<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2012083210/attorney-general-us-nothing-
see-wall-street-folks-just-move-along>
http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2012083210/attorney-general-us-nothing-s
ee-wall-street-folks-just-move-along

Attorney General to US: Nothing to See On Wall Street, Folks, Just Move
Along 

 <http://www.ourfuture.org/users/new-4468> Richard Eskow's picture

By Richard (RJ) Eskow <http://www.ourfuture.org/users/new-4468> 

August 10, 2012

Yesterday the Justice Department announced that once again it's not going to
pursue evidence of Wall Street crimes which has been sent its way. It has
already failed to act on information sent to it by sources whose
investigators are apparently more dogged than its own, including several
other government agencies and the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. Now
the bipartisan committee which was led by Senators Carl Levin and Tom Coburn
can be added to the list of sources whose leads weren't pursued by Attorney
General Eric Holder and his staff.

Holder was on the defensive yesterday, a sign that the mounting criticism of
his inaction is getting his attention. He was also scornful of that
criticism, saying that it's belied by "a troublesome little thing called
facts." 

There's something troublesome here, all right, but it isn't the facts.

A Justice Department press
<http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/08/doj-will-not-prosecute-goldman
-sachs-in-financial-crisis-probe/> release announced that there will be no
prosecutions based on the Levin/Coburn report:



"After a careful review of the information provided in the report and more
than a year of thorough investigation, the Department of Justice ... the FBI
and the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (and
other agencies) have determined that, based on the law and evidence as they
exist at this time, there is not a viable basis to bring a criminal
prosecution with respect to Goldman Sachs or its employees in regard to the
allegations set forth in the report."

The press release goes on to say that "the department and its investigative
partners conducted an exhaustive review of the report and its exhibits,
independently gathered and scrutinized a large volume of other documents,
and tenaciously pursued potential evidentiary leads, including conducting
numerous witness interviews."

The DoJ also boasts that "Since FY 2011, the Department of Justice's
financial fraud enforcement efforts have resulted in at least $185 billion
in civil and criminal forfeitures, restitution, civil settlements and other
penalties." (Bankers have continued to collected huge salaries and bonuses,
however, so the lack of criminal prosecution gives them no reason to stop
committing crimes.)

The statement goes on to describe DoJ's "aggressive" pursuit of bank fraud,
adding that "The Department of Justice has not hesitated to investigate and
take enforcement action when the evidence and facts support doing so." 

Holder himself was considerably more testy: "There have been, I guess, 2,100
or so mortgage-related matters that we have brought here at United State
Department of Justice. Our state counterparts have done a variety of things.
The notion that there has been inactivity over the course of the last three
years is belied by a troublesome little thing called facts."

Unfortunately, the Holder Justice Department has had a troublesome
relationship with facts. That dates back to its ginned-up and ultimately
discredited
<http://ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2010124910/blind-trust-holders-sham-operati
on-and-obamas-wall-street-justice>  claims about something called "Operation
Blind Trust," in which it claimed credit for dozens of mortgage-related
convictions that it said had resulted from a coordinated operation of that
name. As the New York Times noted
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/07/business/07ponzi.html?_r=1> , many of
those investigations had actually concluded before the 2008 election,
Holder's appointment, and the creation of "Blind Trust." The Columbia
Journalism Review gave its review
<http://www.cjr.org/the_audit/the_obama_administrations_fina.php>  of the
fiasco the headline "Obama Administration's Financial-Fraud Stunt
Backfires."

Then there's the graphic evidence of inactivity since the election of
President Obama and the confirmation of Attorney General Holder, courtesy of
Syracuse University's TRAC <http://trac.syr.edu/tracreports/crim/267/>
project:

 2012-08-10-economix15traccustom1.jpg
<http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2012-08-10-economix15traccustom1.jpg> 

(On the other hand, prosecution of immigration cases has soared
<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2011031329/justice-numbers-chasing-immi
grants-while-bank-criminals-go-free>  under this Administration.)

Most tellingly of all, there are the insider comments
<http://ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2012072809/evidence-mounts-dc-insiders-worr
y-about-holders-inaction-wall-street-crime>  which suggest that the Justice
Department has been dragging its feet in providing the mortgage fraud task
force with the extremely modest resources it was promised (roughly 100 staff
members to investigate a trillion-dollar fraud that involved all of the
major US banks, as opposed to 1,000 for the much smaller savings and loan
scandal of the 1980s).

