Rob a bank, you go to Jail, if the bank robs you, they get protection 
from the judicial system, and you could get more legal action against 
you if you no longer have the money to cover your financial obligations.

Corporate personhood has all the benefits, and none of the obligations 
you and I have. Corporate Capitalism in operation, per Mussolini, was 
what he based his Fascism on as that is how it operates.

Scott

Published on //The Nation// (http://www.thenation.com)

------------------------------------------------------------------------


  *How Wall Street Crooks Get Out of Jail Free*

http://www.thenation.com/article/159433/how-wall-street-crooks-get-out-jail-free

William Greider | March 23, 2011

When Charles Ferguson received an Oscar for his documentary on the 
financial crisis, //Inside Job//, he reminded the audience that "not a 
single financial executive has gone to jail, and that's wrong." Given 
the abundant evidence of massive fraud, Americans everywhere have asked 
the same question: Why haven't any of those bankers gone to jail? If 
federal investigators could not establish criminal intent for any 
top-flight executives, didn't they have enough evidence to prosecute 
banks or financial houses as law-breaking corporations?

Evidently not. Except for occasional civil complaints by the Securities 
and Exchange Commission, the nation is left to face a disturbing 
spectacle: crime without punishment. Massive injuries were done to 
millions of people by reckless bankers, and vast wealth was destroyed by 
elaborate financial deceptions. Yet there are no culprits to be held 
responsible.

Former Senator Ted Kaufman was especially upset by this. Kaufman was 
appointed in 2008 to fill out the remaining two years of Vice President 
Biden's term as senator from Delaware. With no ambition to stay in 
politics, he was free to speak his mind. He made unpunished bankers his 
special cause.

"People know that if they rob a bank they will go to jail," Kaufman 
declared in an early speech. "Bankers should know that if they rob 
people, they will go to jail too." Serving on the Senate Judiciary 
Committee, he helped get expanded funding and manpower for investigative 
agencies. In hearings, he politely prodded the Justice Department, the 
SEC and the FBI to be more aggressive.

"At the end of the day," Senator Kaufman warned, "this is a test of 
whether we have one justice system in this country or two. If we do not 
treat a Wall Street firm that defrauded investors of millions of dollars 
the same way we treat someone who stole $500 from a cash register, then 
how can we expect our citizens to have any faith in the rule of law?"

Kaufman, now retired, sounded slightly embarrassed when I reminded him 
of his question. "When you look at what we got, it ain't very much," he 
conceded. "I'm genuinely concerned there are a lot of guys walking 
around Wall Street, the bad apples, saying, 'Hey, man, we got away with 
it. We're going to do it again.'"

If the legal system cannot locate the villains in this story, then "the 
law is a ass---a idiot," as Charles Dickens put it. The technical 
difficulties in making a case for criminal prosecutions are real enough, 
given the complexities of modern finance. But the government's lack of 
response to enormous wrongdoing reflects a deeper conflict of values. 
Will society's sense of right and wrong prevail, or will corporate 
capitalism's amoral need to maximize profit? So far, the marketplace 
appears to be winning.

The government's ambivalence about prosecuting the largest corporate 
interests could be heard in the president's comments. "Nothing will be 
gained by spending our time and energy laying blame for the past," 
Barack Obama said in a different context (crimes of torture and unlawful 
detention committed under the Bush administration). Treasury Secretary 
Timothy Geithner bluntly dismissed the "public desire for Old Testament 
justice." That might be morally satisfying, he said, but it would be 
"dramatically damaging" to economic recovery.

No one had to tell federal prosecutors to go easy. They can read the 
newspapers. The Treasury's inspector general called the financial system 
"a target-rich environment" for financial fraud. But the government at 
the same time expended a vast fortune in public funds to rescue and 
restore the biggest banks and brokerages. Criminal indictments would not 
be good for investor confidence.

The economic argument dilutes, even checks, law enforcement. This 
occurred in government policy long before the financial crisis erupted, 
with its revelations of widespread fraud. During the past decade, the 
government demonstrated a similar reluctance to act aggressively against 
corporations. The Justice Department instead adopted a softer, more 
forgiving approach, at least for major companies. The intention was to 
limit the economic damage that can result from vigorous prosecution.

