Too Big To Jail Is Here To Stay

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!
As long as all the Too Big to Fail banks are bigger than what they were before the recession, then its all talk. Especially from the people you approve of.

You got Dodd-Frank. You keep making excuses like one Republican ruined it, three blue dogs in the Senate ruined it, or lobbyist ruined it. Dodd-Frank is an accurate portrayal of liberal values. Sacrifice some (never yourself, always others) for the greater good. The same logic that brought the bailouts in the first place has been made into law. The same logic of Goldman Sachs and all the other Too Big to Fail banks as they committed a massive fraud.

You keep wailing about Republicans being the problem. Well, I'm neither and I'll never vote for either for the rest of my life because they are the same. Simpleminded people are drawn to their rhetoric. What about the results? You obviously don't care that both produce shit results. You have some weird pride where it's important to you to have your favorites in charge fucking up.
 
As long as all the Too Big to Fail banks are bigger than what they were before the recession, then its all talk. Especially from the people you approve of.

You got Dodd-Frank. You keep making excuses like one Republican ruined it, three blue dogs in the Senate ruined it, or lobbyist ruined it. Dodd-Frank is an accurate portrayal of liberal values. Sacrifice some (never yourself, always others) for the greater good. The same logic that brought the bailouts in the first place has been made into law. The same logic of Goldman Sachs and all the other Too Big to Fail banks as they committed a massive fraud.

You keep wailing about Republicans being the problem. Well, I'm neither and I'll never vote for either for the rest of my life because they are the same. Simpleminded people are drawn to their rhetoric. What about the results? You obviously don't care that both produce shit results. You have some weird pride where it's important to you to have your favorites in charge fucking up.

I'll let you in on something. The banks were bigger before the recession than they were in 2000.

As I have said, too big to fail is a symptom, not the result.

Any fool would take as a given that Republicrats are the problem, not just republicans. I do stand by my contention that liberals are closer to the solution than libertarians, Conservatives or so called moderates.

You still haven't posted and republicans in congress who are doing anything close to what Senators Warren and Sanders are doing.

Not unexpected.
 
I'll let you in on something. The banks were bigger before the recession than they were in 2000.
Except that since 2000, the size of the banks have been explained as a detriment and the CAUSE of the last recession. They reason that it's fine they are bigger is what?

As I have said, too big to fail is a symptom, not the result.

Any fool would take as a given that Republicrats are the problem, not just republicans. I do stand by my contention that liberals are closer to the solution than libertarians, Conservatives or so called moderates.
To you a Republicrat is a Democrat that acts like a Republican. You need to get it that when a Democrat acts like a Democrat they're also a problem. Hence the unsatisfactory results on fixing any of this.

You still haven't posted and republicans in congress who are doing anything close to what Senators Warren and Sanders are doing.

Not unexpected.
I already said none while also saying those two aren't doing shit either but securing their reelections.
 
S&P to Fight for Evidence U.S. Suit Was Political Payback

So Petty.

S&P to Fight for Evidence U.S. Suit Was Political Payback
By Edvard Pettersson - Aug 18, 2013 11:01 PM CT

Standard & Poor’s is trying to show it was unfairly singled out in a $5 billion fraud lawsuit 18 months after it downgraded U.S. sovereign debt. Getting the government to provide supporting evidence will prove difficult.

McGraw Hill Financial Inc. (MHFI) and its S&P unit are seeking information from the Justice Department about the decision to target the company in the first federal case against a ratings firm for grades related to the credit crisis. S&P also wants a look at the government’s investigative files on other raters as part of a defense strategy to show it was unfairly sued.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...-evidence-u-s-suit-was-political-payback.html
 
Justice Didn’t Ensure Mortgage Fraud Was Priority, IG Says

Justice Didn’t Ensure Mortgage Fraud Was Priority, IG Says
By Tom Schoenberg and Phil Mattingly
Mar 13, 2014 1:39 PM CT

The U.S. Justice Department failed to pursue mortgage fraud in the years following the 2008 financial crisis with the same level of commitment that it publicly touted, an internal watchdog said.

