The Real Reason the SEC Has Been Shredding Documents For Decades
The Real Reason the SEC Has Been Shredding Documents For Decades
SEC Attorney Reveals that Agency Has Shredded Documents for Decades to Cover Up Wall Street Fraud
What should we make of the new revelations by Securities and Exchange Commission attorney Darcy Flynn (background here, here and here) that the SEC has been shredding documents for decades?
As many commentators have noted, the SEC did this to cover up fraud on Wall Street.
The Entire Government Strategy Is To Cover Up Fraud
William K. Black – professor of economics and law, and the senior regulator during the S & L crisis – says that that the government’s entire strategy now – as during the S&L crisis – is to cover up how bad things are:
The entire strategy is to keep people from getting the facts.
Top Government Officials Created the Conditions In Which Fraud Would Flourish
I noted last year:
It is not only a matter of covering up fraud that has already happened. The government also created an environment which greatly encouraged fraud.
Here are just a few of many potential examples:
- The government-sponsored rating agencies committed massive fraud (and see this)
- The Treasury department allowed banks to “cook their books”
- Business Week wrote on May 23, 2006:
“President George W. Bush has bestowed on his intelligence czar, John Negroponte, broad authority, in the name of national security, to excuse publicly traded companies from their usual accounting and securities-disclosure obligations.”
- Regulators knew of and allowed the use of debt-hiding accounting tricks by the big banks
- Tim Geithner was complicit in Lehman’s accounting fraud, (and see this), and pushed to pay AIG’s CDS counterparties at full value, and then to keep the deal secret. And as Robert Reich notes, Geithner was “very much in the center of the action” regarding the secret bail out of Bear Stearns without Congressional approval. William Black points out: “Mr. Geithner, as President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York since October 2003, was one of those senior regulators who failed to take any effective regulatory action to prevent the crisis, but instead covered up its depth”
- The former chief accountant for the SEC says that Bernanke and Paulson broke the law and should be prosecuted
- Freddie and Fannie helped to create the epidemic of mortgage fraud
- The government knew about mortgage fraud a long time ago. For example, the FBI warned of an “epidemic” of mortgage fraud in 2004. However, the FBI, DOJ and other government agencies then stood down and did nothing. See this and this. For example, the Federal Reserve turned its cheek and allowed massive fraud, and the SEC has repeatedly ignored accounting fraud. Indeed, Alan Greenspan took the position that fraud could never happen
- Bernanke might have broken the law by letting unemployment rise in order to keep inflation low
- Paulson and Bernanke falsely stated that the big banks receiving Tarp money were healthy, when they were not
- Arguably, both the Bush and Obama administrations broke the law by refusing to close insolvent banks
- Congress may have covered up illegal tax breaks for the big banks
- Of course, deregulation by Larry Summers, Robert Rubin, Phil Gramm and many other high-level politicians and regulators also helped to grease the skids for fraud
Economist James K. Galbraith wrote in the introduction to his father, John Kenneth Galbraith’s, definitive study of the Great Depression, The Great Crash, 1929:
The main relevance of The Great Crash, 1929 to the great crisis of 2008 is surely here. In both cases, the government knew what it should do. Both times, it declined to do it. In the summer of 1929 a few stern words from on high, a rise in the discount rate, a tough investigation into the pyramid schemes of the day, and the house of cards on Wall Street would have tumbled before its fall destroyed the whole economy. In 2004, the FBI warned publicly of “an epidemic of mortgage fraud.” But the government did nothing, and less than nothing, delivering instead low interest rates, deregulation and clear signals that laws would not be enforced. The signals were not subtle: on one occasion the director of the Office of Thrift Supervision came to a conference with copies of the Federal Register and a chainsaw. There followed every manner of scheme to fleece the unsuspecting ….
This was fraud, perpetrated in the first instance by the government on the population, and by the rich on the poor.
***
The government that permits this to happen is complicit in a vast crime.
In other words, the fraud started at the very top with Greenspan, Bush, Paulson, Negraponte, Bernanke, Geithner, Rubin, Summers and all of the rest of the boys.
As William Black told me today:
In criminology jargon: they created an intensely criminogenic environment. I have no knowledge whether the national security aspects played any role, but the anti-regulatory dogma was devastating.
(Here’s the definition for criminogenic.)
I noted last month:
Fraud caused the Great Depression and it has caused the current financial crisis. But fraud is not not being prosecuted, and so it will occur again and again, and prevent a sustainable economic recovery.
Numerous economists have been saying this for years. As I pointed out in March:
Nobel prize winning economist George Akerlof has demonstrated that failure to punish white collar criminals – and instead bailing them out- creates incentives for more economic crimes and further destruction of the economy in the future. Indeed, William Black notes that we’ve known of this dynamic for “hundreds of years”.
