Taibbi writes: "Here's the thing: most of the crimes Wall Street people commit involve highly specific, highly individualized transactions that won't fit Eric Holder's bag of cookie-cutter statutory definitions."
Matt Taibbi at Skylight Studio in New York, 10/27/10. (photo: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images)
AG Eric Holder Has No Balls
15 August 12
've been on deadline in the past week or so, so I haven't had a chance to weigh in on Eric Holder's predictable decision to not pursue criminal charges against Goldman, Sachs for any of the activities in the report prepared by Senators Carl Levin and Tom Coburn two years ago.
Last year I spent a lot of time and energy jabbering and gesticulating in public about what seemed to me the most obviously prosecutable offenses detailed in the report - the seemingly blatant perjury before congress of Lloyd Blankfein and other Goldman executives, and the almost comically long list of frauds committed by the company in its desperate effort to unload its crappy "cats and dogs" mortgage-backed inventory.
In the notorious Hudson transaction, for instance, Goldman claimed, in writing, that it was fully "aligned" with the interests of its client, Morgan Stanley, because it owned a $6 million slice of the deal. What Goldman left out is that it had a $2 billion short position against the same deal.
If that isn't fraud, Mr. Holder, just what exactly is fraud?
Still, it wasn't surprising that Holder didn't pursue criminal charges against Goldman. And that's not just because Holder has repeatedly proven himself to be a spineless bureaucrat and obsequious political creature masquerading as a cop, and not just because rumors continue to circulate that the Obama administration - supposedly in the interests of staving off market panic - made a conscious decision sometime in early 2009 to give all of Wall Street a pass on pre-crisis offenses.
No, the real reason this wasn't surprising is that Holder's decision followed a general pattern that has been coming into focus for years in American law enforcement. Our prosecutors and regulators have basically admitted now that they only go after the most obvious and easily prosecutable cases.
If the offense committed doesn't fit the exact description in the relevant section of the criminal code, they pass. The only white-collar cases they will bring are absolute slam-dunk situations where some arrogant rogue commits a blatant crime for individual profit in a manner thoroughly familiar to even the non-expert portion of the jury pool/citizenry.
In other words, they'll take on somebody like Raj Rajaratnam, who stacked his illegal insider trades so brazenly and carelessly that his case almost reads like a finance version of Jeff Dahmer tripping over bodies in his Milwaukee apartment. Or they'll pursue Bernie Madoff on the tenth or eleventh time he crosses their desk, after years of nonaction, and after he breaks down weeping and confessing. Basically, if someone backs a dump truck up to the DOJ and unloads the entire case, gift-wrapped, a contrite and confessing criminal included, a guy like Eric Holder might, after much agonizing deliberation, decide to prosecute.
But here's the thing: most of the crimes Wall Street people commit involve highly specific, highly individualized transactions that won't fit Eric Holder's bag of cookie-cutter statutory definitions. That is not the same thing as saying they're not crimes. They are: the crimes of the crisis period were and are very basic crimes like fraud, theft, perjury, and tax evasion, only they're dressed up in millions of pages of camouflaging verbiage.
Or, even more often, the crimes have also been sanctified in advance by "reputable" law and accounting firms, who (for huge fees) offered their clients opinions that, if X and Y are signed in accordance with Z, and A and B are stipulated by the parties, and everyone's sitting Indian-style and facing the moon when the deal is agreed to, then it's not fucked up and illegal when Goldman Sachs tells you it's a co-investor in your deal when it's actually got $2 billion bet against you.
You know that look a dog gives you when you show it something confusing, like an electric razor or a lawn sprinkler? That's the look federal prosecutors give when companies like Goldman wave their attorneys' sanctifying opinions at them. They scratch their heads and say: "Oh, wow, well since this was signed in Australia by three millionaire lawyers wearing magic invisibility cloaks, it really isn't fraud! They're right!"
As one high-profile attorney currently working on a closely-watched case involving a Wall Street bank put it to me yesterday: "With these Justice guys, everything the Wall Street lawyers say makes perfect sense to them, no matter how dumb it is."
You can almost feel the relief emanating from Washington when these prosecutors decide against matching wits with the wizened 60 year-old legal Sith Lords from Harvard and Yale who've seen everything, know every judge by his or her first name, and in a trial would be basically bringing absolutely everything a lawyer can bring to the table, except consciences of course.
