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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

“Round One,” The Banks vs. The Rest of Us

“Round One,” The Banks vs. The Rest of Us

Within a month Federal District Judge Jed Rakoff has launched what may be the beginning of the end for rapacious behavior on the part of our banking sector. Earlier this month he refused once again to rubberstamp an under-the-table deal the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) made with a “Too Big To Fail” Bank, this time Citi. Unlike earlier deals that came before him, he is apparently not going to agree to any settlement without all the gory details being revealed.

As you may recall from our 11.15.11 OP-ED, Citi has been charged with fraud. With selling their customers a bundle of crappy investment vehicles while at the same time betting against them. Of course the crappy stuff turned out to be crappy and when they failed, Citi’s customers took a hit somewhere north of $700 million bucks and Citi collected on their bet. Judge Rakoff questioned the settlement -$95 million- and the fact that only one individual was charged with criminal behavior. In an earlier case (Bank of America) Rakoff signed off when the SEC upped the penalty. Two other Federal Judges signed off on similar deals with Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan Securities, as many judges have over the years.

After mulling over the Citi deal for a couple weeks, Rakoff took a very different tack. This time he rejected the premise that Citi could walk away with a fine and a promise to never do it again. He wants all the gory details out on the table. A path that drew a snarky headline, “Rakoff Cements Status as Populist Firebrand”, on the American Lawyer Magazine website’s report on his ruling. Basically saying that his failure to play “go along to get along” would end any chance of promotion for the judge.  But isn’t that what ethics is all about, doing the right thing without regard for self interest?

An end may be at hand to the age of repeated SEC “Peanuts and a promise” deals for those who pull off massive ripoffs. As Steve Denning noted in a recent Forbes article, What Shall We Do With The Big, Bad Banks, “Over the last 15 years, some 19 large major financial institutions have been found by the SEC to have broken anti-fraud security laws at least 51 times—laws  that they agreed ‘never again to breach’. The group of offenders included Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, UBS, Goldman Sachs, Wachovia, and AIG. In this period, the Securities and Exchange Commission has never once brought a contempt of court citation against any of the banks for repeated offences.”

The leaders of these behemoths, the Lloyd Blankfeins and Jamie Dimons and their minions who hide behind these “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” deals with the SEC, may be called to task if it turns out that they were aware of the double dealings underlying the SEC charges. An outcome sure to be cheered by the State Attorney Generals across the country that have been pursuing the culprits who triggered the financial collapse we are enduring; looking for someone to jail.

Wouldn’t that be nice? Three cheers for Judge Jed Rakoff.

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