Now mainstream journalists are starting to catch on.
Market Watch senior columnist Brett Arends writes:
No one has been punished. Executives like Dick Fuld at Lehman Brothers and Angelo Mozilo at Countrywide, along with many others, cashed out hundreds of millions of dollars before the ship crashed into the rocks. Predatory lenders and crooked mortgage lenders walked away with millions in ill-gotten gains. But they aren’t in jail. They aren’t even under criminal prosecution. They got away scot-free. As a general rule, the worse you behaved from 2000 to 2008, the better you’ve been treated. And so the next crowd will do it again. Guaranteed.
Gretchen Morgenson and Louise Story point out in the New York Times that:
As the financial storm brewed in the summer of 2008 … Federal prosecutors officially adopted new guidelines about charging corporations with crimes — a softer approach that, longtime white-collar lawyers and former federal prosecutors say, helps explain the dearth of criminal cases despite a raft of inquiries into the financial crisis.
Though little noticed outside legal circles, the guidelines were welcomed by firms representing banks. The Justice Department’s directive, involving a process known as deferred prosecutions, signaled “an important step away from the more aggressive prosecutorial practices seen in some cases under their predecessors,” Sullivan & Cromwell, a prominent Wall Street law firm, told clients in a memo that September.
***
“If you do not punish crimes, there’s really no reason they won’t happen again,” said Mary Ramirez, a professor at Washburn University School of Law and a former assistant United States attorney. “I worry and so do a lot of economists that we have created no disincentives for committing fraud or white-collar crime, in particular in the financial space.”
(This appears to be true on both sides of the Atlantic.)
And Frank Rich reports in a much-discussed piece in the New Yorker:
What haunts the Obama administration is what still haunts the country: the stunning lack of accountability for the greed and misdeeds that brought America to its gravest financial crisis since the Great Depression. There has been no legal, moral, or financial reckoning for the most powerful wrongdoers. Nor have there been meaningful reforms that might prevent a repeat catastrophe. Time may heal most wounds, but not these. Chronic unemployment remains a constant, painful reminder of the havoc inflicted on the bust’s innocent victims. As the ghost of Hamlet’s father might have it, America will be stalked by its foul and unresolved crimes until they “are burnt and purged away.”
After the 1929 crash, and thanks in part to the legendary Ferdinand Pecora’s fierce thirties Senate hearings, America gained a Securities and Exchange Commission, the Public Utility Holding Company Act, and the Glass-Steagall Act to forestall a rerun. After the savings-and-loan debacle of the eighties, some 800 miscreants went to jail. But those who ran the central financial institutions of our fiasco escaped culpability (as did most of the institutions). As the indefatigable Matt Taibbi has tabulated, law enforcement on Obama’s watch rounded up 393,000 illegal immigrants last year and zero bankers. The Justice Department’s ballyhooed Operation Broken Trust has broken still more trust by chasing mainly low-echelon, one-off Madoff wannabes.
***
Those in executive suites at the top of that chain have long since fled the scene with the proceeds, while bleeding shareholders, investors, homeowners, and cashiered employees were left with the bills. The weak Dodd-Frank financial-reform law that rose from the ruins remains largely inoperative ….
I pointed out in January that fraud is Wall Street’s business model, which is being supported by the government:
Nobel prize-winning economist George Akerlof demonstrated that if big companies aren’t held responsible for their actions, the government ends up bailing them out. So failure to prosecute directly leads to a bailout.
Moreover, as I noted last month:
Fraud benefits the wealthy more than the poor, because the big banks and big companies have the inside knowledge and the resources to leverage fraud into profits. Joseph Stiglitz noted in September that giants like Goldman are using their size to manipulate the market. The giants (especially Goldman Sachs) have also used high-frequency program trading (representing up to 70% of all stock trades) and high proportions of other trades as well). This not only distorts the markets, but which also lets the program trading giants take a sneak peak at what the real traders are buying and selling, and then trade on the insider information. See this, this, this, this and this.
Similarly, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley together hold 80% of the country’s derivatives risk, and 96% of the exposure to credit derivatives. They use their dominance to manipulate the market.
Fraud disproportionally benefits the big players (and helps them to become big in the first place), increasing inequality and warping the market.
[And] Professor Black says that fraud is a large part of the mechanism through which bubbles are blown.***
Finally, failure to prosecute mortgage fraud is arguably worsening the housing crisis. See this and this.
The government has not only turned the other cheek, but aided and abetted the fraud.
***
And this environment is ongoing today. See this, for example.
***
Even when the government has prosecuted financial crime (because public outrage became too big to ignore), the government has settled for pennies on the dollar [as a way to quietly bail out the big banks].
Corruption At the Top Leads to Lawlessness By The People
Corruption at the top leads to lawlessness by the people.