Instead of "Old Testament justice," federal prosecutors seek "authentic 
cooperation" from corporations in trouble, urging them to come forward 
voluntarily and reveal their illegalities. In exchange, prosecutors will 
offer a deal. If companies pay the fine set by the prosecutor and submit 
to probationary terms for good behavior, perhaps an outside monitor, 
then government will defer prosecution indefinitely or even drop it 
entirely. The corporation thus avoids the stigma of a criminal trial and 
the bad headlines that depress stock prices. More to the point, the 
"deferred prosecution agreement," as it's called, allows the company to 
escape the more severe consequences of criminal conviction---the loss of 
banking and professional licenses, charters, deposit insurance or other 
government benefits, including eligibility for federal contracts and 
healthcare programs. In other words, the punishment prescribed in 
numerous laws.

"With cooperation by the corporation, the government may be able to 
reduce tangible losses, limit damage to reputation, and preserve assets 
for restitution," the Justice Department's authorizing memorandum 
explained in 2003. "A deferred prosecution or non-prosecution agreement 
can help restore the integrity of a company's operations and preserve 
the financial viability of a corporation that has engaged in criminal 
conduct."

The favored argument for the more conciliatory approach was that 
criminal indictment may amount to a death sentence for a corporation. 
The fallout will destroy it, and the economy will lose valuable 
productive capacity. The collateral consequences are unfair to employees 
who lose jobs and stockholders who lose wealth. Corporate defenders 
cited Arthur Andersen, the giant accounting firm that imploded after it 
was convicted in 2002 of multiple offenses in Enron's collapse. But was 
it the firm's indictment or its criminal behavior that caused clients, 
accountants and investors to abandon it?

A better name for the Justice Department's softened policy might be "too 
big to prosecute." Just as the Federal Reserve used the "too big to 
fail" doctrine to rescue big financial institutions from their mistakes, 
Justice has created an express lane for businesses and banks to avoid 
the uglier consequences of their illegal behavior. As a practical 
matter, the option is reserved for the larger companies represented by 
the leading law firms. They have the skill and clout to negotiate a 
tolerable settlement.

* * *

Russell Mokhiber, longtime editor of the //Corporate Crime Reporter//, 
describes deferred prosecutions as another chapter in the long-running 
degradation of corporate law. "Over the past twenty-five years," 
Mokhiber says, "the corporate lobbies have watered down the corporate 
criminal justice system and starved the prosecutorial agencies. Young 
prosecutors dare not overstep their bounds for fear of jeopardizing the 
cash prize at the end of the rainbow---partnership in the big corporate 
defense law firms after they leave public service. The result---if there 
are criminal prosecutions, they now end in deferred or nonprosecution 
agreements---instead of guilty pleas. If executives are criminally 
prosecuted, they tend to be low-level executives."

Deferring prosecution was made standard practice by George W. Bush's 
Justice Department, which over eight years deferred or canceled some 108 
prosecutions. The Los Angeles law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher took the 
lead in promoting the new policy and has negotiated numerous agreements. 
A lawyer in a rival firm wisecracked that Gibson, Dunn had become "the 
West Coast branch of the Bush Justice Department."

During Obama's first two years, Justice deferred action on fifty-three 
corporate defendants. None of those cases stemmed from the financial 
crisis. In a recent article Gibson, Dunn's leading lawyers dubbed 
deferred prosecution "the new normal for handling corporate misconduct." 
The Justice Department does still indict hundreds of business entities 
every year for crimes ranging from routine price-fixing to environmental 
destruction. Some major corporations still plead guilty as charged, 
especially drug companies, but prosecutions are overwhelmingly aimed at 
garden-variety fraud and crimes of smaller enterprises. As Gibson, Dunn 
lawyers put it, negotiated settlements "are now the primary tool in 
DoJ's efforts to combat corporate crime." The statistics in this account 
are unofficial, drawn from Gibson, Dunn's periodic reports to clients on 
deferred prosecutions.

Important corporations that have settled without a public trial include 
Boeing, AIG, AOL, Halliburton, BP, Health South, Daimler Chrysler, 
Wachovia, Merrill Lynch, Pfizer, UBS and Barclays Bank. The crimes 
ranged from healthcare fraud to cheating the government on military 
contracts, bribing foreign governments, money laundering, tax evasion 
and violating trade sanctions.

