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Charles Ferguson

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How Financial Criminalization Crashed the Economy, and the Culprits Got Off Scot-Free

Posted: 05/23/2012 12:30 am

It is no exaggeration to say that since the 1980s, much of the American (and global) financial sector has become criminalized, creating an industry culture that tolerates or even encourages systematic fraud. The behavior that caused the mortgage bubble and financial crisis was a natural outcome and continuation of this pattern, rather than some kind of economic accident.

It is important to understand that this behavior really is seriously criminal. We are not talking about neglecting some bureaucratic formality. We are talking about deliberate concealment of financial transactions that aided terrorism, nuclear weapons proliferation, and large-scale tax evasion; assisting in concealment of criminal assets and activities by others; and directly committing frauds that substantially worsened the worst financial bubbles and crises since the Depression.

None of this conduct was punished in any significant way. On November 7, 2011, the New York Times published an article based on its own review of major banks' settlements of SEC lawsuits since 1996. The Times' analysis found fifty-one cases in which major banks had settled cases involving securities fraud, after having previously been caught violating the same law, and then promising the SEC not to do so again. The Times' list, furthermore, covered only SEC securities fraud cases; it did not include any criminal cases, private lawsuits by victims, cases filed by state attorneys general, or any cases of bribery, money laundering, tax evasion, or illegal asset concealment -- all areas in which the banks have numerous and major violations. 2012-05-21-Screenshot20120521at8.29.30AM.pngIn Predator Nation, I provide detailed, well-documented accounts of behavior ranging from assisting Enron's frauds (Citigroup, Merrill Lynch), to fraudulently exploiting the Internet bubble (most of the major investment banks), to using for-profit colleges to exploit government student loan programs (Goldman Sachs), to assisting in money laundering and tax evasion on a large scale (at least eleven banks including UBS, Barclay's, and Lloyds), to using bribery and artificially complex derivatives to destroy the finances of a county government (JP Morgan Chase), to profiting from Bernard Madoff even while strongly suspecting him to be a fraud (JP Morgan Chase, UBS).

Total fines for all these cases combined appear to be far less than 1 percent of financial sector profits and bonuses during the same period. There have been very few prosecutions and no criminal convictions of large U.S. financial institutions or their senior executives. Where individuals not linked to major banks have committed similar offenses, they have been treated far more harshly.

Given this background, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the mortgage bubble and financial crisis were facilitated not only by deregulation but also by the prior twenty years' tolerance of large scale financial crime. First, the absence of prosecution gradually led to a deeply embedded cultural acceptance of unethical and criminal behavior in finance. And second, it generated a sense of personal impunity; bankers contemplating criminal actions were no longer deterred by threat of prosecution.

And just as the last twenty years of unpunished financial crime constituted a green light for the bubble, so, too, America's non-response to the bubble and crisis is setting the tone for financial conduct in the future.

The Obama administration has rationalized its failure to prosecute any senior financial executives (literally, not a single one) for bubble-related crimes by saying that while much of Wall Street's behavior was unwise or unethical, it wasn't illegal. Here is President Obama at a White House press conference on October 6, 2011:

Well, first on the issue of prosecutions on Wall Street, one of the biggest problems about the collapse of Lehmans [sic] and the subsequent financial crisis and the whole subprime lending fiasco is that a lot of that stuff wasn't necessarily illegal, it was just immoral or inappropriate or reckless....I think part of people's frustrations, part of my frustration, was a lot of practices that should not have been allowed weren't necessarily against the law.


The president and senior administration officials (such as Lanny Breuer, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division) have portrayed themselves as frustrated and hamstrung -- desirous of punishing those responsible for the crisis, but unable to do so because their conduct wasn't illegal, and/or the federal government lacks sufficient power to sanction them. With apologies for my vulgarity, this is complete horseshit.

When the federal government is really serious about something -- preventing another 9/11, or pursuing major organized crime figures -- it has many tools at its disposal and often uses them. There are wiretaps and electronic eavesdropping. There are special prosecutors, task forces, and grand juries. When Patty Hearst was kidnapped by the radical Symbionese Liberation Army in 1974, the FBI assigned hundreds of agents to the case.

In organized crime investigations, the FBI and federal prosecutors often start at the bottom in order to get to the top. They use the well established technique of nailing lower-level people and then offering them a deal if they inform on and/or testify about their superiors -- whereupon the FBI nails their superiors, and does the same thing to them, until climbing to the top of the tree. There is also the technique of nailing people for what can be proven against them, even if it's not the main offense. Al Capone was never convicted of bootlegging, large scale corruption, or murder; he was convicted of tax evasion.

