Comment by no_wizard
6 months ago
I am very glad he was found out and investigated by authorities ultimately leading to this, but reading the article I can’t help but wonder:
It’s interesting that this one guy gets 24 years over 47 million dollars. Yet, not a single executive, board member, VP or SVP got arrested for the fraud that lead to the 2008 crash. We are talking orders of magnitude more than this and they declined to prosecute even though the evidence was absolutely abundant as we now know.
This guy doesn’t deserve any sympathy but it should be known that he’s hardly the most egregious financial criminal walking the streets. That honor goes to Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan Chase.
edit: at the very least, they should have fired all the executives from the banks, and their boards, and stripped them of their compensation packages, and clawed back anything they earned in that time period, and banning them for life from working in the financial sector in any capacity ever again. That would have been more appropriate than jail time and sent an actual message to Wall Street that this behavior won't be tolerated.
What sort of fraud in 2008 would be similar to just wiring millions of dollars out of the bank to a personal investment/scam?
The most egregious stuff in 2008 was mispricing MBSs. Incorrectly pricing risk is pretty far from stealing money from investors/depositors.
They paid $13 billion in fines for their role in underwriting fraudulent securities[0][1] as it was coming to light. In a brief that was never filed as part of the settlement (JP Morgan Chase really didn't want this to be filed and made it a contingency for the settlement), made public after the settlement and summarized in the statement of fact released along side the settlement itself[2], the government had enough evidence that it was going to file a lawsuit, the core of which was related to this:
>for a fraudulent and deceptive scheme to package and sell residential mortgage-backed securities that the bank knew contained a material amount of materially defective loans.
If that's not enough, if we want to look just beyond 2008, they pulled a scam to manipulate the part of the settlement which was suppose to 4 billion in loan relief for home owners[3] by forgiving phony mortgages.
I have more, if so desired, but I didn't want this to turn into a hundred link dump of information that would be very dense to read.
[0]: https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/09/jamie-dimon-billion-...
[1]: https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/jamie-dimons-13-bi...
[2]: https://www.justice.gov/iso/opa/resources/943201311191510319...
[3]: https://billmoyers.com/story/special-investigation-americas-...
As long as you have the money in your coffers to pay for any wrongdoing you'll never get charged. These fraudulent securities in 08' were also somewhat removed from depositors so it's hard to see too many similarities to this case of a local bank.
Robosigning, directing employees to sign fake names on contracts and repeatedly submitting fraudulent statements to the courts, among other things, in a largely successful effort to steal people's homes on a mass scale.
>Reuters has found that some of the biggest U.S. banks and other "loan servicers" continue to file questionable foreclosure documents with courts and county clerks. They are using tactics that late last year triggered an outcry, multiple investigations and temporary moratoriums on foreclosures.
>In recent months, servicers have filed thousands of documents that appear to have been fabricated or improperly altered, or have sworn to false facts. Reuters also identified at least six "robo-signers," individuals who in recent months have each signed thousands of mortgage assignments -- legal documents which pinpoint ownership of a property. These same individuals have been identified -- in depositions, court testimony or court rulings -- as previously having signed vast numbers of foreclosure documents that they never read or checked.
https://www.reuters.com/article/world/special-report-banks-s...
Well, there were the thousands of fraudulent NINJA loans made by individual applicants who lied.
But then you have to ask if the institutions doing the application verifications were criminally negligent.
> But then you have to ask if the institutions doing the application verifications were criminally negligent.
That wasn't negligent. It was intentional.
Not by the institution, but by the officers acting against the interests of the institution.
A tiny example out of so many: it is against the interest of a secured lender to inflate appraised value or allow them to be inflated.
Yet, starting at 2004, appraisers across the country started reporting that they were being pressured to inflate appraisals and blacklisted when they refused.
This is clear indication of fraud against the institution and regulators. There is simply no honest reason to inflate appraisals.
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Criminal negligence laws only apply to physical harm, not financial losses.
4 replies →
The abbreviation you want is TBTF.
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Here[1] is a write up from an expert. It falls into the class of accounting control frauds.
[1] https://fcic-static.law.stanford.edu/cdn_media/fcic-testimon...
I mean they they were bribing/manipulating/forcing the ratings agencies to misclassify derivatives. That’s basically stealing except with more steps.
They shopped around to different ratings agencies and only hired those that provided the better results.
You would need to classify everything from consumer reports to industry awards to not inviting influencers who give negative reviews to events as stealing as well.
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Not outright bribes. Just the implicit knowledge among all parties that the rating agency that gives bad grades get fewer customers. Result is the same but not exactly "bribing".
Yea, probably there was invidual cases of bribing like in all industries. But overall the issue wasn't oughtright bribes.
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It’s not clear to me in 2008 that anyone committed fraud to the level required.
My understanding was more that things were disclosed deep in the fine print, and nobody really verified anything and didn’t have a legal obligation to do so.
Who allegedly lied to the point of it being fraud in 2008?
See my comment to a similar question that I answered already a few comments up from this one. If more information is desired, let me know, I have mountains of it, this is just the highlights to show in broad strokes the banks did indeed know they had fraudulent loans and they willingly misrepresented them.
Well, the people who lied on their mortgage applications to get loans they couldn't possibly every pay back certainly committed fraud. Nobody went to jail. Neither did anyone of the 100,000 or so people who collected the "first time homebuyers tax credit" fraudulently.
> VP or SVP got arrested for the fraud that lead to the 2008 crash. We are talking orders of magnitude more than this and they declined to prosecute even though the evidence was absolutely abundant as we now know.
Nor did any of the millions of Americans who lied on mortgage applications, and took out mortgages they couldn't possibly afford to pay back. Nor was anyone ever held liable for income tax on forgiven debt or the imputed income from living rent-free in houses for years until the court foreclosed.
If I recall correctly, the attorney general at the time (Eric Holder) told his peeps not to bring a case unless it was absolutely 110% rock solid. It was too much bother for them.
What seemingly happened is they used it to leverage a settlement out of the banks[0] as part of the negotiated settlement that landed in 2013 was the explicit removal of a brief that was to be filed to carry out a lawsuit of this nature.
I wish I knew why they decided not to pursue such a rock solid case, but by 2013 it seems they reversed course on being 'hardline' in dealing with the banks.
This still doesn't excuse the fact the executives and board weren't held criminally liable, or at the very least all fired and banned from ever working in any part of the financial sector ever again, and stripped of their golden parachutes and money clawed back that they made during the time period.
[0]: https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/09/jamie-dimon-billion-...
> It’s interesting that this one guy gets 24 years over 47 million dollars. Yet, not a single executive, board member, VP or SVP got arrested for the fraud that lead to the 2008 crash. We are talking orders of magnitude more than this and they declined to prosecute even though the evidence was absolutely abundant as we now know.
Can you show the abundant evidence that is available, and who committed the crimes you think they did and which specific crimes you think these individuals committed?
I replied to someone above with a similar question. And that is only the tip of the iceberg of relevant information I have on hand. If more is desired, please ask what you'd like.
Sure, but I di already ask:)
- which specific people do you think committed crimes?
- which specific crimes do you think they committed?
- what evidence do you have of these crimes linked to these people?
- bonus question, given how mad the US was at bankers post 2008 and how hard prosecutors tried to link people to crimes, nothing came out of this, why did prosecutors fail to find any data to charge people?
the main difference is that Embezzlement doesnt come with the option of a civil settlement by a completely different enforcement agency, and also isnt hard to prove
would you say this would be something similar to the FTX crypto scam?