctors office visit was about 15-20 years ago. But to Medicare I'm an "outpatient" and rules are rules, set in concrete.
09:41 AM on 11/11/2010
For not having been to hospital or a doctor for 20 years--you won't mind if I don't take your word about the process!

Private insurance will pay automatically sometimes--but they will review it-and if you policy says you need a doctors authorization,OR it doesn't qualify as an emergency, they often times don't pay. You often pay a higher co-pay for the ER visit-so you don't use it as a doctors office. Both Medicare and Private insurance will pay for the co-pay and the visit if you are admitted--it's the law. Medicare aslo has a review proces--demand one, if you feel they should have paid.

If what you say is true--Medicare would have a surplus. Any lab work, X-rays, CT, MRI, EKG, EEG's--any test you can have done at the hospital--you are an outpatient. You have an order from your doctor--with an ICD9 code--a diagnosis--a reason for having it done---and private insurance and Medicare pay.
Let's not get to carried away. Medicine has changed in the last 20 years. I suggest you find a doctor, and brush up on the Medicare rules, and you do need a supplmental to cover what Medicare doesn't--because contary to public opinion--Medicare is not free and it doesn't cover everything.
ItsGettingWeird
(or is it just me?)
08:58 PM on 10/23/2010
I worked for many years in the business, and became increasingly suspicious that something was really wrong. In 2006, I resigned my position and liquidated most everything I owned, in a hurry.
07:10 PM on 10/24/2010
ItsGettingWeird, you're smart. My hat's off to you. Fanned and faved. And I agree- it's getting VERY weird.
07:54 PM on 10/23/2010
Judd Gregg....
"There won't be golden parachutes. There will not be high compensation.
want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes. want to make sure people stay in their homes.
That foreclosures do not occur, That foreclosures do not occur That foreclosures do not occur That foreclosures do not occur That foreclosures do not occur"
strict and transparent oversight, .......

Why is this piece of human trash not in a jail cell?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntys9OywkJ8
07:48 PM on 10/23/2010
Judd Gregg.....
"We want to make sure people stay in their homes....."
AAAHHHHHhhhhHHHHhhh Ha HA ha HA ha ha HA!!!!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntys9OywkJ8
07:30 PM on 10/23/2010
Only guy doing his job.
"tries? comon......"
"no, so..."
"do theyyyyyy?...."
great stuff.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXmNpdYpfnk
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BarbaraTodish
Getting younger!
04:31 PM on 10/23/2010
Maybe we all need to look at the bigger picture the picture beyond bully bankers to bully culture, and bully society: society and culture itself is corrupt! There could be a world class action suit against societyand against culture! Only problem is who would be able to be without corruption to, as it were, throw the first stone? I just went to a zoo and felt empathy for the locked up, encaged animals, their eyes all seemed so sad. Then I realized that we are all locked up in a zoo of sorts, a human zoo called society and culture. This is why almost all of us have sad, almost "dead" eyes. We are almost all zombie-like. It is a struggle to retain your HUMAN validity when you try to offer realistic utopian solutions. You are called disruptive, unrealistic; you are silenced or marginalized, banned! You are called ungratefull, insane, you become unemployed/unemployable.You then become a stand up comic!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XegltDJLUHo
02:17 PM on 10/23/2010
Let's see: accounting fraud, auditor fraud, ratings agency fraud, stock analyst fraud, politician fraud, tax fraud....none of it is getting prosecuted by our corrupt and complicit regulators and justices.

Is there any segment left in our society that hasn't been completely overrun with rampant fraud and corruption?

No wonder these corporate titans are buying gazillion dollar, football field sized yachts that they can live on in the middle of the ocean for years and years. Do they suspect another french revolution anytime soon?
11:09 AM on 10/23/2010
The missing link from this story remains missing, as it does with any of the stories about fraud, government ineptitude, corporate greed, and peak oil: How much of the fraudulent wealth is the economy dependent upon?
How many of the car deals, big screen TVs, motorcycles, airplanes, vacation destinations, and speculation on continuous 'growth' are really just paper and spreadsheets manipulated to look like the U.S. actually has any money left?
How much of the CIA is dependent on drug money?
Is anyone going to keep track of these relationships as the Descent happens?
Let them eat high fructose corn syrup.
02:20 PM on 10/23/2010
"Let them eat high fructose corn syrup."

Skip the cake, and go straight for the glucose! Vive la Résistance!
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Lloyd Cata
09:19 AM on 10/23/2010
Make no mistake that there are 2 economies at work here. There is the Wall Street(top 2%) economy, and the rest of the people.

