One hundred and fifty years jail time for Bernard Madoff is a good thing.
To listen to the victims of his swindle, or read their words, is to appreciate the very far-reaching ways in which Madoff's quiet crime has wreaked havoc on the lives of thousands of families.
Federal District Judge Denny Chin was absolutely right in denouncing Madoff's crimes as "extraordinarily evil," and giving him the maximum sentence. Punishment is no substitute for prevention, but the sentence provides a modicum of justice to the victims and will exert some modest deterrent effect against future potential swindlers.
The 150-year sentence is headline grabbing, but what should surprise us is not that Madoff got such a long sentence, but that other corporate criminals escape with light sentences or no criminal prosecution at all.
In August 2006, U.S. Federal District Court Judge Judith Kessler
adjudged the leading tobacco companies to have engaged in a 50-year
long conspiracy [1]
Twenty-five years ago, poisonous gas escaped from a factory
In 1989, the Exxon Valdez [3] hit a reef
Victims of horrendous human rights abuses [4]
For two decades, the multinational oil companies and the giant coal
producers have engaged -- and continue to engage -- in a prolonged
campaign [6]
What to make of the disparity between the appropriate sentencing for Bernard Madoff and the get-out-of-jail free approach for other leading corporate criminals and malefactors? There are a few lessons and conclusions.
First, the Madoff case differs from many of these other examples of corporate wrongdoing in that the individual perpetrator is so closely related to the victims. Although he was handling billions of dollars, Madoff had a skeleton staff, and he had personal connections with many of those he swindled. As a result, the victims and the public's anger is visceral and very targeted -- not directed at an amorphous giant corporation.
Second, Madoff's victims have power. They have the ability to hire lawyers, and to organize for redress and retribution. Corporate crime victims in poor communities, or in poor countries, generally do not have this kind of power. Nor do those who will fall victim in the future to consequences of actions carried out today.
Third, and relatedly, the penalties for financial crimes are generally
much stiffer than for other corporate crimes. The New York Times
Finally, and most important, one of the signal powers of corporations is their ability to influence the law and culture so that their most heinous acts are not considered criminal. Knowingly addict millions of children to a deadly habit? Not a crime. Collaborate with military regimes and destroy lives and livelihoods in poor countries? Not a crime. Endanger the planet with greenhouse gas pollution -- and then mobilize politically to block emergency efforts to save the earth? Not a crime.
The world is a little bit more just today, after the sentencing of Bernie Madoff. When other corporate culprits are sentenced comparably, the world will be a lot more just.
*Clarification: Executives from the U.S. parent company were charged in India, but never appeared, and are officially "absconders" from justice. Executives in India have been charged; their trial, which began in 1992, is ongoing.
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