Courtesy of Pam Martens.
The Wall Street Journal is running a titillating headline this morning, “Prosecutors and SAC Head Toward a Possible Record-Breaking Settlement.” CounterPunch is running my cheerless headline this morning, “It’s Now Official: New York is Drowning in Bribes and Corruption.” There’s an intellectual junction between the two stories.
The Obama Justice Department, ensconced with partners from the law firm, Covington & Burling, which helped Big Tobacco hide the dangers of smoking for decades, believes in this formula: money = justice. Thus, SAC Capital Advisors LP, the hedge fund charged with securities fraud and encouraging a culture of insider trading, is rumored to be about to offer up more than $1 billion to settle its charges. That follows on the heels of the $1 billion and counting that JPMorgan Chase has recently paid to settle a mountain of charges of wrongdoing. There’s said to be many more billions in settlements waiting in the wings for JPMorgan to escape trials over serial corruption.
“Pay to Play” as it previously applied to Wall Street meant the giving of a bribe to get business. The concept has now expanded to suggest that one can simply pay a large fine for fraudulent acts in order to play again another day – often in the same corrupted playground.
At the same time that the crimes of the one percent are overwhelming the investigative capacities of prosecutors, corruption among judges and elected officials in New York State is expanding at an exponential rate, as we point out today in our CounterPunch article.
When everyday folks write to U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara asking for an investigation into the crimes committed against them, the complaint often goes nowhere because his office is too busy chasing down billion dollar settlements with Wall Street and its legions of $800 an hour lawyers. At our last count, the Justice Department had 7 separate investigations open against just JPMorgan. Calling SAC Capital a “veritable magnet for market cheaters,” six employees have already pleaded guilty while charges and/or trials remain pending against numerous others.
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