In this spirit, here are a few observations about the ethics, legalities, and practicalities of prosecution related to the bubble:

First, much of the bubble was directly, massively criminal.

Second, if you really wanted to get these people, you could. Maybe not all of them, but certainly many. Some bubble-related violations are very clear, with strong written evidence, as my book Predator Nation demonstrates. And if you flipped enough people, some of them would undoubtedly have interesting things to say about what their senior management knew. In fact, there are many techniques, venues, organizations, regulations, and statutes, both civil and criminal, available to investigate these people, punish them, and recover the money they took -- if you really wanted to. The federal government has used almost none of them.

Third, the moral argument for punishment is very strong, providing ample justification for erring on the side of aggressive legal pursuit. Whatever portion of banking conduct during the bubble was criminal, it was certainly substantial, and there is no doubt whatsoever that it was utterly, pervasively unethical, designed to defraud in reality if not in law. Since the crisis, the people who caused it have been anything but honest or contrite. They have been evasive, dishonest, and self-justifying, returning as quickly as possible to their unerringly selfish behavior. Their behavior caused enormous damage, both human and economic; the consequences of their wrongdoing are so large as to justify almost any action that could help to prevent another such crisis by creating real deterrence. There would also be intangible but large benefits to raising the general ethical standard of a vital industry, and one whose executives often become high-level government officials.

Given this background, let's now consider the question of criminal liability, as well as the feasibility of prosecution.

J'Accuse

The list of prosecutable crimes committed during the bubble, the crisis, and aftermath period by financial services firms and senior executives includes: securities fraud (many forms); accounting fraud (many forms); honest services violations (mail fraud statute); bribery; perjury and making false statements to federal investigators; Sarbanes-Oxley violations (certifying accounting statements and financial controls); RICO offenses and criminal antitrust violations; Federal aid disclosure regulations (related to Federal Reserve loans); Personal conduct offenses (many forms: drugs, tax evasion, etc.).

In Predator Nation I consider each of these categories in detail, naming many names and providing many specific examples. But in considering only one category, securities fraud, we already face an embarrassment of riches.

Almost all the prospectuses and sales material on mortgage-backed securities sold from 2005 through 2007 were a compound of falsehoods. But it starts even earlier in the food chain. We also know that mortgage originators committed securities fraud when they misrepresented the characteristics of loan pools, and the nature and extent of their due diligence with regard to them, when they sold pools to securitizers (and accepted financing from them). Most or all of the securitizers (meaning nearly all the investment banks and major banking conglomerates) then committed securities fraud when they misrepresented the characteristics of the loans backing their CDOs, the characteristics of the resulting mortgage-backed securities, and the nature and results of their due diligence in the process of creating those securities. The securitizers also committed securities fraud when they made similar misrepresentations to the insurers of, and sellers of credit default swap (CDS) protection on, those securities.

The executives of both originators and securitizers then committed a separate form of securities fraud in their statements to investors and the public about their companies' financial condition. They knew that they were engaging in a Ponzi-like fraud that would eventually need to end, and as the bubble peaked and started to collapse, they repeatedly lied about their companies' financial condition. In some cases they also concealed other material information, such as the extent to which they, themselves, and/or other executives of their firms, were selling or hedging their own stock holdings because they knew that their firms were about to collapse.

Next, several investment banks committed securities fraud when they failed to disclose that they were selling securities that were designed to fail so that the investment banks, and/or their hedge fund clients, could profit by betting on their failure. The Hudson and Timberwolf synthetic CDOs sold by Goldman Sachs, and which were the focus of the Levin Senate subcommittee hearings, provide a very strong basis for prosecution. Goldman's trading arm had been dragooned into finding and dumping their most dangerous assets to naive institutional investors. Important representations in the Hudson sales material--that assets were not sourced from Goldman's own inventory -- were lies, and they were material lies, since investors had learned to be wary of banks clearing out their own bad inventory. E-mail trails show that top executives closely tracked the garbage disposals and were gleeful at the unloading of the Timberwolf assets -- as they should have been, for the assets were nearly worthless within months. There have been no prosecutions.

In some cases, we already have clear evidence of senior executive knowledge of and involvement in these frauds. For example, quarterly presentations to investors are nearly always made by the CEO or CFO of the firm; if lies were told in those presentations, or if material facts were omitted, the responsibility lies with senior management. In some other cases, such as Bear Stearns, we already have evidence from civil lawsuits that very senior executives were directly involved in constructing and selling securities whose prospectuses contained lies and omissions.

The list is long. In chapters three through six of Predator Nation, I survey the financial sector's behavior during the bubble, and provide dozens of examples of major criminal behavior. Again, there have been no prosecutions.