I know they flim-flammed the people with all that Wall St./Main St. propaganda, and it appeared to be right because that 401(k) gets hit every time Wall St. founders. Why does George Bush wish, out of all his errors, that he had privatized Social Security? Even after the disaster of the market collapse? Because 10% of the SS trust invested in Wall Street could have prevented the collapse. OMG, they knew all the time when he was crossing the country campaigning to give Social Security to Wall St.....

See how they think? If Obama lets them fail, all those 401(k)s fail - not an option. It's a hostage crisis and Wall St. has all the snipers. Those 401(k) and hedge fund managers have hijacked the American economy and are in the process of selling the entire lot to their comrades in Beijing.

Please don't cry over your plight America. The American people lost the ability to control their economy when the government created the Federal Reserve. There is actual fear in the White House that there is nothing Obama can do that can prevent what's to come. That's why Geithner twice postpones the China analysis, bad news can wait...until after the elections.

"The comrades on Wall St. and the comrades in Beijing have already decided your fate."
08:31 AM on 10/23/2010
SIMPLY PUT - THIS IS WHY WE MUST PROTECT OUR GUN RIGHTS!

So, which will it be - Are you willing to FIGHT for your Constitutional Rights OR simply bend-over and hand it all over to the lying thieving corporate slave-traders? Are you too liberal to FIGHT for your damn FREEDOMS & LIBERTIES...

If the gov refuses to do its job and protect the people, then WHO is going to do it? If the FBI has been pimped to the highest bidders what are YOU willing to do about it?

Read Patrick Henry's famous speech - "...give me liberty or give me death.."

We've been here before - we've dealt with these types before - they will be dealt with again. It is only a matter of time before this country will be FORCED to make a decision - BOW to the self-imposed Corporate Order - OR - FIGHT TO THE DEATH to REMOVE the cancerous tumors destroying our country?

Now you KNOW why we MUST protect our GUN LAWS. - and don't worry about our military - they are sworn to protect our Constitution - NOT politicians...

Reality bites - if we speak up loudly enough NOW, maybe it will prevent the fleet of customized McVeigh U-Haulers from being delivered to every foreclosure mill and corporate headquarters across this land. Maybe these corporate monarchs need to meet the American - jimmy-jack-jihad - Louisville slugger :-)

Keep the Powder Dry
08:02 AM on 10/23/2010
Without a doubt, if our courts continue their arrogance and allow the Illegal Seizure of Private Property and Denial of Due Process - WE THE PEOPLE have an "Obligation & Duty" to take up ARMS and defend our properties.

This is NOT about borrowers in default. The borrowers owe the money. Banks can buy politicians but they cannot hide from THE PEOPLE. We dealt with these types before and WILL AGAIN if necessary…

"...But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security..." - Thomas Jefferson - Declaration of Independence"

These Foreclosures are Illegal and a cover-up. It is akin to authorities learning a high-profile drug dealer is working at a rehab facility but continually arrest the patients instead of the drug-dealer. WE KNOW THESE FOLKS HAVE A PROBLEM - they BETTER arrest the drug dealers OR THE PEOPLE WILL LYNCH THE BASTARDS...

The LAWYERS of these foreclosure mills are ACCOMPLICES to the Illegal Seizures and DENIAL of DUE PROCESS. They deliberately pound these families into poverty to make them too poor to defend. This is an out-right attack against our Constitution. These corporate lying thieves are raping & piliaging our LAND - dismissing our Constitutional Rights - ignoring the law - bribing politicians and ENSLAVING OUR CHILDREN.

We dealt with this issue already -
12:54 AM on 10/23/2010
This is the part that bugs me the most ...

E) The losses are still there, but the taxpayers are on the hook via Fannie and Freddie and the Fed (which has taken over a trillion dollars in toxic collateral at grossly inflated values).

What they should have done is taken over these assets at something like 35 to 40 % of the outstanding mortgage value. Then the lenders would understand what it is like to play with public money.

Apart from this there is no such thing as "too big to fail" in the financial sector. In manufacturing yes but then their assets do have intrinsic value.

We may be a third world country but your own very banks DO comply with the strict regiment of controls by the Reserve Bank of India - equivalent of the Federal reserve - without exception.
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Forever True
10:57 PM on 10/22/2010
Of course the MSM is spinning and obfuscating the massive corporate crimes being perpetrated on the US by their corporate sponsors and masters. If not for the Internet, they would get away with it too. Now Lieberman is trying to shut down the Internet so that his corporate buddies can continue to lie to us and steal from us.