Too Big To Jail Is Here To Stay

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Lanny Breuer, the Assistant Attorney General who claimed that prosecuting banks for crimes poses a risk to the financial sector and so corrupt bankers are “too big to jail” has lost his job:

MARTIN SMITH: You gave a speech before the New York Bar Association. And in that speech, you made a reference to losing sleep at night, worrying about what a lawsuit might result in at a large financial institution.

LANNY BREUER: Right.

MARTIN SMITH: Is that really the job of a prosecutor, to worry about anything other than simply pursuing justice?

LANNY BREUER: Well, I think I am pursuing justice. And I think the entire responsibility of the department is to pursue justice. But in any given case, I think I and prosecutors around the country, being responsible, should speak to regulators, should speak to experts, because if I bring a case against institution A, and as a result of bringing that case, there’s some huge economic effect — if it creates a ripple effect so that suddenly, counterparties and other financial institutions or other companies that had nothing to do with this are affected badly — it’s a factor we need to know and understand

But the man who put him there, and who is ultimately responsible for the policy — the Attorney General himself — is here to stay.

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Simon Johnson notes:

Attorney General Eric Holder expressed similar views in the context of discussing why more severe charges weren’t brought against Zurich-based UBS AG last year for manipulating the London interbank offered rate. And Neil Barofsky, a onetime senior prosecutor and former inspector general of the Troubled Asset Relief Program that administered the bank bailouts, provided a scathing assessment of Justice Department policy.

The Justice Department likes to quote Thomas Jefferson: “The most sacred of the duties of government [is] to do equal and impartial justice to all its citizens,” a line that appears in its latest budget documents.

This sentiment is hardly consistent with saying that some companies have characteristics that put them above the law. Jefferson himself was very worried about the concentrated power of financiers — he would have seen today’s problems much more clearly than do Holder and Breuer.

Fundamentally, President Obama’s continued support for Holder illustrates that Obama is still committed to the policy of holding financiers to a lesser standard of justice than other citizens.

The continued failure to implement even the Volcker rule — let alone a Glass-Steagall-style separation between retail and investment banking — illustrates that Obama is committed to letting bailed-out banks continue to operate in the risky manner that led to the crisis. So does the total failure to ensure a level playing field for retail investors in a market now totally dominated by algorithms.

The big banks continue to ride roughshod over the American people with the complicity of the political class. Too Big to Jail is an affront to the Constitution, an affront to the Bill of Rights, an affront to those like Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Lysander Spooner, Frederick Douglas and all those who at various times crusaded to make equality before the law a reality in America.

The only sensible way forward is that lawbreakers on Wall Street must be prosecuted in the same way as other lawbreakers. That means that Eric Holder and all others associated with Too Big To Jail must lose their jobs.

But I doubt that will happen any time soon.
 
subbed cuz this shit is really bothering me not one thieving cracka went to jail. But brothers are getting criminal records for nickel bags
 
Bloomberg is the last major news source that hasn't become a parody of itself.

The NYTimes and WSJ both focused on Fast and Furious in their reporting of his departure, and only gave a passing reference to his PBS comments.

Overall, no one gives a shit that the financial wasn't punished, but instead, massively rewarded to make Too Big to Fail firms even bigger.

Remember, the populace said thank you when congress authorized TARP. We're a long way from demanding accountability for the rampant fraud that hasn't even slowed down since the recession.
 
A civil suit seems to have no problem uncovering wrongdoings. Where's the government?

E-Mails Imply JPMorgan Knew Some Mortgage Deals Were Bad
BY JESSICA SILVER-GREENBERG
FEBRUARY 6, 2013, 10:31 PM

When an outside analysis uncovered serious flaws with thousands of home loans, JPMorgan Chase executives found an easy fix.

Rather than disclosing the full extent of problems like fraudulent home appraisals and overextended borrowers, the bank adjusted the critical reviews, according to documents filed early Tuesday in federal court in Manhattan. As a result, the mortgages, which JPMorgan bundled into complex securities, appeared healthier, making the deals more appealing to investors.

The trove of internal e-mails and employee interviews, filed as part of a lawsuit by one of the investors in the securities, offers a fresh glimpse into Wall Street’s mortgage machine, which churned out billions of dollars of securities that later imploded. The documents reveal that JPMorgan, as well as two firms the bank acquired during the credit crisis, Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns, flouted quality controls and ignored problems, sometimes hiding them entirely, in a quest for profit.

The lawsuit, which was filed by Dexia, a Belgian-French bank, is being closely watched on Wall Street. After suffering significant losses, Dexia sued JPMorgan and its affiliates in 2012, claiming it had been duped into buying $1.6 billion of troubled mortgage-backed securities. The latest documents could provide a window into a $200 billion case that looms over the entire industry. In that lawsuit, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, has accused 17 banks of selling dubious mortgage securities to the two housing giants. At least 20 of the securities are also highlighted in the Dexia case, according to an analysis of court records.

In court filings, JPMorgan has strongly denied wrongdoing and is contesting both cases in federal court. The bank declined to comment.

Dexia’s lawsuit is part of a broad assault on Wall Street for its role in the 2008 financial crisis, as prosecutors, regulators and private investors take aim at mortgage-related securities. New York’s attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, sued JPMorgan last year over investments created by Bear Stearns between 2005 and 2007.

Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chief executive, has criticized prosecutors for attacking JPMorgan because of what Bear Stearns did. Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations in October, Mr. Dimon said the bank did the federal government “a favor” by rescuing the flailing firm in 2008.

The legal onslaught has been costly. In November, JPMorgan, the nation’s largest bank, agreed to pay $296.9 million to settle claims by the Securities and Exchange Commission that Bear Stearns had misled mortgage investors by hiding some delinquent loans. JPMorgan did not admit or deny wrongdoing.

“The true price tag for the ongoing costs of the litigation is terrifying,” said Christopher Whalen, managing director at Carrington Investment Services.

