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After dragging its G-Man heels for years, someone at the FBI has woken up and realized that laws have been broken by the financial industry. Those violations are part of what led to the economic abyss we are facing. The ever–vigilant bureau that blew its 911 probe has just announced an investigation of 14 unnamed mortgage companies involved in a variety of scams. Talk about going after small fish.
In this week of football mania, what we know and they have yet to learn, is that if you dig deeply, you will soon be playing in a Super Bowl of corporate criminal complicity.
We need a special prosecutor and some zealous investigators who know something about white-collar crime waves. One suggestion: bring back former veteran FBI agent turned whistleblower Coleen Rowley, a recent TIME Magazine “Person of the Year,” to head the taskforce. Rowley told me she used to work cases like this with the former Rudolph Giuliani, who once made a name for himself as the scourge of Wall Street crime families. (Maybe it takes someone with a Mafia patrimony to know how to smell the scammers and then use RICO anti-conspiracy laws to put them behind bars.) That was before Rudy decided to join another mob - the Homeland Security fearmongers to cash in on 911.
Today’s financial racketeers span the globe, and are not confined to a solo junior trader at a French bank who lost over $7 Billion on trades. He was driven, he says, to make a big bonus and with, he adds, the knowledge of all his overlords who now feign great shock—SHOCK!—about what he, and in their view, he alone, did. There are even news organizations in Europe who believe that the whole global financial crisis was the work of one bad man. This sounds like a replay of the “lone assassin” theory that always pops up after high profile killings.
To its shame, our media has once again not been in the lead on this vital story. It is still not framing it in criminal terms. It is not investigating the role of institutions working together—big banks, hedge funds, rating agencies, and the securities industry — making super-profits with deceptive subprime transactions. That is, before their securitized schemes blew up in their faces causing super-losses and the writedowns of billions.
That, in turn, contributed to a larger economic meltdown that may go beyond being a mere “recession.” The press seems to have no “institutional memory” about past crashes and Enronesque scandals, or the way greed and unlawful activity regularly makes for so much misery because it is the people who can least afford it who always suffer the most. Pundits are better at doing post-mortems than insuring accountability with hard-digging watchdog journalism.
So where’s the editorial outrage? Where are the calls for the prosecutions of the fraudsters? As Pam Martens explains on Counterpunch, “Mainstream media has also been implanting the idea that it’s all about homeowners and mortgage loans instead of banksters hiding bad debt.” So there is a trust issue with media as well as the financial overlords. Forbes admits: “This predicament of trust ceased to be a subprime crisis long ago. We face a global credit crisis…”
Mike Whitney puts the problem in a nut shell: “The financial system has been handed over to scam-artists and fraudsters who’ve created a multi-trillion dollar inverted pyramid of shaky, hyper-inflated, subprime slop that they’ve sold around the world with the tacit support of the ratings agencies and the US political establishment.”
Understand the relationship here. Policymakers addicted to right-wing ideology allowed this crisis. A lack of oversight and regulation enabled it. Full Stop! No wonder the bankers meeting in Davos at the World Economic Forum are blaming the Bush White House and its so-called “free market” economic policies for bringing down the “free market.“
The decisions of the Federal Reserve Bank—which was warned about a predatory lending disaster and did nothing—was a big part of the problem and its latest round of rate cuts is likely to make matters worse as inflation rises and the people who need help the most don’t get it.
This underscores the old truth that the “masters of the universe” recognize. As much as they protest restraints on their unscupulous endeavors, they know that regulations and rules in the marketplace are needed to keep them from killing each other off. Without oversight, in the words of the poet, “the centre does not hold” and “things fall apart.”
Of course, finger-pointing bankers rarely blame themselves for anything, even now as they dissemble and downplay their losses while laying off thousands of employees adding to the unemployment lines. Almost every big brand name bank has been complicit in a subcrime scheme.
Many of the smartest minds in finance are worried that this train wreck can’t be stopped. George Soros calls it the worst crisis in 60 years and fears worse to come. Writers are even invoking the worries of top conservative economists like Ludwig von Mises who said: “There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought on by credit expansion. The question is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”
“Total Catastrophe?” Yikes.
And what about the politicians? Most have been silent while still taking donations from the FIRE combine. FIRE stands for the three industries funding much of our politics, Finance, Insurance and Real Estate. They are now trying to put out a financial wildfire with a pathetic bucket brigade in the name of economic “stimulus.”
To do “something,” the Democrats in the House have passed a measure that everyone knows is a joke, and what they are doing is going along once again with Bushevik policies to reward the greedy and those with the least pain.
What’s left of the left, or “progressive” world, is also largely silent, as if economic justice has not always been at the center of the fight for a better world. There has been little direct action to stop massive foreclosures with blockades at home auctions or campaigns for debt relief?
Why can’t the next big anti-war march in March, on the 5th anniversary of the Iraq attack, not broaden its focus to include the way war spending has contributed to the economic decline, and condemn the media for bolstering the occupation, and awaken a new fight for economic change to challenge all the candidates and Wall Street.
