Unprecedented Fraud, Toothless Watchdogs

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 23rd, 2011, 8:03AM

“Why there hasn’t been more robust prosecution is a mystery.”

-Raymond Brescia, visiting professor, Yale Law School

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Reuters has an outrageous article detailing the absurdity of the lack of prosecution of financial crimes in modern America. It is a shocking to watch the United States, a nation that once followed the Rule of Law, slip into a banana republic.

“Four years after the banking system nearly collapsed from reckless mortgage lending, federal prosecutors have stayed on the sidelines, even as judges around the country are pointing fingers at possible wrongdoing.

The federal government, as has been widely noted, has pressed few criminal cases against major lenders or senior executives for the events that led to the meltdown of 2007. Finding hard evidence has proved difficult, the Justice Department has said.

The government also hasn’t brought any prosecutions for dubious foreclosure practices deployed since 2007 by big banks and other mortgage-servicing companies.

But this part of the financial system, a Reuters examination shows, is filled with potential leads.

Foreclosure-related case files in just one New York federal bankruptcy court, for example, hold at least a dozen mortgage documents known as promissory notes bearing evidence of recently forged signatures and illegal alterations, according to a judge’s rulings and records reviewed by Reuters. Similarly altered notes have appeared in courts around the country.

And it gets much worse.

• Despite laws against it, banks have foreclosed on active-duty U.S. soldiers who are legally eligible to have foreclosures halted. Attorneys representing service members estimate banks have foreclosed on up to 30,000 ACTIVE military personnel, mostly while they were in Iraq and Afghanistan.

• There has been — literally — “tens of thousands of fraudulent documents filed in tens of thousands of cases.” Sworn affidavits have been filed containing false information. This is easily prosecuted perjury.

• The size and scope of the fraud on the U.S. court system is unprecedented in U.S. history

• NY State court judge Arthur Schack, ruled in 2010 that pleadings by the Baum Law — who handle 40% of NY foreclosures — were “so incredible, outrageous, ludicrous and disingenuous that they should have been authorized by the late Rod Serling, creator of the famous science-fiction television series, The Twilight Zone.“  There has been no fraud prosecution to date.

• Banks have routinely filed falsified mortgage promissory notes — in some cases, six different documents have been filed, all claimed to be the original. At the least 5 must be forgeries — an easy felony to prosecute.

Read the entire article if you want to be outraged and send your blood pressure skyrocketing.

The fraud is rampant, self-evident, easy to prosecute. The only reason it hasn’t been done so far is that this nation is led by corrupt cowards and suffers from a ruinous two-party system.

We were once a great nation that set a shining example for the rest of the world as to what the Rule of Law meant. That is no more, as we have become a corrupt plutocracy. Why our prosecutors cower in front of the almighty banking industry is beyond my limited ability to comprehend.

Without any sort of legal denouement, we should expect an angry electorate and an unhappy nation.

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Source:
Special Report: The watchdogs that didn’t bark
Scot Paltrow
Reuters Dec 22 2011
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/22/us-foreclosures-idUSTRE7BL0MC20111222

Two Record-Breaking Black Hole Behemoths Spotted

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 23rd, 2011, 7:00AM

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3 Questions: Black Holes

Source:
Two Record-Breaking Black Hole Behemoths Spotted
Discovery News, December 2011

What Gadgets Top Holiday Shopping Lists ?

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 23rd, 2011, 4:30AM

click for larger graphic

Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art

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By Washingtons Blog - December 23rd, 2011, 1:30AM

The Fed and the big banks (Background):

batfcbmain Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art
Painting by Billy Walsh: www.HeckleSketch.com

Our politicians (Background):

FredaCongress Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art
Painting by Anthony Freda: www.AnthonyFreda.com

The mainstream media (Background):

BSFactoryFreda Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art
Painting by Anthony Freda: www.AnthonyFreda.com

Our liberty (Background):

 Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art
Painting by Anthony Freda: www.AnthonyFreda.com

Many are still asleep … or worrying about the wrong things (Background):

WakeUp%2521 Freda Current Events Summarized In Brilliant Art

Painting by Anthony Freda: www.AnthonyFreda.com

Last Minute Holiday Gift Ideas

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 9:30PM

Lots of good feedback for our first few lists (Holiday Shopping Ideas! and Holiday Gifts for Traders and More Holiday Shopping Ideas!). So with but 3 more shopping days til Xmas, lets give this one last go round.

