The People vs Wall Street
Bear Stearns bankers on trial in first criminal case of the credit crunch
Amidst the economic wreckage, after 7 million job losses and approaching 2 million home foreclosures in the US alone, with businesses and consumers around the world still struggling to get finance after the long credit crunch, Wall Street is finally on trial. A little piece of Wall Street, at least.
In the first major case against bankers at the heart of the financial
meltdown, a jury of 12 mainly working-class New Yorkers will decide the fate
of the two Bear Stearns managers whose hedge funds imploded in 2007,
signalling the start of the crisis. Ralph Cioffi, 53, and Matt Tannin, 48,
pocketed millions of dollars in pay during the boom years, but the events of
2007 left their investors nursing losses of $1.6bn (£1bn) and ruined forever
the reputation of Bear Stearns, one of the oldest investment banks on Wall
Street.
Dressed as if for a funeral, the pair sat impassively in the brightly lit
courtroom in downtown Brooklyn yesterday as assistant US attorney Patrick
Sinclair recounted what he said was a litany of lies that they told to
investors. The two men were desperate to stop investors deserting their
funds when the sub-prime mortgage market began to plunge, Mr Sinclair said.
Mr Cioffi alone was paid $32m in the two years before the funds collapsed.
They "violated a special relationship of trust" between fund
managers and investors, he added. "They lied to investors to save their
multimillion dollar bonuses. In the US, that is a crime, a serious crime.
It's called securities fraud." The prosecution plans to lean heavily on
private emails written by the men which suggest they knew much earlier that
the sub-prime market was – in a word used by Mr Tannin – "toast".
Yet the men glossed over the situation and deceived investors in two ways,
it is alleged.
First, Mr Tannin said he was putting more of his own money into the funds, when in fact he did not invest a single cent of the $1m that was available in his bank account. Mr Cioffi, meanwhile, secretly withdrew $2m of his money. Second, Mr Cioffi denied any major investor was planning to pull out, when he had already received a major redemption request. More than a dozen friends and family crammed in to the few public benches, and more spilled into an overflow room as the trial got under way. While the prosecution aimed to distil the case for jurors into a handful of straightforward lies, it was clear yesterday that the defence will portray the events of 2007 as much more nuanced – and highly complicated. In an idiosyncratic opening statement, Mr Cioffi's lawyer, Dane Butswinkas, launched into an educational session on high finance. At one point, he used waste-paper baskets in an attempt to explain how hedge funds worked.
The prosecution is unfairly "cherry-picking from thousands and thousands of emails", Mr Butswinkas complained. "It is easier to call the right play on Monday morning after the game on Sunday, and it is always easier to pick the right investment strategy after the fact. Hindsight is 20-20."
Mr Cioffi was described by Mr Butswinkas as a man who reached a high level on Wall Street through talent and hard work. He came to New York in the late Seventies "with $200 in a slightly worn-out pouch" and "with hopes of being a banker". Mr Tannin's defence team will give their opening arguments this morning.
The trial promises to be a bitter fight between prosecutors, who accuse the pair of lying and manipulating evidence, and defence lawyers, who say the men are being made scapegoats for a financial crisis that was not of their making. The outcome could also be a harbinger of things to come, as the US Justice Department considers bringing cases against even bigger fish on Wall Street.
"This is not a revenge opportunity," the 75-year-old judge, Frederic Block, had told prospective jurors. Neither Mr Cioffi nor Mr Tannin is charged with "causing" the credit crisis. They are charged with behaving dishonestly when the crisis began to break. The pair were traders in mortgage securities, curators of two hedge funds that invested in debt which is now known to have been toxic but which had seemed to promise great riches. They worked at the long end of the chain that stretched from overheated housing markets in the south and west of the US, where millions of buyers were tempted into taking on mortgages they could not afford. Those mortgages were sliced and diced by Wall Street and turned into securities which could be bought and sold as if they were shares. Credit rating agencies had certified the Bear Stearns funds' mortgage derivative portfolio as super-safe; the defendants' superiors at Bear Stearns and the funds' outside investors believed they were taking little risk. The question is when the two managers realised this was far from true.
Messrs Cioffi and Tannin face 20 years in jail if they are found guilty of the securities fraud. Mr Cioffi is additionally charged with insider dealing.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllThe lying is key. The managers of any investment fund have a fiduciary duty to the people who invest with them. If they determined, or should have determined, the prudent course for their own money was to hold or sell, then they are REQUIRED TO TELL THE OTHER INVESTORS.
If your doctor, plumber, or lawyer, knew or should have known in the course of doing their job that you are endangered by their advice or actions they are REQUIRED TO TELL YOU.