The Dexia lawsuit centers on complex securities created by JPMorgan, Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual during the housing boom. As profits soared, the Wall Street firms scrambled to pump out more investments, even as questions emerged about their quality.

With a seemingly insatiable appetite, JPMorgan scooped up mortgages from lenders with troubled records, according to the court documents. In an internal “due diligence scorecard,” JPMorgan ranked large mortgage originators, assigning Washington Mutual and American Home Mortgage the lowest grade of “poor” for their documentation, the court filings show.

The loans were quickly sold to investors. Describing the investment assembly line, an executive at Bear Stearns told employees “we are a moving company not a storage company,” according to the court documents.

As they raced to produce mortgage-backed securities, Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns also scaled back their quality controls, the documents indicate.

In an initiative called Project Scarlett, Washington Mutual slashed its due diligence staff by 25 percent as part of an effort to bolster profit. Such steps “tore the heart out” of quality controls, according to a November 2007 e-mail from a Washington Mutual executive. Executives who pushed back endured “harassment” when they tried to “keep our discipline and controls in place,” the e-mail said.

Even when flaws were flagged, JPMorgan and the other firms sometimes overlooked the warnings.

JPMorgan routinely hired Clayton Holdings and other third-party firms to examine home loans before they were packed into investments. Combing through the mortgages, the firms searched for problems like borrowers who had vastly overstated their incomes or appraisals that inflated property values.

According to the court documents, an analysis for JPMorgan in September 2006 found that “nearly half of the sample pool” — or 214 loans — were “defective,” meaning they did not meet the underwriting standards. The borrowers’ incomes, the firms found, were dangerously low relative to the size of their mortgages. Another troubling report in 2006 discovered that thousands of borrowers had already fallen behind on their payments.

But JPMorgan at times dismissed the critical assessments or altered them, the documents show. Certain JPMorgan employees, including the bankers who assembled the mortgages and the due diligence managers, had the power to ignore or veto bad reviews.

In some instances, JPMorgan executives reduced the number of loans considered delinquent, the documents show. In others, the executives altered the assessments so that a smaller number of loans were considered “defective.”

In a 2007 e-mail, titled “Banking overrides,” a JPMorgan due diligence manager asks a banker: “How do you want to handle these loans?” At times, they whitewashed the findings, the documents indicate. In 2006, for example, a review of mortgages found that at least 1,154 loans were more than 30 days delinquent. The offering documents sent to investors showed only 25 loans as delinquent.

A person familiar with the bank’s portfolios said JPMorgan had reviewed the loans separately and determined that the number of delinquent loans was far less than the outside analysis had found.

At Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, employees also had the power to sanitize bad assessments. Employees at Bear Stearns were told that they were responsible for “purging all of the older reports” that showed flaws, “leaving only the final reports,” according to the court documents.

Such actions were designed to bolster profit. In a deposition, a Washington Mutual employee said revealing loan defects would undermine the lucrative business, and that the bank would suffer “a couple-point hit in price.”

Ratings agencies also did not necessarily get a complete picture of the investments, according to the court filings. An assessment of the loans in one security revealed that 24 percent of the sample was “materially defective,” the filings show. After exercising override power, a JPMorgan employee sent a report in May 2006 to a ratings agency that showed only 5.3 percent of the mortgages were defective.

Such investments eventually collapsed, spreading losses across the financial system.

Dexia, which has been bailed out twice since the financial crisis, lost $774 million on mortgage-backed securities, according to court records.

Mr. Schneiderman, the New York attorney general, said that overall losses from flawed mortgage-backed securities from 2005 and 2007 were $22.5 billion.

In a statement shortly after he sued JPMorgan Chase, Mr. Schneiderman said the lawsuit was a template “for future actions against issuers of residential mortgage-backed securities that defrauded investors and cost millions of Americans their homes.”

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/02/06/e-mails-imply-jpmorgan-knew-some-mortgage-deals-were-bad/
 
The Tea Party needs to get on board with liberals!


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The Tea Party needs to get on board with liberals!


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Because the liberals are on board? Dodd-Frank further solidified the standard of Too Big to Fail.

Unless you're going to pretend those two are Blue Dogs.

No one with authority wants to cut off that cash faucet known as the banking industry.

Part of the problem is people like you romanticizing their side. Liberals and conservatives have had 6 years to secure accountability. No accountability is in sight for this massive fraud. Your government has only delivered a multi-trillion dollar reward to the banking industry as a response.


This is the way the system works whether it's your beloved liberals or the hated conservatives.
 
Because the liberals are on board? Dodd-Frank further solidified the standard of Too Big to Fail.

Unless you're going to pretend those two are Blue Dogs.

No one with authority wants to cut off that cash faucet known as the banking industry.

Part of the problem is people like you romanticizing their side. Liberals and conservatives have had 6 years to secure accountability. No accountability is in sight for this massive fraud. Your government has only delivered a multi-trillion dollar reward to the banking industry as a response.



This is the way the system works whether it's your beloved liberals or the hated conservatives.


Unless you're going to pretend those two are Blue Dogs.

So that's your only choice?

Like I said get on board with liberals regarding this.

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And if I find a quote by a single conservative or Tea Partier, do they magically own the just position on this issue as well?

What a low standard for "being on board" you have for liberals. Especially considered Feingold was the only liberal in the Senate to not vote for Dodd-Frank, which means Bernie Sanders was "on board" with the status quo.
 
No one with authority wants to cut off that cash faucet known as the banking industry.

So in your typical Greedonian style, you posited an opinion as fact and built an entire talking point around it.



What a low standard for "being on board" you have for liberals. Especially considered Feingold was the only liberal in the Senate to not vote for Dodd-Frank, which means Bernie Sanders was "on board" with the status quo.


This how Sanders feels about Dodd-Frank.