As part of our annual Shopmas tradition, I cull some of my more interesting fascinations, acquisitions, and other items I stumble each year, as well as items off of my own overstuffed wish list.

Note that there are not a lot of gifts focused on women. If you are just trying to fill that gap at this late hour, you are pretty much screwed.  (Plan ahead next year)

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Charlie Brown Christmas, Vince Guaraldi: Original SoundTrack CBS Television Special

Guaraldi has a delightful way around a keyboard — quirky,  humorous, deep piano playing that warms the soul and makes you smile. A wonderful soft energy fills this understated jazz collection that exudes pure holiday magic.

Along with Ella, this may be one of all time favorite holiday albums

A Jolly Christmas From Frank Sinatra ($5)

This 1957 is a great addition to any holiday music collection. I love the first cut, Frank’s version of Jingle Bells. The rest is very traditional, very 50′s. A perfect gift for your Aunt with all those cats.

No holiday collection is complete without this Sinatra holiday album.

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Papa Bear’s Chocolate Haus: Every year, a friend in California sends us the chocolate toffee with nuts, from this Mendicino shop — and it is heavenly. This is quite simply the most delicious stuff I’ve ever had.

Astonishingly, they don’t have a webpage, but as Google reveals, they are well loved for a reason.  (707) 937-4406

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Butt Station ($18) Tape Dispenser, Pen & Memo Holder, Paper Clip Storage.

Need a last minute gift for your office cut up? Have a boss you don’t particularly care for? Look no further than the Butt Station — the perfect gift for the imperfect ass.

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Louie: Season One ($20) This is simply the funniest show on television in years. Sharply written, fearless, Louie C.K.’s has created the anti-sitcom; its what television can be when the suits don’t get involved.

Dark, hilarious, absurd.

Louie, the series on FX, is simply brilliant.

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• Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS10 ($235) This is the latest and greatest in the pocket sized Lumix line with the Leica lens. It features a 14.1 MP chip, 16x Wide Angle Optical Image, Stabilized Zoom, HD Video, Built-In GPS Function — and a touch screen, which accounts for much of the price differential versus the older ZS8

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS8 ($150) this is a solid, dependable pocket camera that takes great photos. 14.1 MP chip, 16x Wide Angle Optical Image, Stabilized Zoom, HD Video, Built-In GPS Function. It may not have a touch screen, and its HD video is saved in MPEG format, but its a helluva buy at this price.(Note you can save even more money by getting the DMC-ZS9, which Panasonic tells me is the foreign version of this camera for $130)

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The Man with No Name Trilogy ($30) (A Fistful of Dollars / For a Few Dollars More / The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly) [Blu-ray]

A Fistful of Dollars launched the spaghetti Western and catapulted Clint Eastwood to stardom. Based on Akira Kurosawa’s 1961 samurai picture Yojimbo. And The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly has long been one of my favorite westerns, am epic vision of greed and betrayal   (Also available in DVD format, with Hang ‘em High, for $12.50)

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The Philip K. Dick Collection ($69)

An excellent introduction to the major works of PKD. I have read nearly all of these in my youth, and they were fascinating and influential — for anyone interested in the question: What is perception? And what is reality if perception is so easily skewed?

For your geekiest friend: This collection includes the major works of Dick:
The Man in the High Castle (1962); The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965); Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968); Ubik (1969) Martian Time-Slip (1964); Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965); Now Wait for Last Year (1966); Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said (1974); A Scanner Darkly (1977); A Maze of Death (1970); VALIS (1981); The Divine Invasion (1981); The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982)

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23andMe Gift Kit ($207)

One size fits all for your friends and family. Find branches of your family tree; Learn what your genes mean for your health in terms of your potentially inheritable diseases;  Includes 1-year subscription to the Personal Genome Service to get them started.

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•  Octopus Salad Bowl ($144) Last time I mentioned Vagabond House, a birthday gift had not yet arrived.

Well, a few days ago, these arrived, and they are pretty outrageous. The large Salad Server has a detailed Octopus adorned the wooden bowl, which is about 16 inches across. You can also add Crab or Octopus accented salad bowls ($160 for a set of 4).

The firm notes their work is of “Noble Materials, Inspired Lines, Captivating Styles.”  Indeed.

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The Beatles Stereo Box Set ($225)

I have been meaning to discuss this work, but I never seem to get around to it.

Let me simply say that this may be the finest box set I own — or have ever seen or heard.

From the quality of the recordings, to the dept of printed material to the revelatory remastering of the original work, this is a flawless offering.