All these so called 'professionals' shove their credentials and expertise in your face to get your business. As part of the credentials and license is that they are to work for you, in your interest, all the time. If that means the fund must close and fire the managers to protect the investors - they must do it. Any doctor, lawyer, or plumber is required to refer people to experts when they do not have the skills or knowledge to fix your problem. The reality that you have to give up a chance at income for your clients' interest is part of the job.
These guys need to lose their credentials, pay a fine and do jail time if they are proved guilty in the accusations above.
The red eyes and sad face show just how sorry he is. (THAT HE GOT CAUGHT!)
Wow, mostly stone throwing drivel in the comments. I don't know enough about these clowns on trial, but here's the thing: there is no People Vs. Wall Street. I mean, come on folks, people bought their houses voluntarily and Wall Street traded the mortgages legally. Sure, some people lied, some were defrauded, but to think that Wall Street alone caused the crises, well, he who lives in glass houses...
Jeff
www.cerebellumblues.com (no politics here!)
These guys are on trial not for being sharks but for not making nice with the other sharks.
The current crop of politicians is not about to try sharks for being sharks and acting like sharks, and it won't work to vote now and then and buy these guys' stuff every day.
Let's work towards a 0-huckster economy.
What a whirlwind of evidences of a total scandal in the financial oligarchy that runs from Wall Street to the White House to Congress:
1. This piece on the prosecution for investment fraud of the Bear Stearns banksters.
2. Also on today's CD postings the story of the congressionally unaccountable aides of Secy Treasury Geithner, mostly coming from the House of Robert Rubin.
3. Revelation a few days ago of the thick record of phone calls between Geithner and the CEOs of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Citigroup, firms that have profited heavily from Treasury-administered bailouts.
4. Nomi Prins' study a couple of days ago of the phone records of former Treasury Secy Paulson in 2008 as the bailouts were being orchestrated, including the same Wall Street giants, Treasury Secy to-be Geithner and presidential candidate Obama.
5. And, today Goldman Sachs' announcement of a huge profit for operations in the latest quarter.
How many dots are going to have to be connected---and by whom---to produce a scandal of proportions far beyond that of Watergate?
This morning, Amy Goodman interviewed William Black. It's worth watching if you haven't already seen today's program. He explains, exactly, what is going on with the stock market surge, the new bubble, and without hesitation, describes the actions of the banksters as fraud!
www.democracynow.org
The People vs Wall Street.
But so far, never enough people; never enough 'versus.'
In the "Money as Debt-Pt.2" video (I posted the link in my earlier comment) the conclusion is that we MUST PRESS FOR MONETARY REFORM (i.e. support Ron Paul, join local currency schemes, etc.)
What do you think - is there any chance of success? Can one "boycott" the banks? Or is it too late?
The video also has a great quotation which ought to be engraved at the entrance of the FED (other central banks, too) - and Congress?
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men,
living together in society,
they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."
Frederic Bastiat, (1801-1850)
me too , wake me up when they march Alan Greenspan, Timothy Geithner, Summers, and the Congress...and all the corporate heads..AND their boards.
that about makes up the US "economy" ANYWAY.....
which is turning out to have been nothing more than a GANGSTER CLASS of rich people and greedy people pretending to be "upstanding" citizens who write and lay down "laws and principles"
which are nothing more than fancy terms for ROBBERY, MURDER INCORPORATED, WAR and THIEVERY and TORTURING and ENSLAVING people everywhere.
when or IF humanity survives these times --a nd one day becomes a truly enlightened society
CAPITALISM and its PREMIERE bastion - THE USA
will be looked back at - in the distant past as the HELL HOLE that spread so much RUIN to people everywhere as well as the planet, in the NAME of "Freedom and progress" -
and NEARLY destroyed the entire planet .
it will be seen as the VERY BELLY of the BEAST.
and be taught as an example to the future children of what NOT to BE -- an "american".
Would we want any of these terrorist banksters to be housed in any of our local jails? Don't be closing Gitmo just yet.
Fittingly morbid your comment.
Sadly all this is mandated by the vacant masses, goosestepping to vapid consumerism, voting for the next savior of the parasitic SYSTEM.
tocqueville-good post.... we here (in the u.s.) are the 'don't ask, don't tell' nation of orwellian language and occasional sideshows of truth attempting to get a foothold. you know that 'democracy' song by cohen?.... it's like we're stuck in the 'reefs of greed' and 'squalls of hate' and can't even see the 'shores of need' because they're us.
What does it say about our so called "democracy" that these two managers are on trial for "violating a special relationship of trust", for lying to INVESTORS not for what they have done to SOCIETY as a whole, to millions of Americans and (considering the global domino effect) eventually to millions of citizens around the world?