Sanders, Cantwell Decry Weak New Commodity Speculation Rule



After the Commodity Futures Trading Commission voted to impose position limits on commodity speculators, the emails started whizzing into my inbox. Since the vote fell strictly along party lines, you’d think the left-leaning emailers would be full of praise for the plan, while the right chagrined. But you would be wrong.

There are basically two Senators who have followed this rule the most: Bernie Sanders and Maria Cantwell. Here’s what Sanders said: “Under this rule, a single Wall Street speculator will still be allowed to hold positions equal to 25 percent of the physically deliverable supply of crude oil, gasoline, and heating oil. That’s not enough.” If anything, Cantwell was more bracing:
“Last year, Congress told the CFTC to get serious about reining in Wall Street’s excessive speculation,” Cantwell said. “The CFTC was supposed to provide speed limits for Wall Street gambling on commodities. Today’s overly broad rule is like setting the speed limit at 125 miles per hour.”

“The CFTC should do its job and provide transparency and oversight of Wall Street. I’m pleased the CFTC followed our suggestion in dropping the conditional spot month position limit, which would have made it easier for speculators to manipulate prices. But I’m disappointed that this rule is simply too weak to meaningfully protect consumers.”

The position limits rules were mandated by Dodd-Frank, so the CFTC couldn’t do nothing. According to Sanders and Cantwell, they did the next best thing. First of all, the rule was supposed to be promulgated in January, so that’s a 10-month reprieve for commodity speculators. Second, it’s unclear when this rule will even take effect. Third, even when they do take effect, the rules are a light touch.

Any oil trader, as Sanders said, can control 25% of deliverable supply in any given month, and natural gas traders can hold contracts worth FIVE TIMES the deliverable supply. Tyson Slocum of Public Citizen says in a statement that “these limits are simply too permissive to the big banks and allow them to hold positions that are too large. And with the rules’ implementation delayed until the commission defines the term ‘swap’ (no timeframe on that), the banks’ status quo reigns supreme.”

The Public Citizen recommendation is at 5% for the spot month. Sanders notes that CFTC can tighten the limits in the future. Until then, speculators will be able to run up energy prices and damage consumers. “I will continue to urge the CFTC to use this provision to impose stricter speculation limits,” Sanders said in his statement. Of course, he and his colleagues will have to come up against the massive finance lobby to pull it off.

This has been the trajectory of Dodd-Frank; Congress passed the rule-writing power to the regulators, and the regulators bow to lobbyist pressure to turn the rules into mush
 
I understand what the prosecutor is saying (our financial system and regulations are so fucked up) - banks somehow were able to dictate the terms on their own bailout. However, I still think Obama dropped the ball in not taking measured steps to really put foot to ass.

Hopefully, Elizabeth Warren keeps going hard.
 
So in your typical Greedonian style, you posited an opinion as fact and built an entire talking point around it.






This how Sanders feels about Dodd-Frank.


Sanders, Cantwell Decry Weak New Commodity Speculation Rule



After the Commodity Futures Trading Commission voted to impose position limits on commodity speculators, the emails started whizzing into my inbox. Since the vote fell strictly along party lines, you’d think the left-leaning emailers would be full of praise for the plan, while the right chagrined. But you would be wrong.

There are basically two Senators who have followed this rule the most: Bernie Sanders and Maria Cantwell. Here’s what Sanders said: “Under this rule, a single Wall Street speculator will still be allowed to hold positions equal to 25 percent of the physically deliverable supply of crude oil, gasoline, and heating oil. That’s not enough.” If anything, Cantwell was more bracing:
“Last year, Congress told the CFTC to get serious about reining in Wall Street’s excessive speculation,” Cantwell said. “The CFTC was supposed to provide speed limits for Wall Street gambling on commodities. Today’s overly broad rule is like setting the speed limit at 125 miles per hour.”

“The CFTC should do its job and provide transparency and oversight of Wall Street. I’m pleased the CFTC followed our suggestion in dropping the conditional spot month position limit, which would have made it easier for speculators to manipulate prices. But I’m disappointed that this rule is simply too weak to meaningfully protect consumers.”

The position limits rules were mandated by Dodd-Frank, so the CFTC couldn’t do nothing. According to Sanders and Cantwell, they did the next best thing. First of all, the rule was supposed to be promulgated in January, so that’s a 10-month reprieve for commodity speculators. Second, it’s unclear when this rule will even take effect. Third, even when they do take effect, the rules are a light touch.

Any oil trader, as Sanders said, can control 25% of deliverable supply in any given month, and natural gas traders can hold contracts worth FIVE TIMES the deliverable supply. Tyson Slocum of Public Citizen says in a statement that “these limits are simply too permissive to the big banks and allow them to hold positions that are too large. And with the rules’ implementation delayed until the commission defines the term ‘swap’ (no timeframe on that), the banks’ status quo reigns supreme.”

The Public Citizen recommendation is at 5% for the spot month. Sanders notes that CFTC can tighten the limits in the future. Until then, speculators will be able to run up energy prices and damage consumers. “I will continue to urge the CFTC to use this provision to impose stricter speculation limits,” Sanders said in his statement. Of course, he and his colleagues will have to come up against the massive finance lobby to pull it off.

This has been the trajectory of Dodd-Frank; Congress passed the rule-writing power to the regulators, and the regulators bow to lobbyist pressure to turn the rules into mush
So it's OK that he voted for it?

The predictable result happened when Congress purposely left it to the regulators, who apply for jobs with the banks after they let the banks write the regulation? Such a shocking development considering that dynamic has existed for decades.

Poor Congress, always the victim. If only they had the power to write laws dictating the actions of banks.
 
Eric Holder: Some Banks Are So Large That It Is Difficult For Us To Prosecute Them

While it is widely assumed that the too-big-to-fail banks in the US (and elsewhere) are beyond the criminal justice system - based on simple empirical fact - when the Attorney General of the United States openly admits to the fact that he is "concerned that the size of some of these institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to prosecute them," since, "it will have a negative impact on the national economy, perhaps even the world economy," one has to stare open-mouthed at the state of our union. It appears, just as the proletariat assumed, that too-big-to-fail banks are indeed too-big-to-jail.