And despite Holder's claims, the convictions obtained over the least three
and a half years have been strictly for small fry. The Justice Department
hasn't even tried any cases against major financial executives, despite
seemingly overwhelming evidence which includes:

The AIG allegations: We used the Levin/Coburn Report to review the list of
potential criminal activity in that case here
<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2010072919/wall-street-justice-where-ar
e-indictments> .

GE Capital deceptions: That's the company whose politically-connected CEO
was given a Presidential appointment. Referring investigators were stunned
to find that no criminal charges would be filed over its fraudulent
deception
<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2011020610/dark-crimes-capital-crimes-a
nd-ge-capital-crimes>  of investors, even though they had identified
specific individuals in the accounting department who had cooked GE's books.
GE Capital has also been implicated
<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2012010531/michael-hudson-interview-fra
ud-folly-mortgages-ge-whose-ceo-heads-presidents-j>  in fraudulent mortgage
practices.

Wells Fargo drug-money laundering: That's the case in which bankers
laundered money for the Mexican cartels
<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-29/banks-financing-mexico-s-drug-cart
els-admitted-in-wells-fargo-s-u-s-deal.html>  that have killed tens of
thousands of people. You know the gangsters we mean - they're the guys who
decapitate people. 

JPMorgan Chase's "London Whale": With particular concern about the cover-up
<http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/11/s-e-c-opens-investigation-into-jpmor
gans-2-billion-loss/>  of billion-dollar losses, with special concerns about
CEO Jamie Dimon's statement to investors that its London losses were "a
tempest in a teapot." Dimon later admitted he already knew that those losses
would be at least two billion. (Making false statements to investors is
stock fraud, a crime.)

And there are others, too numerous to mention all of them here: Countrywide.
Citigroup. HSBC. The list goes on and on.

The Justice Department's argument for inaction seems to come down to this:
Bank cases are complicated. They're hard to win. We don't want to try. And
it has repeatedly used an argument that's also been made by the President
and Treasury Secretary as well, as they've tried to explain away
<http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2012041726/burden-proof-geithner-obama-
and-wall-street-s-unpunished-crimes>  the inactivity: that bad banking
behavior isn't necessarily criminal behavior. That claim's been repeated
many times, especially in the context of "ABACUS" and other Goldman Sachs
misdeeds contained in the Coburn/Levin report.

But it's not true. It's already illegal to lie to clients, to knowingly
conceal important information from in order to get their money under false
pretenses, or to withhold materially important information from
shareholders. And yet that flimsy argument seems to lie at the core of the
DOJ's explanation for once again declining to pursue the evidence wherever
it may lead. 

Here's what really happened in this case: Goldman was selling its clients
"crap" investments (A Goldman employee's word), and which it knew to be
"crap," while at the same time betting against those investments. And it
concealed the fact that these investments were selected, not by the people
it told investors were doing the choosing, but by somebody who was
well-known for betting against the "crap" - and who would make a fortune if
they failed.

Under the massive civil settlement for ABACUS, the parties acknowledged that
it was a "mistake" for Goldman marketing materials to claim that "the
reference portfolio was 'selected by' ACA Management LLC without disclosing
the role of Paulson & Co. Inc. in the portfolio selection process and that
Paulson's economic interests were adverse to CDO investors."

"Mistake"? That's more of the linguistic evasion that's used when crooked
bankers pay hundreds of millions to settle criminal and civil charges while
"neither admitting nor denying wrongdoing." Goldman paid a record amount -
more than half a billion dollars - to settle this case. The total settlement
came to 550 million dollars. That's 550 million admissions of wrongdoing.

As they say: Money talks.

We're not into speculating about the motives for the Justice Department's
inaction. But it's not surprising when others who do come to unflattering
conclusions, and not just about Holder. This is an issue which the President
himself will ultimately have to address - for his campaign, and ultimately
for his legacy.

Meanwhile, the cases the Justice Department hasn't prosecuted have led to
billions of dollars in settlements. Eric Holder says that his department and
this Administration are doing everything they can to prosecute Wall Street
fraud and make sure it doesn't happen again. There's only one thing that
makes that statement hard to believe: It's a troublesome little thing called
"facts."


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