Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH - Friday, 3 February 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)THAT'S THE UMPTY-UMP TRILLION $ QUESTION, ISN'T IT?
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/01/can-the-schneiderman-infused-financial-fraud-unit-prosecute-vikram-pandit.html
By Matt Stoller, the former Senior Policy Advisor to Rep. Alan Grayson and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. You can reach him at stoller (at) gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at@matthewstoller.
There are two underlying structural problems with the new(ish) Federal task force on financial fraud. One, it is the policy of the administration to protect the banking systems basic architecture, which means the compensation structure and the existing personnel who run these large institutions. Any real investigation into the financial collapse will inevitably lead to the collapse of this architecture. Thus, any real investigation will be impeded when it begins to conflict the basic policy framework of the Obama administration. And this framework is set by Obama. Its what he believes in. He made this clear in his first State of the Union, when he said a priority of the administration was to ensure that the major banks that Americans depend on have enough confidence and enough money to lend even in more difficult times.
Two, Obama personally believes in the legitimacy of the existing banking institutional framework and he strongly suspects that no crimes were committed. He has hired a raft of people including Jack Lew, Tim Geithner, Eric Holder, Larry Summers, and so on and so forth who agree, and has implemented policies such as Dodd-Frank that assume as much. His administration genuinely believes that mortgage fraud has been a top priority of theirs, as I showed this morning. These people arent stupid, they arent without principles, and they arent electorally driven. They are ideologues. They really believe in a neoliberal political economy, where government throws money at the economy through private channels and private channels do with it whatever they think best. As Jonathan Alter, who is as close as you can get to the administrations emotional spokesperson, explains in a column titled For Obama, Pro-business Populism is no Oxymoron:
The response to this is often: Who is the president to tell me where or how to run my business? But hes not. Hes simply saying hell offer you tax advantages when your interests are aligned with the nations, and he wont when they arent. (italics are mine)
The Obama administrations posture is not passive because Obama is weak, it is passive because President Obama and his administration believe passivity towards business interests is the appropriate role of government. Schneiderman does not believe this, he wants to govern. And thats why he wants this Federal task force, because the Federal government has more resources and tools (including legal authority, personnel, jurisdiction, and documents) that he needs to do a reasonable job explaining to the country through the use of the Justice system what happened in the multi-trillion theft and why. But he is coupled, as co-Chair, with several of these people who, as Matt Taibbi puts it, might in an ideal world be targets of their own committees investigation. This makes it very difficult to consider how they could possibly work well together, with such misaligned interests...There is a possible a collision coming, because the two parties have contradictory objectives. For now, the administration probably believes that this is a good political talking point, and nothing more. Perhaps the task force will go after a few mid-level people, or not, but it isnt really going to cause any major problems for them. Schneiderman for his part has already said hed walk away publicly if he is impeded in his investigation, as Dave Dayen noted in his terrific series of articles on the whole episode. As just one example, Jonathan Weil keeps wryly pointing out that Vikram Pandit at Citigroup may be guilty of violating Sarbanes-Oxley.
The statute seems pretty clear to me, though Im not a lawyer. The criminal statute says that CEOs must certify financial statements of their companies, and that information contained in the periodic report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer. If a CEO certifies false statements its a million dollar fine and up to 10 years in jail. If a CEO willfully certifies false statements its a five million dollar fine and up to 20 years in jail....