GRASSLEY: On the issue of bank prosecution, I'm concerned that we have a mentality of too-big-to-jail in the financial sector of spreading from fraud cases to terrorist financing and money laundering cases -- and I cite HSBC. So I think we're on a slippery slope.

HOLDER: The concern that you have raised is one that I, frankly, share. And I'm not talking about HSBC now. That (inaudible) be appropriate.

But I am concerned that the size of some of these institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to prosecute them when we are hit with indications that if you do prosecute, if you do bring a criminal charge, it will have a negative impact on the national economy, perhaps even the world economy. And I think that is a function of the fact that some of these institutions have become too large.

Again, I'm not talking about HSBC. This is just a -- a more general comment. I think it has an inhibiting influence -- impact on our ability to bring resolutions that I think would be more appropriate. And I think that is something that we -- you all need to -- need to consider. So the concern that you raised is actually one that I share.
 
Eric Holder: Some Banks Are So Large That It Is Difficult For Us To Prosecute Them

While it is widely assumed that the too-big-to-fail banks in the US (and elsewhere) are beyond the criminal justice system - based on simple empirical fact - when the Attorney General of the United States openly admits to the fact that he is "concerned that the size of some of these institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to prosecute them," since, "it will have a negative impact on the national economy, perhaps even the world economy," one has to stare open-mouthed at the state of our union. It appears, just as the proletariat assumed, that too-big-to-fail banks are indeed too-big-to-jail.

Can't defend Holder on this one.
 
Note to New S.E.C. Chief: The Clock Is Ticking

Note to New S.E.C. Chief: The Clock Is Ticking
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
Published: April 13, 2013

AFTER receiving unanimous support from the United States Senate, Mary Jo White was confirmed last week as the new head of the Securities and Exchange Commission. At her swearing-in, she praised S.E.C. officials for “vigorously enforcing the securities laws.”

Doubts remain, however, about how potent the S.E.C.’s enforcement has been, especially in the aftermath of the mortgage mania. So Ms. White has some work to do.

She surely has a long list of ideas for her S.E.C. stewardship. Here’s hoping that one priority is to determine, and ramp up, investigations and whistle-blower complaints that are approaching their five-year statute of limitations. For a lot of cases involving questionable practices and disclosures arising from the mortgage bust of 2008, time is running out.

A February ruling by the Supreme Court made this crystal clear. In a case called Gabelli v. S.E.C., the court ruled that the commission has no more than five years from the occurrence of a fraud to file enforcement actions. It cannot wait until it uncovers a violation to start that clock.

How many S.E.C. cases are up against that five-year limit? Outsiders have no way of knowing. But one whistle-blower complaint involving potentially misleading disclosures by SunTrust Banks, a regional bank holding company in Atlanta, serves as an example. Filed with the S.E.C. more than a year ago by a former SunTrust employee, it appears to be languishing even though time’s a-wasting.

The SunTrust whistle-blower complaint, which I reviewed, contends that company financial filings of recent years misrepresented the bank’s exposure to risky no-documentation mortgages that it underwrote from 2006 to 2008. Many were sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the taxpayer-backed mortgage finance giants.

Shareholders have not been aware, the complaint says, that many mortgages SunTrust was selling to Fannie and Freddie in this period were so-called liar loans, with little to no documentation of borrowers’ income or assets. The bank maintained that it had little exposure to low-documentation loans, the complaint says.

As with many whistle-blower complaints, the person filing this matter asked not to be identified. Aegis J. Frumento, a lawyer at Stern Tannenbaum & Bell who represents the whistle-blower, said the plaintiff is an experienced mortgage underwriter at SunTrust who was disturbed by dubious practices at the bank.

Michael McCoy, a SunTrust spokesman, declined to comment on the whistle-blower’s allegations, saying the bank was unaware of the complaint. He said in a statement that the bank’s policy was to use Fannie’s and Freddie’s guidelines when underwriting loans that would be sold to them. Nevertheless, the complaint details how it says some SunTrust mortgage sales representatives manipulated an automated loan underwriting system to gain Fannie’s and Freddie’s approval for mortgages that did not meet those companies’ standards. These loans, sold mostly to Fannie, were called Agency Shortcut mortgages.

SunTrust sales representatives entered fabricated income and asset figures into the bank’s exclusive version of Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriting system, the complaint says. Fake numbers, it says, would generate automatic approvals for unqualified borrowers, “at the same time preventing underwriters from exercising proper oversight.”

That oversight was thwarted because once the system’s approvals kicked in, the complaint contends, underwriters in SunTrust’s due diligence department could not stop the loans from being sold to Fannie or Freddie. There was no turning off the assembly line.

The complaint contains several internal SunTrust documents to support its allegations. One is a promotional piece for sales reps that explains the Agency Shortcut mortgage. “It’s a SISA (Stated Income/Stated Asset) at full doc pricing,” it says. Translation: undocumented loans carried the same interest rate as a fully documented version.

Because of fabrications, the complaint says, Fannie Mae’s system recognized these loans as fully documented. But according to the complaint, the Agency Shortcut mortgage waived property inspections and did not require the borrower to sign the document that allows the Internal Revenue Service to provide a prospective lender with a borrower’s income. In addition, borrowers of these loans could have a debt-to-income ratio of up to 64.99 percent, an onerous level.

SunTrust terminated the Agency Shortcut program in April 2008, the complaint says. Two months before, Fannie Mae limited the number of times a sales rep could enter information on a single borrower, according to the complaint. This might have been in recognition that its underwriting system was being gamed by repeated efforts to gain a loan approval.