While Attorney General Eric Holder said mortgage-fraud cases were among the department’s top priorities, the Federal Bureau of Investigation internally ranked them the lowest of six criminal threats, according to a report released today by Inspector General Michael Horowitz. The FBI devoted fewer resources to such cases even though Congress allocated $196 million for fiscal years 2009 to 2011 to pursue such conduct.

The Justice Department has been criticized by lawmakers and judges for not bringing more criminal cases against individuals following the collapse in housing prices and ensuing market turmoil. In August, Holder retracted a public statement after Bloomberg News reported that the department had inflated its track record of mortgage-fraud prosecutions.

Holder’s department “did not uniformly ensure that mortgage fraud was prioritized at a level commensurate with DOJ’s public statements about the importance of pursuing financial fraud cases in general, and mortgage fraud cases in particular,” the inspector general’s office said in a statement.

Low Priority

Horowitz found that mortgage fraud was a low priority or wasn’t a priority at all in FBI field offices including New York, Miami, Los Angeles and Baltimore, according to the report.

“The facts regarding the department’s work on mortgage fraud tell a much different story than this report,” Ellen Canale, a Justice Department spokeswoman, said in a statement. “In the time period in question, the number of mortgage fraud indictments nearly doubled, and the number of convictions rose by more than 100 percent.”

The Justice Department acknowledged last year that it had significantly overstated its performance, sometimes attributing older mortgage-fraud prosecutions to an initiative that began in 2011. Initial statistics, which were later corrected, were released at a press conference with two cabinet officials in attendance just weeks before the 2012 election.

Holder, speaking at the October 2012 press conference, said that the results indicated a “historic, government-wide commitment to eradicating mortgage fraud and related offenses across the country.”

Restated Statistics

The FBI in August restated statistics from the year-long mortgage-fraud initiative, lowering the number of people criminally charged to 107 from 530. Agencies were asked to correct victims’ total losses to $95 million from an estimated $1 billion, and the number of victims found to 17,185 from more than 73,000. The department also altered a transcript of Holder’s remarks on its website.

The release of “significantly flawed” information at the October 2012 press conference showed a “serious failure” to vet information that was being made public, the watchdog said.

A 2010 initiative called “Operation Stolen Dreams,” which was touted as “the largest collective enforcement effort ever brought to bear in confronting mortgage fraud,” may have contained similar errors, the report suggests.

Representative Elijah Cummings, the top Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government reform, said he was “deeply troubled” by the inspector general’s findings and will seek a briefing with Holder to discuss the report.

IG Recommendations

Horowitz made seven recommendations that include correcting prior public statements and materials that used inaccurate data as well as notifying “key stakeholders” of the changes.

Deputy Attorney General James Cole, in a letter to Horowitz that was released with the report, said the department would look into whether more information should be corrected.

The erroneous reporting “does not detract from the successes that the Department achieved during the audit period of 2009 to 2011,” Cole said in the letter. Mortgage fraud convictions rose to 1,118 in 2011 from 555 in 2009, and the department brought “significant criminal and civil enforcement actions against company officials,” Cole said.
 
One Banker Went to Jail, Two Prosecutors Got New Jobs

One Banker Went to Jail, Two Prosecutors Got New Jobs
8 MAY 5, 2014 11:39 AM EDT
By Christopher Flavelle

Why has just one top banker been imprisoned for the financial crisis? In this weekend's New York Times Magazine, ProPublica's Jesse Eisinger wrote that the answer is a Justice Department chastened by prosecutorial setbacks before the crisis, leaving an organization with neither the verve to seek criminal convictions nor the institutional know-how to achieve them.

Maybe most damning, Eisinger also attributes the department's reluctance to prosecutors with an eye on their next jobs. He cites Lanny Breuer, who left his job heading the department's criminal division to become vice chairman of Covington & Burling LLP, a Washington-based firm.