____________________________

This post is adapted from Predator Nation: Corporate Criminals, Political Corruption, and the Hijacking of America; Copyright © 2012 by Charles Ferguson. Published by Crown Business, a division of Random House, Inc.

 
 
 
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It is no exaggeration to say that since the 1980s, much of the American (and global) financial sector has become criminalized, creating an industry culture that tolerates or even encourages systematic...
It is no exaggeration to say that since the 1980s, much of the American (and global) financial sector has become criminalized, creating an industry culture that tolerates or even encourages systematic...
 
 
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03:37 AM on 06/28/2012
As a UK resident and long time Labour voter ( until Blair cocked up New Labour) I have for 2 decades said :- " Thatcher let the Barrow Boys loose in the City " that , my friends sums it up in a nutshell , from this side of the pond
03:49 PM on 06/27/2012
I was a victim in New Zealand, along with 14,000 others at the hands of ING bank and ANZ bank who jointly owned bonds they marketed as "AAA" which in truth were junk bonds and misrepresented. After a two year battle of street protest and protest where ever we could be heard, we manged to get maybe two thirds of our money returned and forced ING out of New Zealand and their partner in crime having to rebrand the products they bought from ING. A book has been written, still trying to find a publisher "The Hustlers" hopefully one day another good read about criminals who still run major corporations and walk our streets.
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lostinNJ1
09:17 AM on 06/18/2012
I am late to this discussion- just finished your book. I want to say thank you Mr. Ferguson for an excellent book. You do a great job supporting your claims and it really makes the etiology of our economic nightmare clearer to understand. Yet today, I turn on the radio to hear once again how illegal immigrants are to blame for our problems. The PR campaign continues...
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Ty2010
08:24 AM on 05/30/2012
The recent history, Nixon messed up the economy by closing the gold window rather than budget holes, Volker set things right and Reagan got rid of laws that limited shady dealings banks and corporations could engage in and since he didn't immediately mess things up too horribly in the short term he took credit for Volker's work. The 80s and 90s were populated by bailouts required as a result of Reagan's policies. Clinton balanced the budget by moving debt from higher rate long term financing to low rate short term, leaving the government budget and economy overly sensitive to rate increases. Zero percent and endless printing, bailouts from here till the currency or debt blows up, or both. It's a replay of the 20s and 30s, Volker clearing bad debt = 21 crash, Iran-Contra = Brown Bros Harriman, TSA = TVA, telecom = railroads, gold seizure is as yet unnecessary as it's a floating currency, the Euro or Japan appear to be the leaders at the moment in bringing all this to a head.
The Joler
nil sine labore
11:16 PM on 05/27/2012
Sounds like a good read. It also sounds like the author is seriously disconnected with the reality of the country in which he lives. There have been no significant prosecutions for a simple reason. Regardless of which party is in power the country is basically being run in the interests of Wall Street. The whole judicial and politcal processes of the country are compromised. There is no judicial or political solution. They are the problem. The problem cannot solve the problem so things will never get better. The sooner the American people wake up to this the sooner that they will take steps to deal with the problem. Unfortunately most still seem to be in deep denial. Don't expect anything to change other than on a cosmetic level. The pollies are good at snowing the public that they are doing something when the are really jsut propping up the status quo.
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Ty2010
08:29 AM on 05/30/2012
He isn't disconnected from reality, he wrote it so others wouldn't be. Too many are taking the no prosecution thing as meaning the economy just went bad and they were victims like everyone else.
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lostinNJ1
09:13 AM on 06/18/2012
You should read his book. He outlines very well how corrupted our government, media, and higher education really are. I will warn you-it is depressing to read.
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04:42 PM on 05/27/2012
5/27/12
4:41pm
NYC

The book, PREDATOR NATION, is on the shelves here at the NYPL and it's amazing.
But I didn't see anything about banks assisting identity thieves yet. Of course, I'm only on Chapter Three.
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Ty2010
07:44 AM on 05/30/2012
Someone had to launder the Iran-Contra money to start with.
01:22 PM on 05/27/2012
You may have heard the story of Diane Tran:

"Diane Tran, 17, thrown in jail for one night because of repeated absences from school
Honors student has been working two jobs to keep family afloat since parents' divorce"

"Ms Tran's employer at the Waverly Manor wedding venue, where Tran works during the weekend, suggested that the authorities should 'help [the family], don't harm them'."

"'If you let one [truant student] run loose, what are you gonna' do with the rest of 'em? Let them go too?' asked Judge Moriarty."

"Ms Tran, in the meantime, is worried this could mar her future ambitions - she one day hopes to become a doctor."

