“This is the damning verdict of Sen. Elizabeth Warren's (D-Mass.) report released Friday, RiggedJustice: How Weak Enforcement Lets Corporate Offenders Off Easy (pdf).
“Described
as ‘the first in an annual series on enforcement,’ the 12-page booklet ‘highlights
20 of the most egregious civil and criminal cases during the past year in which
federal settlements failed to require meaningful accountability to deter future
wrongdoing and to protect taxpayers and families,’ according to
a press statement from Warren's office.
“Take the
Education Management Corporation, the nation's second-largest for-profit
college, for example. That institution ‘signed up tens of thousands of students
by lying about its programs, it saddled them with fraudulent degrees and huge
debts,’ Warren wrote
in an accompanying New York
Times op-ed published Friday. ‘Those debts wrecked lives. Under the
law, the government can bar such institutions from receiving more federal
student loans. But EDMC just paid a fine and kept right on raking in federal
loan money.’
“Other cases
outlined in the report include: Standard and Poor's delivering
inflated credit ratings to defraud investors during the financial crisis; ‘The
Cartel’—Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Barclays, UBS AG, and Royal Bank of
Scotland—manipulating
exchange and interest rates at the expense of clients and investors; the Upper
Big Branch Mine Disaster that resulted in 29 deaths; and the Novartis
Pharmaceuticals kickback
scheme that cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars and undermined
patient health.
“‘The
examples raise the disturbing possibility that some giant corporations—and
their executives—have decided that following the law is merely optional,’
Warren argues. ‘For these companies, punishment for breaking the law is little
more than a cost of doing business.’ And they shed troubling light on the state
of the U.S. justice system. ‘Justice cannot mean a prison sentence for a
teenager who steals a car, but nothing more than a sideways glance at a C.E.O.
who quietly engineers the theft of billions of dollars,’ Warren said in the
op-ed.
“What's
more, Rigged Justice places
blame at the feet of federal agencies and regulators, whose ‘limp approach to
corporate enforcement, particularly in response to serious misconduct that cost
Americans their jobs, their homes, or, in some cases, their lives, threatens
the safety and security of every American.’
“The report
lambastes the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as ‘particularly feeble’
in this regard: Not only does the agency fail to demand accountability, the SEC
frequently uses its prosecutorial discretion to grant waivers to big companies
so that those companies can continue to enjoy special privileges despite
often-repeated misconduct that legally disqualifies them from receiving such
benefits.
“And it
scoffs at last year's U.S. Justice Department announcement,
known as the Yates memo, in which Deputy Attorney General Sally Quillian Yates
vowed to finally crack down on corporate criminals. ‘Despite this rhetoric,’
Warren declares, ‘DOJ civil and criminal settlements—and enforcement actions by
other federal agencies—continually fail to impose any serious threat of punishment
on corporate offenders.’
“Rigged
Justice is also a
commentary on the 2016 election, writes
David Dayen at The Intercept. ‘The
focus on how laws are enforced rather than the intricacies of the law itself
carries on a theme Warren has stressed throughout primary season—that personnel
is policy, that who you will put in power in those key regulatory positions
matters as much as your 10-point plan,’ he says…”
For the
complete article, “Corporate criminals routinely escape meaningful prosecution for their misconduct” by Deirdre Fulton, click here.
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