"Too big to prosecute" has generated controversy in legal circles but 
very little in politics. William Lerach, the notorious trial lawyer who 
has won huge investor lawsuits against Enron and many other 
corporations, describes deferred prosecutions as "sham guilt. They 
create a thin veneer of responsibility, but nothing really happens." 
(Lerach is not a neutral or untarnished expert, having gone to prison 
himself for illegally recruiting plaintiffs.) "I call them headline 
fines---they make for good reading, but that's all," Lerach says. "The 
companies can pay them in a heartbeat. You know what it is to them? A 
cost of doing business, that's all. The profitability of the illegal 
activity far exceeds the cost of the penalty."

Lerach argues that negotiated settlements of corporate cases serve a 
different purpose: they shield the company's top officers and directors, 
who could be held personally liable for crimes. "It shifts the blame to 
the corporate entity---the fictional person---rather than the 
individuals who engaged in the misconduct and really gained financially 
from it," Lerach charges.

"The actual law says you are not allowed to indemnify a corporate 
officer or board member from prosecution for deliberate dishonest acts, 
i.e., criminal behavior," he explains. "The way they get around this is 
a misuse of these agreements. They settle with the government on what is 
a criminal charge, and the shareholders end up paying. They use 
corporate guilt to pay off the prosecutor."

Some of the penalties are huge---Pfizer paid $2.3 billion for marketing 
drugs in violation of labeling restrictions---but many fines seem 
trivial alongside a company's ill-gotten gains. A series of federal 
judges have accused Justice and SEC lawyers of letting defendants off 
too easy. "A facade of enforcement," New York Judge Jed Rakoff 
complained when he objected to a $33 million SEC settlement with Bank of 
America. The bank subsequently agreed to pay $150 million.

Judge Emmet Sullivan in Washington, DC, hammered Justice Department 
lawyers for giving "a free ride" to Barclays, which was accused of 
evading US sanctions on Iran and Cuba. Evidence made clear that its 
officers knew they were breaking the law, but none of them were 
indicted. "You know what?" Judge Sullivan told the government lawyers. 
"If other banks saw that the government was being rough and tough with 
banks and requiring banking officials to stand before federal judges and 
enter pleas of guilty, that might be a powerful deterrent to this type 
of conduct."

In fact, federal judges have no authority to block or alter such 
agreements. The discretion belongs solely to Justice Department 
prosecutors and US Attorneys---in effect, a semi-private system with 
virtually no external checks. When New Jersey Governor Chris Christie 
was a US Attorney, he approved a series of deferred prosecution 
agreements and handed out sinecures to political pals---the lucrative 
lawyer's job of monitoring the corporations. In one settlement Christie 
ordered Bristol-Myers-Squibb to finance an endowed chair in business 
ethics at Seton Hall law school, Christie's alma mater. This became a 
minor issue in his gubernatorial campaign but not enough to defeat him.

Professor Kent Greenfield of Boston College, author of //The Failure of 
Corporate Law//, views all this as an ominous trend. "It has become the 
increasing normalization of law-breaking by corporations," he says. When 
epic crimes go unpunished by the legal system, the wrongful behavior 
seems less shocking when it is repeated in the future, tolerated by 
discouraged citizens or regarded as an acceptable option by corporate 
managers.

"Crime is defined as price rather than punishment," Greenfield notes. In 
the new normal, "corporations can say, 'Well, is the crime worth the 
price, discounted by the probability of getting caught?' Because you 
can't make a corporation go to prison. They have no morality, no human 
personality or sense of morals, other than the morality of the market 
that reduces everything to money. If the only way to punish companies is 
with money, then the fine sets the price for crime."

* * *

This amoral economic logic epitomizes the deep conflict over values our 
society is gradually losing. Corporate leaders may protest my 
characterization of business values, but Greenfield points out that 
during the past generation this bloodless market logic has become 
mainstream thinking among legal scholars. A rough version of the same 
thinking has crept into law enforcement. Oft-cited legal scholars Frank 
Easterbrook and Daniel Fischel argue, as Greenfield summarizes, that 
"corporations should, with some exceptions, seek to maximize profits 
even when they must break the law to do so.... As long as the expected 
penalties from illegality are less than the expected profits, the 
corporation should act illegally." As Easterbrook and Fischel write: 
"Managers have no general obligation to avoid violating regulatory laws, 
when violations are profitable to the firm." They even argue that 
"managers not only may but also should violate the rules when it is 
profitable to do so."

