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Endgame for Gramm?
One wonders if Phil Gramm has been made just a tad nervous by the news on Tuesday that one of UBS' super-wealthy private clients has pleaded guilty to tax evasion. That's the second case in two weeks involving the bank at which the former senator is a vice chairman, and 100 other clients are under investigation for possible bank-assisted tax fraud.
Gramm, the Republican former chair of the Senate Finance Committee, where he authored much of the deregulatory legislation at the heart of the current banking meltdown, has for the six years since he left office helped lead a foreign-owned bank specializing in tax dodges for the wealthy. These schemes by the Swiss-based UBS not only force the rest of us taxpayers to pay more to make up the government revenue shortfall but are blatantly illegal. In February, UBS admitted to having committed fraud and conspiracy and agreed to pay a fine of $780 million. Republican "Tea Baggers" take note: Offshore tax havens do not equal populist revolt.
In UBS' "deferred prosecution agreement" with the Justice Department, the bank agreed to turn over the names of its secret account holders to avoid a criminal indictment. The complicity of top executives in this far-ranging scheme to use foreign tax havens to cheat the U.S. treasury of billions in uncollected taxes was noted at the time in a Justice Department statement: "Swiss bankers routinely traveled to the United States to market Swiss bank secrecy to United States clients interested in attempting to evade United States income taxes."
What did Gramm think all of those Swiss bankers from his firm were doing over here? Was he totally clueless? The Justice Department statement suggests otherwise: "UBS executives knew that UBS's cross-border business violated the law. They refused to stop this activity, however, and in fact instructed their bankers to grow the business. The reason was money-the business was too profitable to give up. This was not a mere compliance oversight, but rather a knowing crime motivated by greed and disrespect of the law."
Is it conceivable that this "knowing crime," so widespread within the UBS enterprise, was unknown to Vice Chairman Gramm-even though it primarily involved U.S. tax evasion, and he had been hired by the company because of his expertise in American law, some of which he helped to write? As Gramm said when he was hired in 2002 by UBS, the position "will provide me with the opportunity to practice what I have always preached. I have been involved in every major financial debate since I've been in the Congress."
How could Gramm, who prides himself on expertise in these matters, have been unaware of the damage that the Swiss bankers who worked for him were doing to American taxpayers saddled with making up the shortfall in government revenue? As the Justice Department said: "In 2004 alone, Swiss bankers allegedly traveled to the United States approximately 3,800 times to discuss their clients' Swiss bank accounts. The information further alleges that UBS managers and employees used encrypted laptops and other counter-surveillance techniques to help prevent the detection of their marketing efforts and the identities and offshore assets of their U.S. clients."
But then again, if you are Phil Gramm or his wife, Wendy, you might expect to get away with a great deal in the way of financial machinations. After all, neither has ever been held legally responsible for the Enron debacle, in which the Gramms played a major part.
As a top government regulator, Wendy Gramm changed the rules to make Enron's chicanery possible, and as the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Phil codified those rule changes into federal law. While Enron execs like Chairman Ken Lay (a major Gramm campaign contributor) were indicted, the charmed couple that created the loopholes Lay and others jumped through escaped legal responsibility.
After leaving the government, Wendy Gramm joined Enron's board, where she headed the audit committee that managed to avoid auditing the company's disgraceful accounting procedures-just as her husband has apparently looked the other way during his stint in the private sector with UBS.
Sure, Phil Gramm lost his position as the co-chairman of John McCain's presidential campaign when he blamed the recession not on the banking deregulation he championed but rather the people of the United States, which he described as a "nation of whiners." But that was a sideshow compared with the serious charges now swirling around UBS, charges that may finally prove to be Gramm's undoing.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllIf I was Phil and Wendy Gramm, I would familiarize myself the airline schedules in regards to flights to Geneva and Zurich. They should know from the Marc Rich episode that Switzerland does not extradite people accused or convicted of financial crimes. Considering all they did for UBS' bottom line (though they also got the bank into the Mortgage backed securities ponzi scheme as well), I am sure the company has reserved for them a nice apartment with views of the Limmat river.
When Gramm was in the senate he used to take his shoes off in the chamber, rub his feet and sometimes pick his toes. True story.
Did he pick his feet in Poughkeepsie?
· Yr Obd't Servant
I don't think he ever saw "The French Connection".
it's almost a certainty that bush and cheney and lay and gramm, amongst others, are just sitting there, laughing their asses off at us. please, all i ask for is five minutes...
lino, you might recall that Lay's ass is no longer available. He expired on his way to jail.
We need some more jail sentences or they will keep on doing what they are doing.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
Re BeForKids April 15th, 2009 2:20 pm, who asserts,
"...you might recall that Lay's ass is no longer available. He expired on his way to jail."
As with Raygun's DCIA, Bill Casey, who was alleged to have died just before he was to testify under oath before Congress, I'll believe Lay's dead when I can poke the body with a stick.
Jethro, I've heard that one before. You may be right.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
Phil will cut a deal, pay a fine, and be rewarded with a regular stint on FOX as their new investment expert while Wendy guest stars on The Really Old Housewives of Texas.
"But that was a sideshow compared with the serious charges now swirling around UBS, charges that may finally prove to be Gramm's undoing."
With the Justice Department stocked with Monica Goodling’s loyal Bushies don’t count on it.
It's been a l..o..n..g time since the UBS related tax evasion list was given to our government and we have heard nothing but deafening silence about it and who is on it. I suspect the list contains most of our Senators, paraticularly those on the banking committees and probably such honest folks as Geitner as well. This is an issue of both sides of Congress, or we would have heard something by now as to who is involved. As the value of our dollars has gone down and our future taxes will go up, these clowns have been evading taxes with a lot of help from those orchestrating the bailout. What a country!
Jail, Not Bail.
My Republican friends are blaming Frank and Dodd.
So is Rush Limbaugh.
Phil Gramm made to answer for his skunkworks attack on our economy and the resulting disaster, even if not directly for it......poetic justice.
The neocons and corporate America could not have done this withiout Gramm and Clinton. They carry the blame.
Speaking of Phil Gramm, wasn't he once a Democrat before he turned Republican? Also, did he ever face a pro-populist opponent during the Senate races? I take it that Phil Gramm gave your state a bad name just like Roy Blunt's been doing to our state.
I belioeve he was. But he has always been a Gramm Party of one actually. He is just a little below whale waste on the bottom of the ocean floor.
"He is just a little below whale waste on the bottom of the ocean floor."
When he leaves the planet he can donate his blubber towards energy production. :)
"The information further alleges that UBS managers and employees used encrypted laptops and other counter-surveillance techniques to help prevent the detection of their marketing efforts and the identities and offshore assets of their U.S. clients."
And WTF was the Securities and Exchange Commission and the National Security Agency doing at that time? Were they too busy wire-tapping innocent citizens to focus on the real terrorsits who engaged in tax and other kinds of fraud responsible for the economic meltdown of the entire globe?
"Parasitic Entitlement"!
I don't believe Mr. Gramm or his wife will be indicted.
This countries Justice Department has not indicted or arrested any of the known war criminals. Why should it be supposed that any other insider big wigs be indicted for any crime?
There is no reason Justice will indict. The big wigs are to big to jail.
Phil Gramm has caused more harm to the US than bin Laden.