It's political, sure, these decisions not to go after the Goldmans of the world, but more than that what usually rules the day is just pure intellectual fear - appropriate in many cases, since any prosecutor who buys for a second any of the high-priced excuses being shoveled at them from corporate defense firms like Davis Polk or criminal defense mercenaries like Reid Weingarten (retained to defend Blankfein against possible criminal charges) probably really is no match, intellectually, for Wall Street's lawyers.
They're also no match morally. Wall Street firms pay their lawyers millions of dollars for their creativity, for their willingness to fight. They say to their lawyers, as Lehman Brothers said before it crashed: "We'd like to book $50 million in loans as sales. Find a way for us to call that legal."
As it happens Lehman couldn't find even one American law firm to go for that one, so they went to England and got a firm called Linklaters to find a way, which they did. The Linklaters opinion was just a duller version of the, "It's legal if we're all sitting Indian style and facing the moon" defense. Here's the New York Times explanation:
Enter Linklaters, which grounded its legal brief in English, rather than American, law. The firm explicitly said: "This opinion is limited to English law as applied by the English courts and is given on the basis that it will be governed by and construed in accordance with English law."
Otherwise, Linklaters provided Lehman with exactly what it wanted to hear. The law firm decreed in its briefs, at least as outlined in the 2006 iteration obtained by Mr. Valukas, that intent matters. If two parties intend to exchange assets for cash, and then later the party receiving the assets decides to hand back "equivalent assets (such as securities of the same series and nominal value) rather than the very assets that were originally delivered," that amounts to a sale.
That's how law works on Wall Street. The bank walks into the room with the sordid activity, and the law firm's partners huddle up and whip their associates - for hundreds and hundreds of billable hours straight, if necessary - until a way is found to call stealing or tax evasion or accounting fraud or whatever legal.
That's the way it should work on the prosecutorial side, too. You should start with a simple moral premise - this group of crooks ripped off X group of victims for fifty million dollars - and then you should bury yourself in law books until you find a way to put them all in jail. If Linklaters gets paid to be creative, well, Mr. Holder, we're paying you to be creative, too.
Again, though, Holder didn't need to be creative in the Goldman case. Levin gift-wrapped the whole thing for him. He could have had a dozen easy convictions just on the evidence in that report, and if he had been creative, if he had used his vast power to roll up the guilty and flip them into more revelations, then he'd have had enough cases to last the AG's office the next decade.
But the Holders of the world do not want to be creative when the targets are politically influential rich people. Instead, they use their creativity against Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds, immigrant housekeepers, and guys who knock over liquor stores. They like to flex muscles against bank robbers, celebrity tax evaders (we can't have Wesley Snipes on the loose!), truck hijackers, and drug dealers. As Gene Wilder would say, "You know - morons."
Holder's non-decision on Goldman is more than unsurprising. It amounts to an official announcement that the government is no longer in the business or prosecuting smart criminals. It's pathetic. The one thing you pay any lawyer to have is balls, and our nation's top attorney has none.
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With Obama the Wimp as his boss what did you expect.
I wasn’t prejudice before Obama the Wimp was elected. I have worked with Blanks for almost 50 years, but I am now. What a sorry excuse for a president he has been.
Until there are two hundred thousand really, really pissed off people on Capital Hill (all at the same time) raising some serious hell absolutely nothing is ever, ever going to happen to these totally bought and paid for by the richest 50 people in the world that are becoming more and more powerful with each passing rigged election thanks to the stupid people.
Excellent point and you are so correct. Thanks for clarifying.
On a government employee salary too... Interesting to look and compare the investments over the years. Talk about inside information... You'd think that with what they know they'd dump everything they have invested on Wall Street - but then they'd be broke - so better to rule against the peasants and try to keep the banks alive.
They'd have been better off to dump their stocks - follow the rule of law, maintain their integrity and write a best seller.
I'm not giving Holder any credit, don't get me wrong. Chances are he too is heavily invested in Wall Street. Hard to crack down on your Dealer when he's supplying the drug you crave most!
Eric Holder's boss is a secretive political thug from Chicago, who happens to be the largest recipients of Goldman and Goldman employee contributions.. . ever!
Now... act surprised if you can, go ahead, act surprised!
No investigation by Holder, and no presidential order by Pres. Obama to investigate same, re. this loss of so essential right to vote and have the vote honestly counted.
Then, there's Holder's backdown on investigation of the torture/brutali zation of the St. Paddy's Day 7 (Google: Colorado Springs Independent, Jan. 21, 2010, "No Peace or Justice").
