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Too Big to Jail
Can we all agree that a $1 billion swindle represents a lot of money, and the fact that Citigroup agreed last week to pay a $285 million fine to settle SEC charges for “misleading investors” demonstrates a damning admission of culpability?
Former Citigroup Chief Executive Officer Charles Prince, left, and former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, who was a senior adviser and chairman of Citigroup during the mortgage and financial crises, testify on Capitol Hill in 2010. (AP / J. Scott Applewhite)
So why has Robert Rubin, the onetime treasury secretary who went on to become Citigroup chairman during the time of the corporation’s financial shenanigans, never been held accountable for this and other deep damage done to the U.S. economy on his watch?
Rubin’s tenure atop the world of high finance began when he was co-chairman of Goldman Sachs, before he became Bill Clinton’s treasury secretary and pushed through the reversal of the Glass-Steagall Act, an action that legalized the formation of Citigroup and other “too big to fail” banking conglomerates.
Rubin’s destructive impact on the economy in enabling these giant corporate banks to run amok was far greater than that of swindler Bernard Madoff, who sits in prison under a 150-year sentence while Rubin sits on the Harvard Board of Overseers, as chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations and as a leader of the Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project.
Rubin was rewarded for his efforts on behalf of Citigroup with a top job as chairman of the bank’s executive committee and at least $126 million in compensation. That was “compensation” for steering the bank to the point of a bankruptcy avoided only by a $45 billion taxpayer bailout and a further guarantee of $300 billion of the bank’s toxic assets.
Those toxic assets and other collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps were exempted from government regulation by the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which Rubin helped design while he was treasury secretary and which was turned into law when Rubin protégé Lawrence Summers took over that Cabinet post.
In arguing that the derivatives market in housing mortgages and other debt obligations required no government oversight, Summers told Congress, “First, the parties to these kinds of contracts are largely sophisticated financial institutions that would appear to be eminently capable of protecting themselves from fraud and counterparty insolvencies. ... Second, given the nature of the underlying assets—namely supplies of financial exchange and other financial instruments—there would seem to be little scope for market manipulation. ...”
Oops. One wonders if Summers, who went on to be president of Harvard after playing such a disastrous role in the federal government, ever asked his mentor Rubin what went wrong. After all, it was Rubin who was a honcho at the “sophisticated financial institution” of Citigroup when, as the Securities and Exchange Commission filing against the bank explains, Citigroup structured and marketed a $1 billion toxic asset to investors without disclosing that it was simultaneously betting against that asset.
Back in January of 2008, knowing full well of the chicanery of his own bank and others with which he was quite familiar, Rubin nonetheless told an audience at Cooper Union in New York that the turmoil in the markets was “all part of a cycle of periodic excess leading to periodic disruption.” CNNMoney, reporting on his talk, noted that Rubin “doesn’t seem particularly alarmed. ... And the economic problems that he did acknowledge were blamed on just about everyone but the major financial players.”
Rubin, who became a key adviser to the Obama campaign, has long cultivated an image as a do-gooder by making philanthropic contributions that deflect attention from the consequences of his own grievous actions. He has played a major role in shaping Obama administration economic policy not only through former aides like Summers and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner but through the Hamilton Project, which he has funded at the Brookings Institution. The Hamilton Project has had much influence over the Democratic Party, and President Barack Obama as a young senator was the project’s first public speaker.
But facts these days tend to intrude in ways inconvenient to the superrich, who assume they can control the narrative. This month the Hamilton Project released a depressing assessment of the results of the era of radical market deregulation that Rubin’s policies launched, particularly as it had a horrendous effect on children.
Referring to the “Great Recession,” dismissed by Rubin at its inception as a mere blip in the business cycle, the report noted that the family income of the median child in the U.S. has fallen nearly 14 percent in the past five years and is now 7 percent lower than in 1975, concluding that while the income of the top 10 percent of families with children has increased 45 percent in the last 35 years, “half of America’s children are worse-off than their counterparts 35 years ago.”
That’s a telling obituary for the illusion, fostered by Robert Rubin as effectively as anyone, that the 22 percent of children in the United States who suffer below the poverty line and the offspring of multimillionaires like Rubin are living in the same America.
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19 Comments so far
Show All$285 million to settle? Nothing. This guy should be personally held accountable. Jail time for what he has done to Americans (and the world).. and our children living shitty lives with no future but the army.. comparable to 1975. Hang him and all of his ugly, I mean UGLY, followers, like Summers. Why don’t we also dump Geithner- and perhaps Obama if that is such a problem. We need to run them out of town and teach some banks a lesson. Go OWS- you are the solution for us.
Is there no justice in this country under Obama? This shocking SEC settlement made the crimes worthwhile. Too big to jail or is it a slap to a friend? Not an example to prohibit such actions in our future to protect our country and its people.
No..NOT jail, he must spend the next 20 years serving and living in a homeless shelter, cooking for the homeless...he has no concept of compassion or service so lets give him the opportunity to experience both. Need fruit picked? Send Rubin and the myriad other miscreants who have plucked vast sums of moaney from those least able to afford it. What about working in a OWS location, cleaning etc? The debt they owe cannot be repaid in prison but a small deposit might be put down by serving the poor they helped create.