"Top governmental lawyers generally don't want to spend their entire careers in the public sector," Eisinger wrote. "Many want to score marquee victories and avoid mistakes and eventually leave for prominent corporate firms with starting salaries at 10 times what they make at the Department of Justice."

In other words, the department's failure to bring more criminal charges after the meltdown doesn't reflect only, or even primarily, the merits of those charges. Eisinger's story brings to mind what Mythili Raman, then acting chief of the department's criminal division, said in January at a Bloomberg Government breakfast in Washington. Asked why more people haven't gone to jail in the wake of the crisis, her response was:

So I think we have consistently said, and I believe strongly, that since the financial crisis and even at the time there was not a group more motivated to try to figure out whether there was crime underlying the crisis than prosecutors and FBI agents. We all devoted a great deal of resources and continue to devote resources to those issues. And I can't obviously speak to conclusions that were drawn in particular investigations, but I can say, and I want to emphasize this as much as possible, if -- where there are crimes -- provable crimes, the Department of Justice has always shown, our track record over decades, we will bring those cases. When there are not, we can't.

If the question is, were there crimes that were not prosecuted, I just don't think that is in a prosecutor's DNA to do. If there's a provable crime, we bring charges. If there's not, we don't. And so I think we have looked hard. We continue to look hard. And as you've seen, some of our civil counterparts have been using civil authorities to address some of that conduct of late. And I think that's what the department should be doing, which is using all of our tools as appropriate depending on the evidence. That's maybe an unsatisfying answer to your question, but it's about as close as I can get.

Last month, Raman left the department to join Breuer at Covington.

http://www.bloombergview.com/articl...ker-went-to-jail-two-prosecutors-got-new-jobs
 
How To Punish A Bank

How To Punish A Bank (12:23)
June 18, 2014 7:28 PM ET

One of the biggest banks in the world, BNP Paribas, is about to be punished. The financial cops are in the middle of deciding what they are going to do. They're trying to figure out how to punish a bank in a way that actually makes it change.

There are some standard ways to punish a bad bank. Fines are the first thing every regulator and judge tries. There's also getting the bank to admit guilt. Now they might try something never done before.

Today on the show: how to punish a bank.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2014/06/18/323045793/episode-547-how-to-punish-a-bank
 
source: Mother Jones

Did You Know That Antonin Scalia's Son Is Sabotaging Wall Street Reform?

He's not just Scalia's son. Eugene Scalia is quietly freeing Wall Street from the rules meant to keep it from crashing the economy again.

scalia_630x354.jpg


Ambrose Bierce once quipped that a lawyer is one skilled in the circumvention of the law. By that definition, Eugene Scalia is a lawyer of extraordinary skill. In less than five years, the 50-year-old son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia has become a one-man scourge to the reformers who won a hard-fought battle to pass the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act to rein in the out-of-control financial sector. So far, he's prevailed in three of the six suits he's filed against the law, single-handedly slowing its rollout to a snail's pace. As of May, a little more than half of the nearly four-year-old law's rules had been finalized and another 25 percent hadn't even been drafted. Much of that breathing room for Wall Street is thanks to Scalia, who has deployed a hyperliteral, almost absurdist series of procedural challenges to unnerve the bureaucrats charged with giving the legislation teeth.

Scalia has "created this sense that we're paralyzed, because if we write a rule we're just going to be reversed," says Lisa Donner, executive director of the watchdog group Americans for Financial Reform. The threat of more suits, she says, has "cast a real chill" over Wall Street regulators, particularly at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Scalia's legal challenges hinge on a simple, two-decade-old rule: Federal agencies monitoring financial markets must conduct a cost-benefit analysis whenever they write a new regulation. The idea is to weigh "efficiency, competition, and capital formation" so that businesses and investors can anticipate how their bottom line might be affected. Sounds reasonable. But by recognizing that the assumptions behind these hypothetical projections can be endlessly picked apart, Scalia has found a remarkably effective way to delay key parts of the law from going into effect.