And to return to the Fee Bee Eye: You want to see real terror and homeland insecurity? Visit any town and most homes in this country as the economic sqeeeze made worse by high gas and food prices tightens its grip on the dreams and hopes of Americans of all ages, colors and classes. As the larger bill comes due, many of us can barely pay our endless loans and credit card bills.
Raids on Wall Street firms and a serious global investigation can’t solve the deeper problem, but it sure would be a good start.
– News Dissector Danny Schechter wrote the e-book SQUEEZED (Coldtype.net) and made In Debt We Trust (InDebtWeTrust.org) about the credit crisis. Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org
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How convenient that FIRE can stand for Finance, Insurance and Real Estate OR Finance, Insurance, Real Estate and Energy!
Hi Danny - So true, since our most important economic driver right now is
producing death and scarcity, how far into the future can our American
“culture” and “economy” expand?
Now people realize that fat local defense contracts are no safeguard
against the greed at the top of the pyramid. Is there a breakdown of
foreclosures ranked by which industry head of household is employed in?
Probably defense workers have a lower rate of foreclosure. If the
government starts defaulting on corporate defense contracts you will hear
screaming and pain from the white middle class that will be terrifying.
The other day I was in an Office Max parking lot and a big Lexus drove in
front of me, while I was walking. A woman next to me yelled out “I ought
to shoot her tires out - who does she think she is, driving in front of
you.” And I was afraid to ignore her because she probably had a gun in
her car, which she was getting into. So I just said “shame”, and in my
mind thinking ’shame on both those selfish impatient people’. But who am
I to judge, but then again, I don’t want to get into a shooting match in
a strip mall parking lot in the middle of the day. But the level of rage
and frustration is increasing exponentially - I’m sure you see it too.
This is the result of less government the republicans keep preaching about. Brainwashing the the American people that less gov. is good for them, when it only benefits and protects the wealthy.
Danny, I closed out a Chase account last year after interest rates soared to over 27%. Then my husband became ill with a hospital acquired infection (MRSA) and spent over 180 days hospitalized, while nearly dying from it.
Even thought,I had never gotten behind before, (except during Hurricane Rita and chaos in our situation reigned) there was no sympathy, despite many attempts to explain our situation, from Chase.
By the time I transferred/paid off our Chase debt, the interest rate had soared to 325%. I framed and saved the final statement as a warning to my children and grandchildren.
There is no worse criminal than the one who requires your soul, while those caught holding a few ounces of medical pot do not pass go and are sent directly to jail.
It’s a hard rain gonna fall!
I am beginning to think that the Justic Department has not a clue about economic crime. What with the banks whisking in the narco dollar spin drying it and moving it out in the housing market. Nothing is said no trips to jail.
All one has to do is look at say QWest or the energy companies.
Newmont Mining paid Abdu Sayf one point eight million which helped finance his father in law’s attack on 9-11. Right now they corrupted the Town of Victor Colorado to sell them some prime water rights…etc.
Their real estate arm is selling super fund lots to the unsuspecting in Colorado Springs and the list goes on.
The bandit that robs at gun point kills a few and is tried and fried. The mining company executive kills thousands, starves millions,is a respected Republican,paying democrats not to peek.
If you visit www.worldreports.org you will see that we have been covering this in detail for 18 months. See also this Editor’s posted analysis dated 26th December 2007: ‘A deconstruction of fraudulent finance operations behind the ’subprime’ crisis ’slide'’:
‘The money that you make illegally using my money, is my money’.
The ‘mainstream’ media have failed in their duty as the Fourth Estate. So the Fifth Estate has done the job for them, and has arguably, therefore, started to replace the Fourth Estate.
OK, Washington and state lawmakers have been on the industry about so called “red lining” and encouraged the industry to lend to people that should not have been allowed to qualify for loans.
People had home loans that should have never been able to buy houses to start with.
When you get a loan … the rates are EXPLAINED. Most of these people knew that their rates could go up, they either didn;t care or thought they could just get another loan.
Another problem is many of thes epeople also went on huge spending sprees on home equity lines … stupid people are stupid people and the taxpayer should not have to pay for people who are just dumb.
Hey Dan. I would like to address a couple of points mentioned in your article.
We are fortunate to life in a free media society but do not overlook the fact the media reports only what they are allowed to know, what they are led to believe, and what they think they figured out based on the misinformation made available to them.
That may be why we only hear reports of symptoms sometime dressed up as the cause, but more often than not does the public does not hear the real cause.
Regarding the current mortgage and housing crisis, your quote from Mike Whitney above says it all. To anyone with knowledge of the mortgage banking industry, it should be obvious that a major part of the cause is many of the nations mayor lenders enticed third party originators
to “doctor up” unqualified individuals and families wishing to own a home and make them appear as qualified.
The perfect racket for the major lenders who can put the blame on the local loan originators if needed, while enriching themselves, and their co-conspirators, then cashing out by closing down or selling and walking away when the pyramid collapses. All culprits get paid up front. The public takes the loss when borrowers default.