There is a pattern here:

As the Lords gain increasing impunity, the the treatment of the serfs is increasingly harsh.
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Simon Aguilar
your vote doesn't matter
12:10 PM on 05/27/2012
What about the borrowers who lied about their income, or took mortgages they knew they couldn't afford? Are they guilty as well?
01:32 PM on 05/27/2012
Yes, but not to the same degree. Even when the applicant lied, banks were typically willing co-conspirators.

And many, as far as I can tell, most applicants did not lie,and some were just plain bamboozled by "professional" bankers. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/01/opinion/kristof-a-banker-speaks-with-regret.html
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EdCorner
Now what - more of the same...
01:47 PM on 05/27/2012
For being .001% of the problem you would condemn them? Why waste resources on them when those that got away with near 100% of the profits to be made through selling bad mortgages go free. Do you think those that might have lied about their income were bailed? Of course not - they are paying the price of their indiscretions.

The banks are not.

Why don't people like you understand that no one should have gotten a bad loan? And that banks were enabling mortgage crimes with their actions? Writing bad loans is a crime and it's the crime of origination.
11:42 AM on 05/27/2012
Barack, can you please get on this?
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11:22 PM on 05/27/2012
LOL, when pigs fly.
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lndgrabber
11:15 AM on 05/27/2012
Where is Freddie and Fannie in all of this?? If they didn't encourage/require banks to make all of these loans, Wall Street would not had anything to bundle and sell.
09:54 AM on 05/27/2012
And how about Raines and Johnson from Fannae mae or how about the demogogues thenselves like rangel, etc? No defense of wall street but when I see these hypocrites in government always "know what they knew before but they did not know they knew it" until we suffer consequnces or it is an election year it you know what their motives are. They all need to go
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Austintatious
09:27 AM on 05/27/2012
It can be said in one sentence. The criminals have been given permission to defraud and steal from the American people by their government, and the criminals still go Scot-free because Barack Obama does not intend to hold them accountable.
05:12 PM on 05/27/2012
Neither did bush
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Austintatious
12:49 PM on 05/28/2012
quite right
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Ty2010
08:33 AM on 05/30/2012
They put him in office, like almost every politician of the last 25-30 years.
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aligatorhardt
Cut on the bias
09:16 AM on 05/27/2012
As long as Congress is allowed to accept bribes in the form of campaign contributions, they will corrupt the law to favor their benefactors. This is how immoral and unacceptable become legal. As long as an individual is not held accountable for what they do, but a company is fined instead, then no true accountability exists. Fines to a company are paid by customers and stockholders, they seldom even reduce the bonuses of the management.
  Public campaign financing with no other donations allowed is the way to get politicians beholding to voters instead of sponsors. Until this is done, government will only serve the rich.
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yakmeat
Nearly all of us are both makers and takers.
01:44 PM on 05/27/2012
"Public campaign financing with no other donations allowed is the way to get politicians beholding to voters instead of sponsors. Until this is done, government will only serve the rich."

Bingo.
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Ty2010
08:39 AM on 05/30/2012
Most voters aren't accountants and lawyers, so accountability to them means nothing. The 17 amendment needs repealed so the state governments can fight it out with the feds, this is all the result of there being no checks and balances any more.
knute9
Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.
07:09 AM on 05/27/2012
Actually the problem began with the Criminalization of our Political System. To fix this problem we serious Campaign Finance Reform.
08:54 AM on 05/27/2012
Like Sen. Bernie Sanders' Save American Democracy amendment.
Check it out!
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aacme
My micro-bio is on a strict need-to-know basis.
05:52 AM on 05/27/2012
For the retail investor, the only differences between Wall Street and Vegas casinos are these:
1. The casinos are highly regulated to prevent institutional fraud
2. The motivating factor of both industries, greed, is recognized for what it is in Vegas, while Wall Street wraps it in a cloak of phony patriotism and has convinced almost everyone that it contains the essence of Americanism.
Step right up and claim your corner of the American Dream! Ooohh, you lost. Too bad! No guarantees here. That would be socialism. Thank you very much. Nice doing business with you.
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Hannibal55
Misrey luvs company but company doesn't reciprocat
09:50 AM on 05/27/2012
The greatest deception that Satan ever pulled off was to convince people that he didn't exist!!!

The retail investor is nothing more than another sucker to the job creating investor class. For that reason alone there should be open season and a bounty on the banksters!!!!!!
05:15 PM on 05/27/2012
But we do have socialism for corporations to big to fail, govt support loop holes favors, politicians with insider information. How many politicians leave office with millions more than when they came into office.