Sad and then some, this Pres. and his Attny. Gen. are giving sign after sign after sign that they are either bought off or scared off, i.e. Obama, the former Constitution law professor, signing - after he said he would veto - this year's National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), thereby allowing military to arrest American citizens, incarcerate them here and abroad with no charges, no due process (a.k.a. trials), indefinite detention, etc.. In other words, rule of law in the toilet, as in no prosecution of the banking/Wall Street villainaires.
Michael Moore said it well..."Dudes, Where's My Country?"
From the movie "O' Lucky Man," come the lyrics to the song, "Justice":
We all want justice but you got to have the money to buy it
You'd have to be a fool to close your eyes and deny it
There's a lot of poor people who are walking the streets of my town
Too blind to see that justice is used to do them right down
All life from beginning to end
You pay your monthly installments
Next to health is wealth
And only wealth will buy you justice
There'll always be a fool who insists on taking his chances
And that is the man who believes in true love romances
He will trust and rely on the goodness of human nature
Now a judge will tell you that's a pathetic creature
All life from beginning to end
You pay your monthly installments
Next to health is wealth
And only wealth will buy you justice
Money, justice
Money and justice
Money, justice
It's all a matter of scale.
J
Franklin Raines, ex-Chairman and CEO, FannieMae. Forced to retire due to severe irregularities in Fannie Mae's accounting activities. Raines left with a "golden parachute" worth $240. The Government filed suit against Raines due to depth of the accounting scandal. The U S Gov't has sued him.
Tim Howard - CFO, Fannie Mae - ensured a "stable pattern of earnings" at Fannie. Irregular methods (manipulations) triggered bonuses for execs. Howard resigned under pressure with parachute valued at estimated at $20 Million.
Jim Johnson - A disgraced former Fannie Mae CEO & Lehman Brothers Exec. Reported publicly his compensation as between $6 million and $7 million when it fact it was $21 million. Johnson is currently under investigation for taking illegal loans from Countrywide while serving as CEO of Fannie Mae. Johnson's Parachute was estimated at $28 Million.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
FRANKLIN RAINES works for the Obama Campaign as his Chief Economic Advisor.
TIM HOWARD is a Chief Economic Advisor to Obama under Franklin Raines.
JIM JOHNSON was hired as a Senior Obama Finance Advisor and was selected to run Obama's Vice Presidential Search Committee.
See my comme*nt directly above!
Maybe that is part of the problem. It's one I hadn't considered, but isn't the root deeper and simpler? Isn't it something that Taibbi and others have already pointed out many times and that Dick Durbin put most succinctly: "The banks own this place."
The banks have written the statutes under which young Justice Department lawyers would be trying to prosecute them. They helped spawn a Federalist Society judiciary to interpret those laws in sympathy with Ayn Rand. They control markets in which the children and spouses and siblings and neighbors of judges make their livings. They can mount public relations campaigns to bring discredit on both their courtroom opponents and those in the public forum. They will one day make some young lawyer a lavish job offer … or decide how to crush his dreamt of political career.
At the end of the day, I have to imagine that the problem is more material than intellectual.
Seriously, I think the medical community should study Obama and the Dems to figure out how they are able to walk without a spine. It could bring relief to thousands of paralyzed soldiers and citizens with spinal cord injuries!!!
If the Democratic Party doesn't hold the financial miscreants feet to the fire then their party is as useless to the American people as the Republican Party...and not worth the sweat off of Holder's 'non-existent' balls!
You have a very potent mind, please focus it on the real problem at hand. As for the banks and bankers, they are doing just what they are, and always have been, supposed to be doing. Moving "money"!
It is not coincidental that Goldman Sachs was the biggest campaign contributor to Barack Obama in 2008.
You better have lived and are now living your life as a saint because you might incite one of your targets to sic the G-men on you.
It isn't left vs right or Democrat vs Republican that is the issue in our world. It is the corporate hostage taking of the democratic system. A few who can do whatever they want at the expense of others. A few who can utilize the CIA, the military and even the Federal Reserve for there own selfish desires while the democratic process insures that the people get the bill.
It's just like 2006 when the Dems were handed both houses of Congress and then did nothing to impeach Bush and Cheney or to end the wars. No, not even an investigation. This was all because they wanted to win the White House in 2008.
Seeing some poor kids doing time for minor offenses when our nation's Attorney General lets Wall street criminals walk free is perhaps the greatest injustice we see from our "Justice Department." These are the ones who devastated the savings and retirements of millions of Americans and they are free as birds. What an outrage!