The confusion of values starts with the fictitious premise that the 
corporation is a person, for purposes of law. The Supreme Court has 
awarded it many of the constitutional rights that a person 
possesses---free speech, the right to due process. But corporations are 
not mortal beings, of course, and unlike people, they can live forever. 
The language of "corporate personhood" is really a slick way of saying 
property rights come before people's rights.

Government says it is acceptable to execute people for their crimes, 
then turns around and tries to eliminate the death penalty for 
corporations. When an actual person is sentenced to prison, the court 
does not pause to weigh the unfortunate collateral consequences for his 
children. "How many individuals do you know who get a deferred 
prosecution agreement?" Lerach asks. "They get marched into court and 
put in the clink."

Lerach is sympathetic to the "death penalty" argument, because he has 
seen the negative consequences for people whose firms collapsed. "But 
you can't have it both ways," he says. "You can't say you won't indict 
the corporation because it will injure a lot of innocent people and have 
catastrophic impact. OK, but then you don't indict the individuals who 
were responsible. And you let them use corporate money to pay the fine. 
That's just a big game. There's no accountability there."

Restoring justice thus has two parts---establishing individual 
responsibility within the company and redefining criminal liability for 
the corporation in ways that have real impact on corporate behavior. 
Both require reforms that are fiendishly difficult to achieve, given the 
corporate dominance of politics. Prosecuting individuals is complicated, 
as Greenfield says, because responsibility is diffused within the 
corporation.

"It is hard to find the one individual who had a proper mental state 
that satisfies criminal intent, because everyone has a part of it," 
Greenfield says. "The purpose of limited liability is to protect people 
from being responsible. If we put the assumptions about how we organize 
business in other areas of our lives and politics, people would be aghast."

In other words, restoring individual responsibility requires big changes 
in the corporation itself---anti-trust legislation to make the big boys 
get smaller, and internal governance reforms that give voice and 
influence to other stakeholders, like employees and small shareholders, 
who now suffer most from recklessness at the top. People throughout the 
firm need incentives to take responsibility for its acts.

Corporations do not experience human guilt, since they exist only as 
artificial entities constructed from law. It is intolerable that these 
organizations wield so much power over society, but for many years 
people have been led to believe that corporate good fortune is 
synonymous with general prosperity. As broadly shared prosperity is 
steadily withdrawn, people may rise up and demand serious reforms.

* * *

Lerach thinks any reform is hopeless for now, but he nonetheless has 
lots of ideas about what it might look like. "Corporations are too big, 
too powerful," he says. "The prosecutors are completely outgunned by the 
law firms, setting aside the fact that a young prosecutor is probably 
thinking about a job someday in a private firm. Corporate executives are 
not only greedy; they tend to be pretty smart. They surround themselves 
with professionals who tell them what they're doing is reasonable. That 
creates a structural shield against prosecution."

Yet Lerach thinks criminal penalties "can be created for corporations 
that wouldn't amount to the death penalty for them but are still 
painful. So you wouldn't put the prosecutor in that terrible bind where 
indictment might cost innocent people their jobs but would still put 
pressure on the company."

If a company is convicted, law could prescribe a rising scale of 
mandatory measures depending on the severity of the crime: forcing the 
company to sell off subsidiaries, drop lines of business, surrender 
government licenses and contracts. This would be the equivalent of 
"three strikes, you're out" for the mammoth corporations. The courts 
could also punish executives past and present, break up the company or 
put the entire enterprise up for sale at depressed prices. These actions 
are harsh---in some cases, fatal---but not really worse than what 
happens routinely to smaller businesses in the marketplace. Business 
failure gets punished unsentimentally. Criminal behavior should be 
clearly defined as business failure.

What will give political momentum to these ideas? Continuation of the 
status quo. Nobody went to jail, so eventually the corporate crooks will 
do it again. Next time, the rebellion won't be aimed at government.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

**Source 
URL:**http://www.thenation.com/article/159433/how-wall-street-crooks-get-out-jail-free


?The hottest(darkest) places in Hell are reserved for those who in times 
of great moral crises maintain their neutrality?  ----Dante Alighieri




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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