Of course many other bankers should also be charged with massive fraud (Wouldn't it be great to see the crooks of Goldman, JP Morgan, Citi, the feudal lords of the FED - and their political supporters being indicted according to the RICO Act?)and it may well be that these two men are used as scapegoats to create the illusion that some kind of "justice" prevails even in the financial sector.
The article points that they are NOT charged with "causing" the credit crisis. "They are charged with behaving dishonestly when the crisis began to break."
But didn't they "behave dishonestly" all along? The whole derivative business is a scam: to create "something out of nothing", and insane practices like "naked short selling" and other financial shenanigans are not only accepted as normal behaviour - No, they are even called "financial innovation"and politicians here in Europe fell over themselves to lift earlier regulations, so that European banks could also behave like hedge-fund managers...
In a sane world, all hedge funds would be outlawed and - as Nomi Prins has pointed out repeatedly - the monster banks must be dissected, not being allowed to form even bigger institutions.
The most important conclusion from the crisis-prone deregulation of finance is that banking should be a public service, not a private racket. Roosevelt separated commercial banks from investment banks to avoid disaster - this was as step in the right direction but as we have seen now it does not work in the long run because the investment banks will use their zillions of profit to "buy congress" and install their former bosses in the treasury.
So we must not allow the establishment of a financial aristocracy and to prevent that, banking must be heavily regulated (...to save these greedy bastards from themselves...).
But as long as these criminal and immoral practices are considered "normal" and the madness of it all is hidden behind fancy euphemisms like "securities" (the mother of all oxymorons...!) nothing will change...
By the way, here in Europe we (the people) still use the term "to earn money", not "to make money".... but the financial and economic "elite" will probably laugh at us....
http://video.google.de/videoplay?docid=-2550156453790090544&ei=ai_XSqG2FaGI2wKe7oykCg&q=money+as+debt#
http://www.viddler.com/explore/prommasa/videos/40/
GREAT Observation.
INVESTORS are NOT more important than the citizenry or population or society as a whole.
if that is all that an "economy" goes down to, there is only one phrase to say abotu "investors" :
PHUCK THEM. that kind of social "arrangement" should not even exist - if it all means investing at the expense of others for personal "improvement" because it is still just a form of SELFISHNESS and GREED underlying the entire social fabric and eventually poisons society -- all over again.
but of course the capitalist system ENSHRINES it. it is global, until of course humanity GROWS UP out of it.
From the article: They "violated a special relationship of trust" between fund managers and investors, he added. ("he" being US Attorney Patrick Sinclair)
That "special relationship of trust" is something like the special relationship between a lion and a zebra I think, just about when the lion is sinking its teeth in the zebra's neck.
Off with their heads!
There are honest crooks, The ones that stick a gun in your face and say give me your money. You know exactly where you stand with these crooks,normally they get what's in your wallet. Then there are dishonest crooks. They rob you with an ink pen and a computer. They normally are able to get your retirement account, your home, eventually your job and everything else. The honest crook normally is given the maximum sentence the law will allow. They do hard jail time. The dishonest crooks get bailed out by the tax payers. They are rewarded with bonuses that come from the taxpayers. They buy congress and senate with our money and write law to protect themselves. What the fuck is wrong with us for allowing this to happen. Wall Street is the terrorist nation folks. This is where we should be fighting our war. These fuckers have declared class war on us. When the hell do we get to fight back? When the hell do we get to stand up to these crooks and take our nation back?
When?
When the critical mass for change of direction is reached.
That point depends on how well the SYSTEM can further exploit foreign wealth in conjunction with the ongoing financial leech attack by Wall Street.
This SYSTEM is a parasitic system, which must absorb energy (wealth) in order to exist. This energy is derived and composed in many ways, financially, militarily, corporately, diplomatically, clandestinely, exploitatively, racially, through lies, intrigue, propaganda, murder and crime -and through ‘democracy’ totally subverted by lobbyism. Exploitation is the facilitator of our APPEASEMENT BY CONSUME. Within all the crises and misery the voting majority is still too appeased.
Therefore, the chance, that we ever come to a situation (like in other countries and cultures which we have usurped) where enough social, economical or political need and pressure is created to enable evolution or even revolution, is distant. The evil ways of the SYSTEM might be unsustainable and voters’ complacency, derived through consumerism, might be shaken but the misery has to get much worse to get our people’s a$$es into action.
The only true chance for aiding any reformation/revolution is INFORMATION.
And HERE is some vital info: watch “Zeitgeist Addendum”.
*Yawn*
Wake me up when they start frog-marching high level Goldman Sachs executives to the paddy wagons.
These two guys appear to be responsible for some level of wrongdoing but, given the extent of iresponsiblility on Wall Street over the past several years, it's hard not to see them in some regard as scapegoats.
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