Get over it - balls have nothing to do with any of the characteristics a democracy needs in its leaders.
You want women to respect your opinions? Drop the balls-as-courag e, out-dated, nauseating, never-true, offensive, ridiculous, arrogant, insensitive, metaphor. Get with the 21st century.
Not true, Fight Back. I've know MANY women who've had MORE, as well as much bigger, Balls than ANY man! It IS a figure of speech that defines the assertiveness of an individual, male OR female. Matt's article ISN'T about genitals! It's about whether or not our A.G. has guts and gumption enough to go after the Thieves who have brought this Country to it's knees! By the way, he DOESN'T!
Did you ever hear that WW II song about balls? It was intended to mock the Nazi leadership as unmanly weaklings by asserting that their balls were defective.
"Goering has only got one ball,
Goebels has two but they're too small,
Himmler has something similar,
But Hitler has no balls at all."
The fact that something is a "figure of speech" in no way makes it acceptable if the picture it presents is ugly and based upon demeaning half the population of the world.
Kudos for pointing these things out, Matt, but I can't honestly give similar complements to the typical reader and commenter here. I think you'd be better off posting your articles in a more professional venue.
Do you think anyone cares? Answers abound.
Matt, do you remember how MFGlobal's Jon Corzine "couldn't find" 600M dollars that was supposed to be in segregated accounts? Let you or I try that and see how long it would take for brother Holder to crack the whip.
Or our old pal, Tim Geithner who it turns out was long aware of the LIBOR scandal proceedings. Do you want to hold your breath waiting for the shoe to drop there?
Matt, your frustration is noted but really, have a glass of your favorite beverage and relax. The Obamabots are LOTE folks, what's a little chicanery among friends?
You hit a sore point with me that makes the AG's inactions not at all surprising.
You said, "After 2 stolen elections by Bush, this is the most aggressive assault on peoples right to vote in our history."
That Cheney/Bush (note that I don't say Bush/Cheney) STOLE 2 elections is almost 'established law' in America, shows how far we have sunk, and how successful has been the 30 year war on America by the far right fascists in our country.
I keep on saying that we are a young country in world history, only 236 years old; and we are and were an experiment that keeps on having set backs. We might have run out of 'do-overs' this time around and that saddens me.
Have you heard anything lately of the Great Roman Empire; the Great Greek civilization; the Aztecs; the Mayans; the ancient Egyptian Dynasties; the Chinese Dynasties that built a wall that can be seen from space; the Ibo and Banin of Africa; Genghis Khan and the Khan & Mongol Empire, well, have you?
That damn Eve! If only she hadn't eaten from that 'Tree of Knowledge' and listened to the snake-in-the-gr ass, we'd all be sitting pretty, sipping palm date cocktails.
I don't see Eric Holder as the total problem; he is a symbol of the on-going and growing problem.
As Pogo said, back in the Funny papers in the 1970's, "We have met the enemy, and it is us."
That being said, I still think positive; I don't know, I'm crazy that way.
Easy to blame OB, He certainly could do things differently and possibly would with better backing in Senate and Congress. However where are the Mass Balls of Congress. What is Mitt the snit and Ryan of Wisconsin going to do to the Banks, Realtors who destroyed people's lives? I do not hear them coming to the rescue.
Easy to Judge but it takes more than OB to undo Banking Fraud....If none of you like what has been done what are you doing about it. Did you change your accounts, we did. Did you invest outside the Wall Street? Did you reinvest your Portfolios or 401k's with Green Investments.
If you say no, than you are the reason your leadership s___ks. You prove them to be okay with every non American purchase, with every waste of gas, with every investment in Companies who promote Foreign Goods. Want Leadership...be one yourself. Cause No One is going to do it for you anymore. The Gravy Train ended because You all let it....Bye Bye American Pie, American Jobs, America.
Rather than trying to impress ourselves with how clever & snarky we can be puncturing others' comments, we need to address key questions about movement building. What are the grand coalitions that need to be built? How can we work both on campaigns with immediate benefits (saving Social Security) & long-term efforts to transform our political & economic structures? What are the forms of leadership and decision-making we need in our organizations & politics that will avoid abuse of power by the few? Just to name a few. Read Deepak Bhargava & William Greider on these issues.
After knuckling under to Sen Ted Stevens attack on the US Attorneys, Holder's offcie is likely gun shy, also.
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