Several of you have suggested the Mono Box set (as “originally recorded”) — it sports the same extras, but only one channel — is that why its half the price of Stereo? The Beatles Mono Box Set ($125)

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Star Wars: The Blueprints ($450)

Star Wars: The Blueprints brings together the original blueprints created for the filming of the Star Wars Saga. Drawn from deep within the Lucasfilm Archives, a precise, vivid, and intricate detail the very genesis of the most enduring sci fi work ever to appear onscreen. (at least the original trilogy, and not the debacle that followed)

Melding science and art, these drawings giving birth to fantastic new worlds, ships, and creatures.

This is a limited edition of only 5,000 hand-numbered English language copies. The perfect gift to get from a Star Wars nerd who has too much money . . .

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Praying mantis ($2,000 – 15,000)

I find the work of sculptor Nemo Gould to be both charming and compelling. He does a variety of wicked cool kinetic sculptures and various creatures.

I don’t know why, but I find this Praying mantis lamp utterly beguiling. Perhaps its the gas nozzle arms

Here you will find a portfolio of images and videos of his work — but I find his Creatures especially fanciful.

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What Makes a Donor Donate? A New Marketplace Podcast

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 6:00PM

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Source:
What Makes a Donor Donate? A New Marketplace Podcast
Freakonomics, November 2011

10 Thursday PM Reads

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 4:30PM

Afternoon train reading:

• Economic Growth Revised Lower for 3rd Quarter (WSJ)
• How Luther went viral (Economist)
• Corzine Another Victim of the Alpha-Male Curse (Bloomberg)
• Cleveland Fed Two-fer:
…..-Urban Growth & Decline: Role of Pop Density at the City Core (Fed Cleveland)
…..-Concentrated Poverty (Fed Cleveland)
• London Brokers Shrink as Debt Crisis Bites (Bloomberg)
• The Return of Lee Munson (TRB) see also 25-Year-Old Broker Lee Munson Is Swaggering Relic of the Boom (Observer)
• Facebook reveals music, film make friendships; books, not so much (Ars Technica)
• The Day I Saw Van Gogh’s Genius in a New Light (Asada’s Memorandum)
• The truth about Microsoft and CES ? (The Verge) see also Mystery: Who killed the Microsoft CES keynote? (Gigaom)
• 106 of the most beloved Street Art Photos – Year 2011 (Street Art Utopia)

What is on your tablet?

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Louis CK: I am giving away half $1M Dollars from live show

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 3:15PM

This is pretty cool:  Louis C. K. announced he was giving away the lion’s share of the proceeds from his online only event,  Live at the Beacon Theater

hi. So it’s been about 12 days since the thing started and yesterday we hit the crazy number. One million dollars. That’s a lot of money. Really too much money. I’ve never had a million dollars all of a sudden. and since we’re all sharing this experience and since it’s really your money, I wanted to let you know what I’m doing with it. People are paying attention to what’s going on with this thing. So I guess I want to set an example of what you can do if you all of a sudden have a million dollars that people just gave to you directly because you told jokes.

So I’m breaking the million into four pieces.

the first 250k is going to pay back what the special cost to produce and the website to build.

The second 250k is going back to my staff and the people who work for me on the special and on my show. I’m giving them a big fat bonus.

The third 280k is going to a few different charities. They are listed below in case you’d like to donate to them also. Some of these i learned about through friends, some were reccomended through twitter.

That leaves me with 220k for myself. Some of that will pay my rent and will care for my childen. The rest I will do terrible, horrible things with and none of that is any of your business. In any case, to me, 220k is enough out of a million.

I never viewed money as being “my money” I always saw it as “The money” It’s a resource. if it pools up around me then it needs to be flushed back out into the system.

The entire online venture is a disruptive upending — disintermediation — of the usual concert approach.

I saw him perform at Westbury not too long ago, and my sides hurt for three days . . .

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PayPal at $1m!

Top 10 Countries for Solar Energy

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 2:30PM

Well, today is December 22nd. It is, in the Northern hemisphere, the shortest day of the year.

A perfect time to think about Solar energy:

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Home Solar Power Discounts – One Block Off the Grid

What Really Caused The Eurozone Crisis?

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By Barry Ritholtz - December 22nd, 2011, 11:30AM

Great graphic of the EU crisis via the Beeb:

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Click thru for enlarged version with full text:

Source:
What really caused the eurozone crisis?
BBC News, December 22, 2011

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