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SEC Admits Documents From Preliminary Investigations On Big Banks, Bernie Madoff Likely Tossed

Sec Deaf Investors

MARCY GORDON   09/14/11 10:20 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission has acknowledged that some documents from preliminary investigations of major banks and convicted swindler Bernard Madoff likely were destroyed under a former agency policy.

The SEC's enforcement chief made the disclosure in a letter Wednesday to Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa. Grassley had asked about allegations by an SEC attorney that the agency illegally destroyed records related to thousands of preliminary probes, including investigations of Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo and Madoff.

Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said the agency doesn't believe any current or future investigations were harmed by the policy, which allowed documents to be discarded in cases that were closed when staffers decided a formal probe wasn't warranted. A review by the SEC inspector general is under way to determine if any law was violated.

Khuzami said in the letter that the SEC has kept "significant information" related to all the "matters under inquiry," even under the former records policy.

"We believe the electronic ... information that we retain allows staff to `connect the dots' between current and closed matters," Khuzami wrote to Grassley. The electronic information is searchable and allows SEC enforcement staff to identify potential relationships between individuals or entities, and between current and past inquiries, he said.

The information in documents that were discarded still may be available from sources inside or outside the SEC, Khuzami said. The agency's current policy, adopted last year, requires all documents to be retained whether they are part of a preliminary probe that is closed or a formal investigation, Khuzami said. The current policy and practices meet the SEC's legal obligations, he said.

The agency's reputation has been battered by its failure to detect the massive Madoff fraud over nearly two decades and by other lapses.

Grassley, a longtime critic of the SEC, has expressed concern that the records destruction may have hurt the agency's ability to pursue cases.

Commenting on Khuzami's letter, he said Wednesday that "the SEC's argument seems to rely on its claim that nothing significant was destroyed. But since the documents are gone, we'll never know how important they might have been."

U.S. government records must by law be preserved whether they are part of a formal investigation or a preliminary inquiry, Grassley said in a statement.

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WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission has acknowledged that some documents from preliminary investigations of major banks and convicted swindler Bernard Madoff likely were destroye...
WASHINGTON — The Securities and Exchange Commission has acknowledged that some documents from preliminary investigations of major banks and convicted swindler Bernard Madoff likely were destroye...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rfmaneater
May reason, not treason, rule the day
03:51 PM on 09/16/2011
They destroy the evidience almost as fast as the banking industry destroys the economy. Why? Too much space? load it on to a computer. NO EXCUSE. I used to microfish credit card doc. for a bank those they keep for 7+ years. But evidience of corruption BYE BYE
08:50 AM on 09/16/2011
Typical government BS action.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jmgair
04:18 AM on 09/16/2011
Just like Madoff, the Obama adminstration has been tossing abd sgredding any and all documents related to Solyndra and Fast & Furious, at least they are recycling what they shred so they can call themselves Green.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kvh
kvh
02:29 AM on 09/16/2011
OOPS something never mentioned in Cheney's book. I wonder if their was any mention of the SEC's involvment--just spectulation. The mortgage and financial meltdown had many players,
remember GWB "there are more homeowners in America that ever before". The only ones who made the most money are now in the shreader. How convenient!
12:08 AM on 09/16/2011
The SEC raises incompetence to the level of an art form.
NancyY
carpe diem!
11:43 PM on 09/15/2011
There is NO REASON why account information could not have been saved on CDs or by other means which would take up little space.
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GWBsuxone
we shall overcomb
11:19 PM on 09/15/2011
hmmmm i wonder how far back that was - probably an executive order from gwb
NancyY
carpe diem!
11:42 PM on 09/15/2011
Ummm...GWB is no longer President, and hasn't been for going on three years now....duuuuuh...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jacknab
You can flog a dead horse, but it ain't gonna plow
02:10 AM on 09/16/2011
Many of his appointees remain in government jobs not to mention those hired by appointees who remain burrowed within government agencies whose philosophical bent is that government is evil. GOP has spent twenty of the last thirty years placing like minded people in government jobs. What better way to undermine the credibility of the government than having a bunch of people throughout who believe the federal government should be "drown in the bath water". Prime example was GWB's appointment of Brownie as FEMA head.
10:54 PM on 09/15/2011
Then the top brass needs to resign and the shredder's be fired.
10:44 PM on 09/15/2011
Once again. One hand washes the other.
10:44 PM on 09/15/2011
Securities and Exchange Commission
Office of Inspector General
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC 20549-2736 June 4, 2010
Dear Mr. Kotz,
It has now been over a year since I made you and Mr. Khuzami aware of the AXA/MONY PricewaterhouseCoopers accounting fraud and Ponzi. As near as I can tell, you have not taken any action with regards to this complaint. From news reports I have noted that several of the individuals that were involved have been promoted and received new jobs with the very companies that they were supposed to oversee.
Should I just opine that you and Mr. Khuzami and Chairman Schapiro have in fact decided to take the politically correct position and continue to ignore the longest running Ponzi in American history? Surly you have a reason for your lack of action in not protecting the public. This is not an old issue, it is an ongoing Ponzi and I would like to have an answer. My children have a right to know where their $5,000,000 went!
I am preparing to update the information on my web sites that are mentioned in the attached letter to Chairman Schapiro. I do not want to interfere with any investigation work that you actually have in process with regard to this matter and request that you respond ASAP to this request for an explanation.
You may contact me at 817 946-8097 or rabshire@aol.com .
Respectfully,
R. Dale Abshire
2606 Twelve Oaks Lane
Colleyville, TX 76034
10:40 PM on 09/15/2011
http://pwcsucks.com/id4.html

April 15, 2009
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500


Dear Mr. President,

Thank you for helping with my March 2, 2009 request for help in getting the Securities and Exchange Commission to answer a Freedom of Information request for the identities of 14 companies that PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP had taken public with fraudulent documents. They have responded that the documents have now been destroyed due to the "retention period". Please consider this as a report of criminal fraud by members of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Goldman Sachs, PricewaterhouseCoopers, AXA Financial and others.
Background:
The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, commonly and hereafter referred to as MONY, was founded in 1843 and recognized as the oldest mutual life insurance company in America. From its inception,
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jacknab
You can flog a dead horse, but it ain't gonna plow
02:23 AM on 09/16/2011
Very interesting. Thank you for the link. It is very informative.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
falco1998
10:39 PM on 09/15/2011
I'm not buying this at all. The government has records from wayyyyyyyyyyyy back, they don't just destroy documents. I worked for a securities attorney and we couldn't get rid of anything for 7 years. However, anything concerning criminal records and wills we couldn't get rid of at all. These records had to be kept. This was and is a criminal investigation, so those records should have been kept, but they'll find a way around it, they always do.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sejs105
10:34 PM on 09/15/2011
We're in deep and getting deeper, kids. Thanks for signing up for recession 101. see ya next term for recession 102. I'll make that even more fun that 101.
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askandtell
Proud Minnesotan; Inspired by Paul Wellstone
10:37 PM on 09/15/2011
This practice has been happening for 20 years within the SEC and financial industry. It would still be going on if it weren't for a whistle blower.
10:26 PM on 09/15/2011
WOW! Amazing! How could this happen?? Unbelievable!! It's like...like having a SecTreas who cheated on his taxes! Never happen! Impossible! Must be a misprint!
10:20 PM on 09/15/2011
does anyone believe the SEC will be affected by their screw up? No. they will continue on living off your dollar and never have to face the music,