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Joe Conason
Joe Conason
24 May 2012
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A Special Prosecutor for Wall Street

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Debate over how to resolve the nation's financial emergency is taking a salutary direction for the moment, as politicians of both parties refuse to be herded by the Bush White House into a ridiculous $700-billion swindle. Before Congress approves such a stunning expenditure to save the undeserving hides of the super-rich, they may at least create provisions for independent oversight, new regulation, public equity and homeowner relief.

There is one more thing that should not be neglected, however. Before this is over, we will need a special prosecutor with an ample budget to find, prosecute, imprison and ultimately deter the criminals responsible for this disaster.

From the bottom-of-the-barrel bucket-shop mortgage salespeople, who sought inspiration and technique from the movie "Boiler Room," to the geniuses who packaged those bad and often fraudulent loans into bad paper for sale to major banks, investment houses and insurance companies, literally thousands of crooks are out there. Unless we find a way to bring them to justice — starting at the top, by the way — then the "moral hazard" inherent in any bailout will become even more acute.

Anyone who doubts that massive fraud is at the center of this crisis hasn't been reading between the lines. While much coverage in the business press has focused on tick-tock accounts of the final days of the big investment houses or the vagaries of the roiling market, there is no shortage of stories showing how we got into this morass.

The simple version of this decentralized criminal conspiracy can be summarized as follows: Mortgage lenders handed out loans to unqualified borrowers and sometimes tricked them into signing agreements they could not fulfill. Those same companies and others then marketed those loans with false assurances of their soundness to convince investors to buy them. Some of those investors then resold the packages of crap mortgages to other investors both here and abroad. Among the miscreants implicated in these activities were many with actual criminal records, whose entry into the mortgage industry was in no way hindered by the state regulatory agencies.

They proceeded to amass fortunes large and small, using the same techniques familiar from previous financial scandals — pressurized sales techniques; targeting of the weak, elderly and insecure; outright fraud, forgery and deception.

Which of the participants knew what was going on here? Which of them merely failed to perform any due diligence before passing along undue risk to the individual investors, pension funds and others to whom they owed fiscal prudence? Which companies and executives actively encouraged thievery, and which simply looked away while they booked big profits?

Those are the questions that must be sorted out by competent judicial authorities if we are ever to establish the rule of law in our markets. The FBI is currently investigating more than 20 lenders, including the defunct Indymac, but there is much more to be done — and at the moment, the prosecutors seem to have set their sights too low. Someone with prosecutorial authority and resources should scrutinize the major players at UBS, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and all the rest. The passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley law was meant to discourage this kind of financial chicanery by major firms. Now is the time to apply its criminal sanctions to those who flouted the law.

State authorities, whose years of incompetence and negligence led directly to the debacle, cannot be trusted to enforce the law now. In Florida, for example, which has suffered the worst of the national epidemic of mortgage fraud, the state regulators were recently found to have permitted thousands of brokers with criminal records — including actual bank robbers! — to enter the marketplace. The best estimate is that up to 25 percent of the mortgages recorded in the Sunshine State over the past few years were tainted.

Now, as the federal government prepares to take many or most of those bad loans off the books of the geniuses who bought them, what will prevent additional massive fraud? Only the threat of enormous fines and years of imprisonment can prevent these crimes from being repeated, at our expense. During the final decade of the last century, the nation spent well over $100 million on special prosecutors to investigate trivial and nonexistent offenses by public officials. We should be prepared to spend many times that amount in the years to come to get to the root of this gigantic scam, both to punish and to deter.

Joe Conason writes for the New York Observer (www.observer.com). To find out more about Joe Conason, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Sir; You sound like one of those surprised to find out there is a ho house in Texas, and who cares if it smells like an outhouse as long as we can make some money. Where is the democrat who wants to be the first to show us his clean hands. They all have blood on them. They have all stayed out of the way while these rich people have robbed us with usery and made us squeeze through our own butt holes for their profit. All they have done is reach a critical point where they cannot get any more out of us. Do you think real estate has lost its value? It has not. It is falling to its natural price. That is the price it would cost if taxes made it jump and workers work to make it profitable enough to pay the taxes. No taxes on property, and all taxes on labor have made property a bank of wealth with which the rich could control the supply and the price just by sitting on it forever. It had a speculation value far higher than what anyone could get out of it in use. But high interest has done to property what high taxes should have long ago, it has driven down the price because no one could afford to pay interest without profit.... Spoil the economy. Reduce wages. Export jobs; especially productive jobs. And import all you can sell with credit. That is how to destroy an economy. Well sure; that's fine because they were betting on the world economy... Just spoil that too, with too much war, too much profit, and too much alienation of people around the world. You want to investigate these people? Well; how perfectly legal of you. These people write their own laws to make legal any injustice. It does not matter how many you send to prison, and it just costs you more to do so. Rather than trying to teach those crooks a lesson; take a lesson from them... If the lure of easy money is allowed to work its magic there is no limit to the immorality and indignity that it will produce. The solution is simple: Take the handle off the pump! If an out of control economy is the problem, the people should not let that govern them, but they should govern it. I know that is the definition of socialism; but if people do not control events the people are controled by events. So what if a little room is left for profit? We could still call it socialism, if it works... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Sep 25, 2008 6:33 PM
Sorry to say, I think like Mr. Sweeney, that you are living in a cloud of fantasy. The Dems are not going to get all those goodies you think they are. Remember, from way back, The Who? .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
"I'll tip my hat to the new constitution
Take a bow for the new revolution
Smile and grin at the change all around me
Pick up my guitar and play
Just like yesterday
Then I'll get on my knees and pray
We don't get fooled again." ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
We will get fooled again. Count on it.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Sun Sep 28, 2008 4:06 PM
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