Easy to understand greed is the culprit, but hard to understand the absence of moral resposability in the executive levels.
Maybe the Mafia gone main stream. Maybe the elite business schools are not emphsizing integrity and morals in their curriculums.
The last point is: Who is keeping the authorities from intervining? All loans, good or bad, has evident documentation. not hard to build cases.
Maybe the “didn’t know” excuse works at executive levels. I only whish it worked in traffic court.
Thee are quite a few people in financial industry jobs who might well be candidates for criminal charges. That much I agree with. The problem is that to get convictions (or plea bargains) there has to be strong enough evidence of illegal behavior, and in the case of white-collar crime such evidence can only be gotten in a small fraction of the cases in which someone has gotten rich off of other people’s money. But that problem is encountered also in the case of street crime. It’s been shown in numerous studies that “crime pays”, and the people who commit crimes are usually well aware of that. How many handbags does a mugger steal before being caught? Many. And what is the punishment for being caught? Often nothing more than a suspended sentence and probation, if that. So how can we expect that white-collar criminals will be convicted and jailed in large numbers? They won’t. The best we can hope for is that enough of them will be convicted and jailed to put the fear of God into the others.
It is imperative that they seek out and punish as many of the individuals as possible. Why wouldn’t they do it again if there are no consequences. Even the small time fraudster needs their hands slapped. Bail out? Get the funds from the individuals that screwed up the industry… Cash in their Mercedes, BMW’s and jewelry.
I would love to see many of the individuals that harassed me as an underwriter getting some striped “jeans and t shirts, serves them right.
While painful job wise at the moment, I see better days ahead, with more respect for “doing the right” thing (which I always fought for) instead of looking the other way.
The last thing we need is a bailout, but it’s what we’re going to get considering it’s an election year. The people who really need the help are the ones who have faithfully paid their mortgages DESPITE struggling to pay for their kids’ educations, their medical bills, and their utility/gasoline bills. We should NOT be bailing out borrowers who lied to get into their first house, or who lied in order to get a bigger house. We should NOT be bailing out the speculators and investors whose competition in “hot” markets helped raise real estate prices everywhere to unsustainable levels. We should NOT be giving $15,000 to everybody who wants to buy a house (as suggested by Ga. Senator Johnny Isackson).
The economoy is going to tank in a big way and these “stimulus” plans are doomed to fail because Americans are drowning in debt. That the economy is tanking is shown by the fact that subprime default rates are in the stratosphere and Alt-A (near prime) rates are rising. More alarmingly, default rates are also climbing in auto loans and credit cards (and the average American family has $9500 on those cards). IT’S A DEBT CRISIS, NOT A CREDIT CRISIS!!
I work with the FBI on economic crimes and know that this is why they were not more active in these cases: First, most of the agents that worked on white collar crimes were transferred to terrorism and homeland security after 9/11 and they have never been replaced. Second, the secondary market for mortgage-backed securities dilutsd liability for bad mortgages and makes it very difficult to determine who owns the notes. During the salad days of the housing bubble, fraud was not seen as a big problem because it was such a small percentage (they thought!) of total originations. So even if the FBI managed to figure out who owned the note, the lenders who misjudged the severity of the problem were also –frequently — too busy to be bothered to cooperate or to respond to FBI subpoenas. Without a cooperative “victim” these cases have a very small chance of succeeding. Finally, given the lack of communication and the fact that so much fraud was given the wink-wink-nudge-nudge treatment by lenders (the stated income “liar loans” and “no doc/no verification” loans are a case in point), given the amout of work needed to develop a criminal case, and given that the standard of proof requires that the prosecutor convince a jury that the lender was taken advantage of, most federal prosecutors said “no way!” except in the most egregious cases. The FBI depends on the federal prosecutors to take its cases to trial. If the prosecutors are not willing to do that (and there are way too few of them as well), why should the FBI spend its scare resources on a case that will never go anywhere?
This is the biggest cluster-you-know-what since the Great Depression. We’ll be lucky if all we get is a recession.
to Sandy the underwriter, I feel your pain. Can’t do the right thing in the mortgage trade or you will be unemployed even during boom times. If you are in the business, then you know who is in demand.
To Semper (above), thanks for the insight from the enforcement comunity’s perspective.
This Valentine’s day Consumers Union is working to “kiss credit card rip offs goodbye”! Unfair rate hikes, outrageous fees, hidden interest charges… it’s time for Congress to take action to protect consumers and not big credit card companies. Go to www.creditcardreform.org to take action and learn more. When you send a “Valentine”, we’ll hand deliver postcards to your representatives asking them to pass real reforms for you.
It is obvious that the more we see of this mess the answer is to abandon credit in droves. I have been digging my way out of debt for over ten years now and hopefully in the next year or two be back in black. I am never going to attain a credit card again (debit cards work quite well) and if I do a property it will be payed for up front. Lesson learned long ago here.

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