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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Piece for Peace April 3-5, 2015 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)66. Bill Black: HSBC Violates its Sweetheart Deal and Loretta Lynch Praises It
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2015/04/bill-black-hsbc-violates-sweetheart-deal-loretta-lynch-praises.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+NakedCapitalism+%28naked+capitalism%29
By Bill Black, the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One and an associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Jointly published with New Economic Perspectives
HSBC got a sweetheart deal from the Obama administration. It laundered vast amounts of money for Mexicos murderous Sinaloa cartel, helped bust sanctions for terrorists and mass murderers, and did not cooperate with the investigation. The U.S. Attorney in charge of the case, Loretta Lynch, refused to prosecute any of the HSBC bankers or even sue them individually. Instead, there was a pathetic non-prosecution agreement limited to HSBC. Lynch is accused of not contacting either of the primary whistleblowers in the case. The failure to contact one of the whistleblowers has already blown up in Lynchs face as it became public a few months ago that the governments of the U.S. and Europe were provided many years ago with data on HSBCs Swiss affiliate that show it was helping terrorists, genocidal leaders, the most violent drug gangs, and tens of thousands of wealthy people evade taxes. Lynch failed to bring that case or use any of the invaluable data provided by the whistleblower who copied the files from the Swiss bank. ...HSBC is failing to abide even by the pathetic sweetheart deal Lynch gifted HSBCs criminal managers with... She failed even to do the most obvious move of extending the agreement with HSBC. The New York Times tells the tale in DealBooks trademark incoherent fashion.
DealBook, of course, is not so impolite as to mention that the two clauses of the second sentence are contradictory and that HSBC is acting in bad faith and violating even the sweetheart agreement. HSBCs violations were a heaven sent opportunity for Lynch to undo the massive embarrassment of the shameful deal she gave HSBC one of the worlds largest and most destructive criminal enterprises. She could use the watchdog report damning HSBC to state the reality HSBCs managers have acted in bad faith and violated the deal that would have got them off with no real prosecution. Lynch could now prosecute HSBC and its senior managers for all the frauds including the vast frauds she missed last time because of her failure to talk with the whistleblowers. And the chances of that happening closely approach zero because Obama chose Lynch to continue Holders shameful policies of refusing to prosecute bankers rather than change those policies.
... Holders refusal to prosecute the bankers has led to repeat offenses on Wall Street. Ponder that which DealBook religiously refuses to ponder if fraudulent bankers find they grow wealthy from the sure thing of fraud with no risk of prosecution or even being sued, why wouldnt they respond with repeat offenses that would create a pattern of corporate recidivism? DealBook is very sympathetic to Holder and Lynch. They are portrayed as grappling with the thorny problem that because senior bankers realize that under Holder and Lynch they can grow wealthy and powerful by leading repeat offenses they will do so even though they promise dad (Holder) or mom (Lynch) that theyll never do it again. (DealBook hates to use the f word to describe elite bankers frauds.)
********************************************************
Heres a hint to dad and mom if we presume for the sake of analysis that Holder and Lynch actually wished to stem the pattern of corporate recidivism. Put the senior officers in prison for at least a decade. Have the OCC and the NY State authorities yank HSBCs (and Standard Chartereds licenses to do business in the U.S.). If they cannot operate profitability without the license have the UK put them in receivership on a Friday, replace the managers with honest, skilled managers, and open the bank (complete with renewed U.S. licenses) on Monday. Then sue and bring enforcement actions against any culpable officers to clawback their compensation. We had no problem with recidivism when we got the Department of Justice (DOJ) to bring the S&L prosecutions. To my knowledge, of the over 1000 felony convictions in S&L cases designated as major by the DOJ, no senior S&L crook that we convicted played any material role in leading the three fraud epidemics that drove the 2008 financial crisis. The truth is that Holder and Lynch are taking no meaningful efforts against what even DealBook now admits is the pattern of corporate recidivism by our most elite bankers. The only thing they grapple with is the bad publicity arising from the stench of that pattern of the most despicable and harmful elite financial frauds in history.