None of the criminals mentioned in Scheer's article will ever be punished at all, let alone jailed. From 1978 until 2008 these criminals and others, bribed politicians into decriminalizing (euphemistically called deregulation) financial fraud to the point that none of their past, present or future frauds are illegal.
None of FDR's New Deal regulations (that made fraude illegal) have been restored, so as Naomi Prins recently told reporters : "investment bankers can do everything today that they could do a decade ago, nothing has changed" and the too-big-to-fail banks keep growing along with more fraud.
Then we must act to remove our money out of banks.
We must move it out of the stock market.
We must move it out of corporations. It’s up to us.
Are we clear? So tell your pension fund controller it is gold, not stock in corrupt businesses. Trade locally as much as possible. Any other ideas?
I too gag at the thought of Bill Clinton- remember the Telecommunications Act too.
Rubinomics, the pernicious policies touted by Rubin whores such as Summers (and, honestly, the entire Obama administration) have only accelerated massive wealth transfers from the people to US elites. Far more destructive than bin Laden, as immoral as Pol Pot, Rubin is far more deserving of a drone missile up his ass than the poor men, women and children the CIA murders almost daily in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere.
I could stick my boot up Rubin's ass up to my knee and I'd just want to do it over again. In fact line them all up - everyone that a hand in on this de-reg bullshit.
Oh, and every GOPer spewing "Regulations are killing job creation". Grrr - I could spit blood.
And never mind mislaying the blame that "it's all Fannie and Freddie..."
Yeah, and while the little guys are getting their heads cracked by police in the square below, these real criminals, the "intellectual psychopaths" occupying their opulent offices 20 floors above get off scott free. Grrrrrrrrr!
and watch their fortunes increase exponentially each year at our expense.
obama and his co-conspirators have clearly spelled out to even those not paying attention that the dems are simply one side to the same crooked rotting coin of corporate depravity coupled with governmental capture.
We need to tax WEALTH - not income - tax Wealth at 10% on any wealth over 10 millon per person.
Nice work, Mr. Scheer, but please don't leave out the part about the whole Wall Street directed system also gaming the cost of seminal food products, like rice, causing starvation to expand all over the world. On the plus side, that's factoring into the revolutionary movements sprouting up all over.
Lying to shareholders is considered "securities fraud". This guy should have been sent to jail long ago with Lloyd Blankfein and Jamie Diamond right behind him.
The only reason they got fine $285 millions is because they OFFENDED other
INVESTOR-CLASS PLUTOCRATS!!! Surely they weren't charged that for offending the little people who have lost their homes due to the same derivatives shenanigans. If you recall, the only reason a criminal named Maddoff went to prison for life: his victims were mostly 1%centers. Two-tiered justice system: one for the rich elite & one for the rest of us. Lovely.
By the way, has anyone seen the well-hidden news of BofA's new underhanded move? These sly banksters moved their $75 trillion worth of derivates onto their regular bank accounting sheets----thereby earning the protection of the FDIC, that's you & me again holding the bag for their criminal activities! And how clever & timely for them to roll out their announcement that they would back down from charging that onerous $5/month charge for debit cards---news that made the front page for further distraction from the really outrageous theft.
Pavrovian dog: I've been barking about that for 2 days and no one responds. It's either a shockwave to cognitive functions or people do not WANT to know. I mean these numbers entirely shift the metrics of anything the "Super Committee" can or will come up with in its eager rationale to send the next wave of necessary social programs to the auction block.
"The Bankers own the place." Indeed...
This is why I've been posting on the idea of beginning to circulate alternative local currencies, barter systems, or Time Bank initiatives. The money system is a fraud... it's been tainted for real. Like a body wrought with cancer, the better thing to do is find a new body... not pretend life can be replenished in "this one."
I am surpriseed that they were even fined because, from what I remember and Scheer made clear in his book 'The Great American Stickup', that slick willie gladly, and was most likely paid handsomely, to sign into law another of the insidious laws that grants immunity to those exposed for what should be prosecutable crimes. That sort of makes them too big to fail. That should determine which representatives AND senators get reelected in 2012. But to repeal that law would be like pulling teeth. All the financial 'regulatory bills clinton signed into law that protects those financial terrorists and their organizations surely make clinton as bad or even the worse president to inhabit the white house. Too bad a once president can't be hauled into court or before congress for hearings and prosecution of some kind as slick willie certainly deserves it for his actions.
Robert Rubin, Larry Summers and Tim Geithner are three of America's most notorious criminals. They are responsible for the lion's share of the real, deep poverty that is currently gripping millions of Americans. They should be prosecuted, but are still called on for more shyster economic advice. They have profited outrageously from their activities and their ill-gotten gains should be taxed away at a 100% rate. Obama and Holder should go after the real big time criminals in this economic debacle they helped create. Send them to jail. Special cells can be be built to house their bloated egos.
nothing will change until these thieves and others like them are swinging from the gallows, in public.
pointing out their crimes and bewailing the injustice of it all is just so much eyewash.
Accessed it easily. Maybe the site was in malfunction mode.