Former Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) says Scalia and the big banks are attempting an end run around the law he coauthored: "These are ideologues who want to kill the rules. They can't say they're unconstitutional. They are doing this because it's the only possible way to knock them out." (Scalia declined to comment for this article.)

Eugene, the second of Antonin and Maureen Scalia's nine children, bears a passing resemblance to his father. Both are known for being congenial with colleagues across the partisan divide. But Gene lacks his father's bombast and love of the limelight. And where Justice Scalia pens withering diatribes against liberalism from the bench, his son is in the trenches, waging a battle of attrition.

His legal career began in 1990, when he joined Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, whose roster of all-star conservative lawyers has included Whitewater-Lewinskygate special prosecutor Ken Starr and former solicitor general Ted Olson. Today, Scalia is a partner, though he does not share in any revenue from the firm's cases before the Supreme Court (otherwise his dad might be pressured to recuse himself). He spent most of the '90s focused on labor law, primarily opposing workplace safety rules for white-collar employees; columnist Molly Ivins dubbed him "the godfather of the anti-ergonomics movement." He defended SeaWorld against federal safety rules implemented after an orca killed a trainer during a live show in 2010. (Scalia has argued in court that the company has no more responsibility to protect its trainers than the NFL has a duty to combat on-the-field injuries.)

In 2001, President George W. Bush tapped Scalia to work as the Department of Labor's solicitor. "It was the classic fox in the henhouse situation," says Lynn Rhinehart, general counsel at the AFL-CIO. When Senate Democrats blocked his confirmation, his father perceived a deeper slight. "Gene, I'm sure, didn't get his appointment as solicitor of labor in part because of his name," Antonin Scalia told his biographer, Joan Biskupic. In the end, Bush bypassed the Senate via a recess appointment and Scalia spent a year at Labor before returning to private practice.

In 2004, Scalia filed his first cost-benefit case, confronting the SEC on behalf of the US Chamber of Commerce over a rule that required mutual funds to find new board members outside the company. He won that case in the DC Circuit Court of Appeals and logged another big victory against the SEC in 2010, establishing himself as the go-to guy for litigating financial regulations into oblivion.

Scalia came after Dodd-Frank just two monthsafter its passage, targeting a rule that would give shareholders more opportunities to replace corporate board members. He laid out what would become his standard argument: Yes, the new law empowered the SEC to implement the rule, but the agency had been shoddy in calculating the impact on companies' balance sheets. A panel of three judges on the DC Circuit Court, all Republican appointees, sided with him and rebuked the agency for being "arbitrary and capricious." Two more wins against other Dodd-Frank rules followed. In September 2012, the court struck down a new rule on commodities futures—even though the Commodity Futures Trading Commission had devoted nearly a quarter of the 81-page rule to cost-benefit analysis in anticipation of just such a showdown.

Part of the secret to Scalia's success, his critics say, is the makeup of the DC District Court and DC Circuit Court, which have been controlled by conservative judges. "This right-wing group in the DC Circuit is one of the worst cases of judicial activism," Frank says. "They pretend judges should be restrained, but you have several cases of them substituting their economic judgment and making decisions that affect public policy rules." After Senate Democrats changed the filibuster rules last December, Obama's long-blocked nominees to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals were finally approved, tilting it to a 7-to-4 liberal-conservative split. But consumer advocates shouldn't pop the champagne too soon: It was an earlier Obama appointee who wrote the decision overturning the commodities rule.

That could be a sign of what's to come, particularly as Scalia sets his sights on the Volcker rule, a cornerstone of Dodd-Frank that is designed to keep banks from becoming "too big to fail" by limiting their investments in hedge funds and other risky activities. When the final rule was announced in January without a financial-impact statement, Scalia was quick to pounce. "This is a disturbing reflection of how some financial-regulatory agencies are treating the economic analysis required by Congress," he told Reuters. You could almost hear the legal pads being laid out.
 
