[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 187 (Wednesday, December 7, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8195-H8196]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WALL STREET AND MF GLOBAL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, numerous stories have come out over the last
few weeks, all detailing the corruption and outright fraud on Wall
Street.
First, there was the recent news about former Secretary of the
Treasury Hank Paulson's inappropriately tipping off a few key friends
from Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street tycoons about the impending
collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac so that those friends could
hedge and make money on that insider knowledge. Then a judge in New
York threw out one of the orchestrated settlements between Citigroup,
which was a bank at the center of the wrongdoing, and the Securities
and Exchange Commission, which allowed that bank to walk away from
cases of fraud without admitting any wrongdoing.
This past weekend, ``60 Minutes'' interviewed a former executive vice
president at Countrywide Financial, a giant and duplicitous player in
the U.S. mortgage business. This woman was in charge of fraud
investigations at the company before the financial crisis.
According to her, ``Countrywide loan officers were forging and
manipulating borrowers' income and asset statements to help them get
loans they weren't qualified for and couldn't afford.'' She went on to
say that all of the recycle bins, wherever they looked in that company,
were full of signatures that had been cut off of one document and put
onto another and then photocopied or faxed. According to her, the fraud
she witnessed was systemic, taking place in Boston, Chicago, Miami,
Detroit, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and elsewhere. She was fired before she
could speak to government regulators about the extent of fraud she had
documented.
What is most troubling is that these stories are not isolated. The
FBI testified before Congress as early as 2004 that they were seeing an
epidemic in white collar crime. They stated the FBI did not have
anywhere near
[[Page H8196]]
enough agents to investigate major white collar crime like the
financial crisis. There are moments when I do wonder if the FBI has the
will to prosecute; but still, today, the FBI has nowhere near enough
special agents or forensic experts to properly investigate the level of
corruption that we know occurred.
Frankly, the Congress has shorted the FBI--some might say purposely--
of the resources it needs to do the job. I have a bill, which I invite
my colleagues to support, H.R. 3050, the Financial Crisis Criminal
Investigation Act, authorizing an additional 1,000 FBI agents to
aggressively investigate the kind of fraud that has destroyed the
economic future of millions of our people and that has upset the global
financial system.
Back when we had the S&L crisis in the 1990s, we had 1,000 agents. Do
you know how many were working when this financial crisis started?
Forty-five. The others had all been reassigned to terrorism. We're only
up a little over 200 agents now investigating white collar crime. Think
about that, America. Why do you think these financial wrongdoers aren't
in jail? Frankly, this Congress has not taken its responsibility to
investigate seriously.
Despite the robust public reporting of misdeeds on Wall Street, it
has not been until the MF Global case, one of the top 10 bankruptcies
in this country, that Congress has shown some mild interest in the
magnitude of the inquiry required. In November, we got an inside look
into the stunning misdeeds--and let's be blunt--outright thievery that
occurred at MF Global in the days before it declared bankruptcy. The
total amount missing from private accounts has fluctuated over the
weeks. As much as $1.2 billion could be missing from private customer
accounts.
Congress is finally having hearings on this subject tomorrow, and
we'll see how seriously an investigation is pursued. Let me say that
the public has a right to know on what specific dates throughout 2011
money from customer accounts was wire-transferred in order to meet MF
Global's margin calls.
{time} 1050
This is the key question. Members should ask, probe, and exact the
truth. The public has a right to know on what specific dates through
2011 was money from private customer accounts at MF wire-transferred in
order to meet MF's global margin calls.
If Mr. Corzine authorized the taking of those funds, then this body
should remind him that no one is above the law, not even someone who
was a former Goldman Sachs CEO, former Governor and U.S. Senator.
Whichever friends and associates aided his actions in that company
should be brought into full sunlight, as well as other companies that
were likely involved in those wire transfers.
The fact that hundreds of millions of dollars, if not over a billion
dollars, can simply be stolen from a major banking institution from the
inside requires full investigation, not just by the Congress, but by
the FBI. I'm reminded of that book, written by Professor William Black,
``The Best Way To Rob a Bank is To Own One.'' Well, I wonder how much
of that applies in this case.
It's time that Wall Street, white collar crimes, be prosecuted
seriously, that this Congress do its job. Let's provide the FBI the
resources it needs to fully investigate and prosecute, and the
committees of this Chamber use their full authority to do no less. We
surely owe this to the American people and the cause of justice toward
all.
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