The complaint contends that SunTrust originated “tens of billions of dollars” in Agency Shortcut mortgages. It is unclear how many of these loans landed at Fannie or Freddie; Suntrust’s financial filings say the bank sold $98.6 billion in total loans to Fannie and Freddie during the three years ended 2008.

Support for the whistle-blower’s descriptions of lax lending at SunTrust seems apparent from the boatload of loans sold to Fannie and Freddie during the mortgage mania that the bank has had to buy back. Such repurchases are typically done with loans that failed to meet standards — like borrower quality — or other characteristics promised to the purchasers at the time of the sale.

Over the last three calendar years, according to its financial statements, SunTrust has repurchased $2.235 billion of mortgages, the bulk from Fannie. Fannie requests these repurchases, and documents show that Suntrust’s constituted the fifth-largest amount among lenders at the end of 2012. It ranked not far below the much larger JPMorgan Chase.

And at the end of 2012, SunTrust said it had $655 million in repurchase requests outstanding. Mr. McCoy, the spokesman, said the bank’s buybacks reflected its heavy concentration of lending in Georgia and Florida during the bubble.

“We sold a higher percentage of loans to Fannie Mae than did some of our competitors,” he said, “so it also stands to reason that our demands from Fannie Mae could be higher than some peers.” The loan types that included the Agency Shortcut have accounted for just 20 percent of the bank’s buybacks, he said.

It is unclear, of course, what might come of this whistle-blower complaint. The S.E.C. declined to comment.

The statute-of-limitations clock, meanwhile, is ticking. “I’m sure the S.E.C. takes the Gabelli decision seriously,” Mr. Frumento said. “The logic of the ruling is that the S.E.C. is supposed to know when there have been securities law violations because that’s their job. I think the S.E.C. may end up being too late to file a lot of cases that it is now sitting on. But not this one, yet.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/14/b...g-on-mortgage-cases.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
 
As usual, you duck issues and exchange and stick to sophistry and hyperbole. That is why your belief system relies so heavily on demonizing the successful. That is why "progressive" economics is still adhered to, even though it has been shown to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.

Progressive, liberal Senator Elizabeth Warren

Where are the libertarian/capitalist/conservative, republican senators?


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Progressive, liberal Senator Elizabeth Warren

Where are the libertarian/capitalist/conservative, republican senators?
So, does a liberal talking about accountability make a sound if no one is being held accountable by a Democratic administration?
 
Why did Wall Street get off easier than the AP and IRS?

Why did Wall Street get off easier than the AP and IRS?
BY JEFF CONNAUGHTON
MAY 16, 2013

For those of us who have long wondered why the Justice Department never investigated Wall Street, the Associated Press subpoena scandal illustrates a key point: The Justice Department sets priorities based on what it hears from the White House. When the White House wanted to identify and prosecute leakers of classified information, Justice sprang into action and used extremely aggressive tactics. "I make no apologies" President Obama said today, for being concerned about leaks.

Here, the AP story is the mirror opposite of the Wall Street scandal. After the financial crisis, when Justice Department leaders cocked their ears toward the Obama White House and Treasury Department, they heard nothing. Consequently, Justice adopted a passive, decentralized and desultory approach to Wall Street investigations. The clear priority at the very top of our government was to restore the health of the financial industry, not to punish those who nearly wrecked it. Even as we learned about the failures of Justice Department leaders to organize any significant effort at pursuing Wall Street fraud, there was no self-correction.

This happened because President Obama has provided deceptive “cover” for the Justice Department’s failures. First, he has stated repeatedly that most Wall Street behavior was “unethical” but not illegal (then why the numerous civil fraud actions against the major banks brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission?). And, second, he created two Potemkin financial fraud task forces to give a false impression of a centrailized, aggressive effort. Meanwhile, from the earliest days of his presidency, Obama has appointed officials from the finance industry or white-collar defense bar who rotate into government and back into the finance industry or the law firms that defended banks.

Before the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, Attorney General Eric Holder—berated for years by Republicans for the Fast and Furious operation and Justice’s actions on immigration and voting rights—quietly dug himself even deeper by contradicting his own previous admission that the size of megabanks has been an “inhibiting factor” in prosecutions: "Let me be very, very, very clear,” he said. “Banks are not too big to jail.”

Holder’s shifting rationalizations for his department’s failures are embarrassing. What’s worse, on May 3, at a Corporate Crime Reporter conference at the National Press Club, Denis McInerney, the deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, defended Justice’s extensive use of non-prosecution and deferred prosecution agreements, even in cases where criminality has occurred, in part by making the delusional statement: “[O]ver the last ten, twenty years, we have seen a complete radical change in how the corporate world behaves in a very positive way.”

That would be news to the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which during the past three years has investigated and reported publicly about extensive evidence of systemic wrongdoing at Washington Mutual, Goldman Sachs, HSBC and now JPMorgan. Under the bipartisan leadership of Senators Carl Levin, Tom Coburn, and John McCain, the PSI has repeatedly shown that when independent competent fact finders devote extensive time and resources to uncovering wrongdoing at our largest banks, they find it.

Nevertheless, the Justice Department has never prosecuted a single individual at these banks. And in Holder’s four years, the House Judiciary Committee has never held a single oversight hearing on the failure to prosecute white collar crime. With the exception of Senator Chuck Grassley, the Senate Judiciary Committee has been no better, quietly nodding along as Holder cites utterly misleading claims of success in prosecuting garden variety financial fraud and small-fry mortgage brokers. Holder was far less succesful in dodging responsibility for the AP subpoenas, but his repeated claims of "I don't know" also mirrored the ineptness and lack of accountability he's demonstrated on Wall Street investigations.

With President Obama's gratitude, Justice Department leaders will likely one day rejoin the prestigious white collar bar and make millions of dollars a year to defend the very bankers they were supposed to hold accountable (as Lanny Breuer, the former Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, already has done). And the damage done to the public’s trust in the equal administration of justice and the integrity of the financial markets, like still waters, runs deep.