By Bill Black, the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One and an associate professor of economics and law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Jointly published with New Economic Perspectives
HSBC got a sweetheart deal from the Obama administration. It laundered vast amounts of money for Mexicos murderous Sinaloa cartel, helped bust sanctions for terrorists and mass murderers, and did not cooperate with the investigation. The U.S. Attorney in charge of the case, Loretta Lynch, refused to prosecute any of the HSBC bankers or even sue them individually. Instead, there was a pathetic non-prosecution agreement limited to HSBC. Lynch is accused of not contacting either of the primary whistleblowers in the case. The failure to contact one of the whistleblowers has already blown up in Lynchs face as it became public a few months ago that the governments of the U.S. and Europe were provided many years ago with data on HSBCs Swiss affiliate that show it was helping terrorists, genocidal leaders, the most violent drug gangs, and tens of thousands of wealthy people evade taxes. Lynch failed to bring that case or use any of the invaluable data provided by the whistleblower who copied the files from the Swiss bank. ...HSBC is failing to abide even by the pathetic sweetheart deal Lynch gifted HSBCs criminal managers with... She failed even to do the most obvious move of extending the agreement with HSBC. The New York Times tells the tale in DealBooks trademark incoherent fashion.
The filing represents a subtle yet important shift for the Justice Department, which until now has largely applauded HSBCs efforts since reaching the deferred-prosecution agreement and paying $1.9 billion to the federal authorities. While commending HSBC for continuing to act in good faith to meet the requirements of the D.P.A., prosecutors highlighted times when bank employees resisted the overhaul.
DealBook, of course, is not so impolite as to mention that the two clauses of the second sentence are contradictory and that HSBC is acting in bad faith and violating even the sweetheart agreement. HSBCs violations were a heaven sent opportunity for Lynch to undo the massive embarrassment of the shameful deal she gave HSBC one of the worlds largest and most destructive criminal enterprises. She could use the watchdog report damning HSBC to state the reality HSBCs managers have acted in bad faith and violated the deal that would have got them off with no real prosecution. Lynch could now prosecute HSBC and its senior managers for all the frauds including the vast frauds she missed last time because of her failure to talk with the whistleblowers. And the chances of that happening closely approach zero because Obama chose Lynch to continue Holders shameful policies of refusing to prosecute bankers rather than change those policies.
... Holders refusal to prosecute the bankers has led to repeat offenses on Wall Street. Ponder that which DealBook religiously refuses to ponder if fraudulent bankers find they grow wealthy from the sure thing of fraud with no risk of prosecution or even being sued, why wouldnt they respond with repeat offenses that would create a pattern of corporate recidivism? DealBook is very sympathetic to Holder and Lynch. They are portrayed as grappling with the thorny problem that because senior bankers realize that under Holder and Lynch they can grow wealthy and powerful by leading repeat offenses they will do so even though they promise dad (Holder) or mom (Lynch) that theyll never do it again. (DealBook hates to use the f word to describe elite bankers frauds.)
********************************************************
Heres a hint to dad and mom if we presume for the sake of analysis that Holder and Lynch actually wished to stem the pattern of corporate recidivism. Put the senior officers in prison for at least a decade. Have the OCC and the NY State authorities yank HSBCs (and Standard Chartereds licenses to do business in the U.S.). If they cannot operate profitability without the license have the UK put them in receivership on a Friday, replace the managers with honest, skilled managers, and open the bank (complete with renewed U.S. licenses) on Monday. Then sue and bring enforcement actions against any culpable officers to clawback their compensation. We had no problem with recidivism when we got the Department of Justice (DOJ) to bring the S&L prosecutions. To my knowledge, of the over 1000 felony convictions in S&L cases designated as major by the DOJ, no senior S&L crook that we convicted played any material role in leading the three fraud epidemics that drove the 2008 financial crisis. The truth is that Holder and Lynch are taking no meaningful efforts against what even DealBook now admits is the pattern of corporate recidivism by our most elite bankers. The only thing they grapple with is the bad publicity arising from the stench of that pattern of the most despicable and harmful elite financial frauds in history.
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