Unfortunately, the lawlessness by those at the top will lead to lawlessness by the people. This will lead to the break down of the economy and the financial system … and society as a whole.


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August 19th, 2011 at 1:45 am
I was just reading the transcript of a recent interview featuring Edward Thorp (the granddaddy of Quants and the one who came up w/ the “Black Scholes” model before Black Scholes Merton). Here is what he had to say, that somewhat pertains to the above:
Question: what is your biggest concern with the US equity market today?
“I think that one of the big issues today is that the playing field in the financial world is not level. If big institutions behave in a risky way and threaten to bring down the whole financial community and throw the entire country into depression, they don’t seem to have to pay a price commensurate with what they’ve done. Instead the public ends up bailing them out…”
“…the fact that we don’t have this level playing field that people who are powerful and politically connected can manage things for themselves in a way that’s much more advantageous than the run-of-the-mill rich or the run-of-the-mill public can, is an issue. It’s led to a major transfer of wealth from the rest of the country to a very small group at the top…”
August 19th, 2011 at 1:47 am
Much of what is said is true, however “lawlessness by those at the top will lead to lawlessness by the people” is off the mark.
The recent behavior in the US and Europe, e.g. flash mobs, the lies rampant in the housing and mortgage industry – at all levels, the behavior mentioned above, and all the other manifestations of evil and selfishness is simply nothing more than moral decay running its course.
There would be no demographic related issues if abortion were illegal. And as Fulton Sheen said, the economic arguments supporting abortion are merely manifestations of materialism in man.
Hand a dollar bill to the Federal Reserve and tell them you want what it promises. They will hand it back to you.
Killing of the most innocent while chasing a pieces of paper blowing across a landscape of financial engineering while preaching “tolerance”, “compassion” and “open mindedness”
Quid est veritas?
August 19th, 2011 at 2:07 am
I think this is something ALL Americans should and will find unacceptable.
August 19th, 2011 at 2:30 am
You can add Reagan to that list. I still remember watching him on TV sign the bill authorizing non-recourse S&L loans. He then held the pen up high and declared with a broad smile to beaming onlookers, “We hit the Jackpot!”
August 19th, 2011 at 2:31 am
Every last corrupt dime is attributed to a sole source.
Political bribery, thankfully being constantly brought to the public attention by Dylan Ratigan on a daily basis.
Call it whatever you want, campaign funding, donation, special interest, lobbying, if it entails receipt of funds in exchange for legislation, law writing or deregulation – it’s BRIBERY.
In the U.S. Constitution, bribery is listed as a high crime alongside treason.
August 19th, 2011 at 7:04 am
Fraud is bi partisan.
It is the military industry congress complex.
The more money, the larger fiction about fears, threats and why the US needs an empire guarded by trillions of bucks of contracts, all of them fraudulent from specification to acceptance.
And to be an expert one must agree to the lies.
August 19th, 2011 at 8:47 am
The Reagan republicans “promised” the religious right to end abortion, put prayer back in school, keep gays in the closet and other pet peeves of the moral majority – and they came out in huge numbers to support the “family value” party.
They actually conned /convinced “Labor” to vote for “Capital” and against their own financial self-interests and now thirty years later the jobs are gone, our GDP is in China, income and wealth inequality is higher than ever, and abortion is still legal.
Way to go.
August 19th, 2011 at 9:10 am
[...] worse than a crime, it’s a mistake? Well, Washington’s blog at Ritholtz’s place, relying on the views of Reagan & Bush Sr. regulator William K. Black, thinks that our [...]
August 19th, 2011 at 11:51 am
I think this is something ALL Americans should and will find unacceptable.
Finally, something you write with which I am in complete agreement. Now, how do we fix it?
August 19th, 2011 at 12:18 pm
To :
“It’s Not The Crime, It’s The Cover-Up | Poison Your Mind”
Mussolini once said : “Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state
and corporate power.”
Though I agree there’s a”pot calling the kettle black” element to it, the founder of Reaganomics, Craig Paul Roberts, is now calling the modern Tea party/GOP “neocons” that Americans may have to stage a revolt against….to be clear, he’s pretty pissed with both sides, but particularly scathing of the corporate “neocon” whoredom DC has become.
David Koch’s Tea Party has crossed the line from right wing conservatism to extreme right wing Fascism.
August 19th, 2011 at 1:55 pm
“at all levels, [fraud and corruption] and all the other manifestations of evil and selfishness is simply nothing more than moral decay running its course. There would be no demographic related issues if abortion were illegal.”
There you have it, fraud and corruption would not have occurred had abortion remained illegal.
but if abortion caused the current financial depression, what caused the great depression?
August 21st, 2011 at 10:27 am
here’s your treason. stick ‘em in gitmo. waterboard the phuckers.