Jeff Connaughton, a former investment banker, lobbyist, aide to Senator Joe Biden, and Clinton White House lawyer, worked with former Senator Ted Kaufman on financial reform in legislation in 2009 and 2010. He is the author of The Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins.

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/...secutions-why-white-house-let-banks-get-away#
 
Re: Why did Wall Street get off easier than the AP and IRS?

Why did Wall Street get off easier than the AP and IRS?
BY JEFF CONNAUGHTON
MAY 16, 2013

For those of us who have long wondered why the Justice Department never investigated Wall Street, the Associated Press subpoena scandal illustrates a key point: The Justice Department sets priorities based on what it hears from the White House. When the White House wanted to identify and prosecute leakers of classified information, Justice sprang into action and used extremely aggressive tactics. "I make no apologies" President Obama said today, for being concerned about leaks.

Here, the AP story is the mirror opposite of the Wall Street scandal. After the financial crisis, when Justice Department leaders cocked their ears toward the Obama White House and Treasury Department, they heard nothing. Consequently, Justice adopted a passive, decentralized and desultory approach to Wall Street investigations. The clear priority at the very top of our government was to restore the health of the financial industry, not to punish those who nearly wrecked it. Even as we learned about the failures of Justice Department leaders to organize any significant effort at pursuing Wall Street fraud, there was no self-correction.

This happened because President Obama has provided deceptive “cover” for the Justice Department’s failures. First, he has stated repeatedly that most Wall Street behavior was “unethical” but not illegal (then why the numerous civil fraud actions against the major banks brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission?). And, second, he created two Potemkin financial fraud task forces to give a false impression of a centrailized, aggressive effort. Meanwhile, from the earliest days of his presidency, Obama has appointed officials from the finance industry or white-collar defense bar who rotate into government and back into the finance industry or the law firms that defended banks.

Before the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, Attorney General Eric Holder—berated for years by Republicans for the Fast and Furious operation and Justice’s actions on immigration and voting rights—quietly dug himself even deeper by contradicting his own previous admission that the size of megabanks has been an “inhibiting factor” in prosecutions: "Let me be very, very, very clear,” he said. “Banks are not too big to jail.”

Holder’s shifting rationalizations for his department’s failures are embarrassing. What’s worse, on May 3, at a Corporate Crime Reporter conference at the National Press Club, Denis McInerney, the deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, defended Justice’s extensive use of non-prosecution and deferred prosecution agreements, even in cases where criminality has occurred, in part by making the delusional statement: “[O]ver the last ten, twenty years, we have seen a complete radical change in how the corporate world behaves in a very positive way.”

That would be news to the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which during the past three years has investigated and reported publicly about extensive evidence of systemic wrongdoing at Washington Mutual, Goldman Sachs, HSBC and now JPMorgan. Under the bipartisan leadership of Senators Carl Levin, Tom Coburn, and John McCain, the PSI has repeatedly shown that when independent competent fact finders devote extensive time and resources to uncovering wrongdoing at our largest banks, they find it.

Nevertheless, the Justice Department has never prosecuted a single individual at these banks. And in Holder’s four years, the House Judiciary Committee has never held a single oversight hearing on the failure to prosecute white collar crime. With the exception of Senator Chuck Grassley, the Senate Judiciary Committee has been no better, quietly nodding along as Holder cites utterly misleading claims of success in prosecuting garden variety financial fraud and small-fry mortgage brokers. Holder was far less succesful in dodging responsibility for the AP subpoenas, but his repeated claims of "I don't know" also mirrored the ineptness and lack of accountability he's demonstrated on Wall Street investigations.

With President Obama's gratitude, Justice Department leaders will likely one day rejoin the prestigious white collar bar and make millions of dollars a year to defend the very bankers they were supposed to hold accountable (as Lanny Breuer, the former Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division, already has done). And the damage done to the public’s trust in the equal administration of justice and the integrity of the financial markets, like still waters, runs deep.

Jeff Connaughton, a former investment banker, lobbyist, aide to Senator Joe Biden, and Clinton White House lawyer, worked with former Senator Ted Kaufman on financial reform in legislation in 2009 and 2010. He is the author of The Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins.

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/...secutions-why-white-house-let-banks-get-away#


Good read!!!!!!!!!!
 
So, does a liberal talking about accountability make a sound if no one is being held accountable by a Democratic administration?

Does this mean if Ted Cruz becomes president he will direct his AG to prosecute the banksters?
 
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“It’s time people understand why – and how – Wall Street always wins. It’s not a tale of bags filled with cash and quid pro quos. It’s more subtle than that, and in some ways best told by my own personal story and the compromises I made along the way. Party cohesion and the desire to make a munificent living in DC go a long way to enforce silence. Yet I’m willing to burn every bridge...

For two years, Senator Kaufman and I kicked Wall Street in the groin every day. We loudly advocated the prosecution of financial fraudsters, prodded the SEC to do something – anything – about high-frequency trading and the vertiginous market swings it was causing, and pushed for meaningful financial regulatory reform. Despite our nearly fanatical dedication, we and other reformers failed."

Quotes above from book author

-Jeff Connaughton-


Read the entire book, epub, mobi, pdf, link below
Code:
https://www.rapidshare.com/files/3878266094/WWSAW.rar


plunder-pros-bfee.jpg
 
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Does this mean if Ted Cruz becomes president he will direct his AG to prosecute the banksters?
No, because as Gretchen Morgenson explain in post 17, the statute of limitations would have passed for most of the cases so it wouldn't even be an option.

And $80 billion a month is a great defense fund anyway.

You won.
 
Justice Department tells lawmakers no bank is too big to jail

Justice Department tells lawmakers no bank is too big to jail
By Sarah N. Lynch | Reuters
15 hrs ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Justice Department official insisted on Wednesday that no financial company is too big to jail, in the department's latest effort to backpedal from statements made in March by Attorney General Eric Holder.