Is this the new liberal narrative? The banks are currently under control and Republicans are setting them free? The banks are richer than before and hold a greater concentration of GDP as assets than before the recession.

Tell me more how you care about inequality but think Dodd-Frank is designed to keep banks from becoming "too big to fail".
 
Is this the new liberal narrative? The banks are currently under control and Republicans are setting them free? The banks are richer than before and hold a greater concentration of GDP as assets than before the recession.

Tell me more how you care about inequality but think Dodd-Frank is designed to keep banks from becoming "too big to fail".


My last post speaks for itself.
 
My last post speaks for itself.
Yea, but as usual you're just speaking to the choir.

The banks are not shackled by Dodd-Frank, never were, and not going to be. Dodd-Frank wasn't designed to keep banks from becoming too big to fail, but instead aimed to identify and regulate "systemic risk." The result? Banks are bigger and richer than before. Good job.

You can now commence to blame everything on the 3 Republicans that voted for it and ignore the 99% of Democratic supporters.
 
New York's Top Cop Scores as Credit Suisse Faces $10 Billion Mortgage Fraud Suit

New York's Top Cop Scores as Credit Suisse Faces $10 Billion Mortgage Fraud Suit
By Linda Sandler and Christie Smythe
Dec 26, 2014 10:37 AM CT

Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN) was ordered to face a $10 billion lawsuit by New York’s attorney general accusing the Swiss bank of fraud in the sales of mortgage-backed securities before the 2008 financial crisis.

A New York State Supreme Court justice rejected the bank’s request to dismiss the case, a move that gives leverage to Attorney General Eric Schneiderman to demand internal bank documents and force a settlement. New York demonstrated the bank may have engaged in misconduct, Justice Marcy Friedman said in a Dec. 24 decision, allowing the suit to head toward trial.

In addition to forcing Zurich-based Credit Suisse to defend itself or settle, the ruling may strengthen Schneiderman’s hand in punishing other banks for bad behavior tied to the recession.

Elizabeth DeBold, a spokeswoman for Schneiderman, said the lawsuit is part of an effort to pursue “accountability for those who contributed to the near collapse of our economy.” Drew Benson, a spokesman for Credit Suisse, said yesterday in an e-mail that the bank will appeal the ruling.

New York sued Credit Suisse in November 2012, claiming Switzerland’s second-largest bank misrepresented the risks of investing in mortgage-backed securities. Last year, the bank argued that New York missed a three-year deadline for suing. The state countered that it had six years to file its complaint.

If the bank had won, Schneiderman would have faced a new roadblock as he considers similar multibillion-dollar claims against Wall Street firms.

Armed with the Martin Act, New York’s powerful anti-fraud statute, Schneiderman has pursued banks while introducing programs to relieve struggling homeowners and stem a rise in foreclosures. He claimed Credit Suisse knew about “pervasive flaws” in the screening of residential loans underlying mortgage securities it sold, but assured investors they were safe because it wanted to expand its business.

Under the Martin Act, “false promises” by sellers of securities are against the law.

Earlier Settlements

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), also sued by Schneiderman’s office, agreed to settle that case along with federal claims over mortgage-backed securities in a landmark $13 billion accord last year. The state got $613 million in the settlement, the first in a string of payouts it has received in legal agreements over the financial instruments.

In July, Citigroup Inc. (C) agreed to pay $7 billion in fines and consumer relief to resolve claims by the federal government and states including New York. The following month, Bank of America Corp. agreed to pay about $17 billion, including almost $10 billion in cash, to resolve civil investigations by federal and state prosecutors, including Schneiderman.

Warning Signs

In New York’s suit against Credit Suisse, Schneiderman claimed the bank ignored warning signs about the quality of loans it was packaging and selling. One example cited was its use of New Century Financial Corp. mortgages after that firm’s 2007 bankruptcy.

The case is People of the State of New York v. Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, 451802-2012, New York State Supreme Court, New York County (Manhattan).

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...to-face-new-york-s-mortgage-fraud-claims.html
 
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