"No institution and no individual is immune from prosecution because of its size," Mythili Raman, acting assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's criminal division, said in testimony before a U.S. House of Representatives panel.

The financial services committee's oversight panel called Wednesday's hearing in response to Holder's comments in March, in which he told a Senate committee that it can "become difficult" to prosecute major financial institutions that have been accused of wrongdoing because they are so large that a criminal charge could pose a threat to the economy.

Many lawmakers interpreted the remark to mean that some banks were "too big to jail;" the 2010 Dodd-Frank law was meant to solve the problem of "too big to fail."

Holder backtracked earlier this month from his comments, but Democrats and Republicans still have asked whether the department has been aggressive enough in pursuing criminal charges in connection with the financial crisis and other matters, such as money laundering.

Many members of the panel on Wednesday said they still had lingering questions about the process that the Justice Department follows when determining whether to charge corporations and individuals.

"Isn't the attorney general implying that some of these institutions are so large, it is very difficult to make a decision to prosecute them?" asked North Carolina Republican Patrick McHenry, who chaired the hearing.

"I don't think that is what the attorney general was saying, Mr. Chairman," Raman said.

She added that the department weighs a number of factors when making prosecution decisions, with "collateral consequences on innocent third parties" being one of them.

She said that no single factor, including collateral consequences, prevents the department from filing criminal charges.

Concerns about the impact of criminal prosecutions on large companies can be traced back to the 2002 indictment and eventual demise of accounting giant Arthur Andersen.

That prosecution led to the loss of about 25,000 jobs and a greater consolidation in the accounting industry. In light of that, the Justice Department stepped up its use of deferred and non-prosecution agreements.

More recently, the department has faced criticism by some for not bringing many criminal cases against banks and high-powered executives in connection with the financial crisis.

Critics also point to the department's decision last year not to prosecute British financial group HSBC Holdings Plc in a case involving allegations of laundering drug money from Mexico.

The company instead entered into a deferred prosecution agreement and paid $1.92 billion to the U.S.

Several Democrats said on Wednesday that they feared big banks are allowed to buy their way out of trouble by paying fines.

"When we hear that none of the Wall Street culprits have gone to trial, it contributes to this feeling out there that if you have money, you can get off," said Representative Emanuel Cleaver, a Democrat from Missouri.

"If you rob a convenience store, you will go to jail. If you rob the nation, you just get richer and you pay a fine," he said.

"I can assure you, Congressman, that our career prosecutors and investigative agents are absolutely tenacious about getting to the bottom of criminal wrongdoing at any entity, including large financial institutions," Raman replied.

http://news.yahoo.com/justice-department-tells-lawmakers-no-bank-too-big-225529674.html
 
Tourre’s Junior Staff Defense Seen Leading to Trial Loss

Goldman Sachs paid a $500 million fine for an accusation of defrauding investors of $1 billion, and of course they don't have to admit any wrongdoing.

That's called worth it.

Somehow Goldman convinced the government to blame it all on one guy, Tourre.


Tourre’s Junior Staff Defense Seen Leading to Trial Loss
By Bob Van Voris & Patricia Hurtado
Aug 2, 2013 3:02 PM CT

Tourre a Foot Soldier in Wall Street Army: Cohan
Fabrice Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) vice president found liable for his role in a failed $1 billion investment, may have lost his case because jurors rejected his defense that as a junior employee he wasn’t primarily responsible for the transaction.

“Being 28 years old and one of several employees of Goldman Sachs isn’t a defense,” Tom Gorman, a former lawyer with the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Enforcement Division, who is now in private practice, said in an interview.

Tourre was a highly paid specialist working in a particular area who asked people to invest billions of dollars in a product he created, Gorman said. Tourre’s lawyers portrayed him as a young employee who was one of many Goldman Sachs employees who worked on the 2007 deal known as Abacus that had subprime mortgage-backed securities underlying the transaction.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...ble-in-sec-case-claiming-1-billion-fraud.html
 
We'll see how serious the Tea Party is in pursuing Wall Street crimes. Right now their focus is overturn abortion rights and meaningless Obamacare ending votes.


No, because as Gretchen Morgenson explain in post 17, the statute of limitations would have passed for most of the cases so it wouldn't even be an option.

And $80 billion a month is a great defense fund anyway.

You won.

A February ruling by the Supreme Court made this crystal clear. In a case called Gabelli v. S.E.C., the court ruled that the commission has no more than five years from the occurrence of a fraud to file enforcement actions. It cannot wait until it uncovers a violation to start that clock.


source: Inside Counsel

Litigation: SEC actions time-barred after five years? Not quite.

On Feb. 27, the U.S. Supreme Court held in a unanimous ruling in Gabelli v. SEC that actions by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for civil penalties must be brought within five years from the date on which the claim first accrued, as opposed to five years from discovery of the underlying wrongful conduct. The five-year limitations period is based upon 28 U.S.C. § 2462 – Time for Commencing Proceedings, which applies to actions for civil penalties where the federal statute upon which the claim is based does not contain its own statute of limitations. An issue not reached by the Supreme Court’s Gabelli decision, however, is whether Section 2462 applies to suits in which the government is seeking equitable relief, as opposed to civil penalties. The lower federal courts have reached varying conclusions on this issue.

In Gabelli, the SEC alleged that individual defendants aided and abetted an illicit quid pro quo between a mutual fund and one of its corporate investors. The SEC filed its action more than five years from the date of the alleged wrongdoing but argued that because the claim was based on fraud, the time within which it was required to bring the action did not begin to run until the agency could reasonably have discovered the alleged fraudulent conduct. The Supreme Court rejected the application of the so-called “discovery rule” on the grounds that its rationale is inconsistent with a regulatory action for civil penalties. According to the court, the discovery rule is “an exception to the standard rule ... where a plaintiff has been injured by fraud and remains [ignorant] without any fault or want of diligence.” By contrast, “the SEC’s very purpose is to root [fraud out].” As a result, the court held that the limitations period for the SEC’s claims for civil penalties should be calculated from the date of the defendants’ wrongdoing, not from the date of the SEC’s discovery of that wrongdoing.

Despite the Supreme Court’s adoption of a bright line rule as to when an SEC claim based on fraud accrues, the decision left open the question of whether the five-year limitations period applies when the SEC is seeking equitable relief, as opposed to civil penalties. Some lower federal courts have held that there are circumstances in which equitable relief may be punitive in nature, making it subject to the five-year limitations period of Section 2462, whereas other courts have held that claims for equitable relief are not subject to the five-year limitations period. In assessing whether a particular claim is inherently punitive or equitable, courts have considered whether the relief sought acts as a penalty or whether it is designed to undo damage or prevent future harm to the public. As the 6th Circuit noted in SEC v. Quinlan, “some courts have held that some or all equitable remedies are exempt from the [five-year] limitations period as a matter of law. ... Other courts have engaged in a fact-intensive inquiry to determine whether the equitable remedies sought in a particular case are remedial or punitive.”

For example, in SEC v. Kelly, the District Court for the Southern District of New York held that “Section 2462’s statute of limitations applies to the SEC’s request for civil penalties but not to its request for permanent injunctive relief, disgorgement or an officer and director bar.” By contrast, in SEC v. Quinlan, the 6th Circuit affirmed a ruling of the Eastern District of Michigan, which also found that SEC claims for an injunction and officer bar were equitable in nature, but only after a fact-intensive inquiry of the particular circumstances of the case. In Johnson v. SEC, the D.C. Circuit took a similarly fact-intensive approach in determining that a six-month suspension of a securities broker was punitive in nature and thus subject to the five-year limitations period of Section 2462. Lower courts’ varying approaches with respect to this issue make it difficult to predict whether an SEC claim will be subject to Section 2462. Particularly troublesome are claims in which the SEC asks the court to require a defendant to return money obtained unlawfully from harmed investors or to give up ill-gotten gains. If, as some courts have held, such remedies are equitable in nature, Section 2462 would offer no protection to a defendant against the SEC’s claims. Yet the monetary impact of such remedies could be much more severe than any civil fines sought by the SEC.

In sum, individuals and corporate entities should be aware that they may not necessarily be immune from all types of SEC enforcement actions merely because the five-year limitation period under Section 2462 has expired.
<!-- /page -->
 
So, does a liberal talking about accountability make a sound if no one is being held accountable by a Democratic administration?


Republicans have the congress!

Name a Tea Partier or libertarian in the house or senate that is doing anything to bring Wall Street to accountability?
 
so basically dude lost his job for telling the truth, but big banking mafia with their hoodwinking sham called the financial market, how the fuck does ubs just skate away..

they damn near set up the whole mortgage crisis bail out thing at our expense.. we followed the trail all the way up the ladder, and now its time to get amnesia..

this must end its time for everyone to pay for what they do....

and they wonder why the jails are filled with so many so called black men.

repost king hit the nail right on the fuckin head with that comment he made.
 
Republicans have the congress!

Name a Tea Partier or libertarian in the house or senate that is doing anything to bring Wall Street to accountability?


Ummm . . . those voting for the 40th time to repeal ObamaCare ???



 
Republicans have the congress!

Name a Tea Partier or libertarian in the house or senate that is doing anything to bring Wall Street to accountability?
Probably none, why not ask that of the party that provided 95% of the votes for Dodd-Frank?

Remember, $80 billion a month going to the financial industry right now as Obama prepares to nominate a new Fed chair that will continue that policy like Obama continued the $23 trillion bailout policies of Bush.

So we'll see if a senator of either party stands up to the banking industry during the confirmation process.
 
Probably none, why not ask that of the party that provided 95% of the votes for Dodd-Frank?

Remember, $80 billion a month going to the financial industry right now as Obama prepares to nominate a new Fed chair that will continue that policy like Obama continued the $23 trillion bailout policies of Bush.

So we'll see if a senator of either party stands up to the banking industry during the confirmation process.

Apposed to 90% of the party that voted to overturn Glass–Steagall with the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which is pretty much the genesis of the entire Wall Street rape.

I don't see any libertarians doing anything serious to right our economy, but I do see self proclaimed liberals doing it. Despite the opposition!
 
Apposed to 90% of the party that voted to overturn Glass–Steagall with the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which is pretty much the genesis of the entire Wall Street rape.
The genesis was knowing they would be bailed out no matter what law was on the books.

Or do you think lobbyist only own Republicans? But then again, of course you do.

I don't see any libertarians doing anything serious to right our economy, but I do see self proclaimed liberals doing it. Despite the opposition!
What are the liberals doing thoughtone?

The full weight of the Executive Branch has been under Democratic control for five years. The number of banks they've found criminally liable is less than the number of Americans killed by drones.

How does the administration define threats to America?
 
The genesis was knowing they would be bailed out no matter what law was on the books.


Or do you think lobbyist only own Republicans? But then again, of course you do.


What are the liberals doing thoughtone?

The full weight of the Executive Branch has been under Democratic control for five years. The number of banks they've found criminally liable is less than the number of Americans killed by drones.

How does the administration define threats to America?

What are the liberals doing thoughtone?

LOL! After all that you've posted about Obama's policy on drones, surveillance, war, Wall Street... you still call him a liberal?

Like I said in many a post on this board, Senator Sanders, Senator Warren and other, unabashedly, self proclaimed liberals are the only political faction in the government keeping the the Wall Street crisis relevant. The Tea Party, libertarians conservatives and most assuredly most republicans in general are the actual ones playing lip service to this issue

Just like the debt, when a republican is in office, the squeak about it, but continue to raise it, but when a democrat is in office, they cry that the world is going to end because of it.

Lip service!
 
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