[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 85 (Tuesday, June 3, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3348-S3349]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BOWEN NOMINATION
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, I rise today in strong opposition to
Sharon Bowen's nomination to be a Commissioner of the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission. Frankly, it amazes me that we are here today
discussing basically a possible promotion for Ms. Bowen. Given my
experience with her in her current job as Acting Chair of the
Securities Investor Protection Corporation--SIPC--and before that as
Vice Chair, I can say quite frankly that she does not deserve any
promotion because she has not successfully safeguarded consumers, which
is her job, her mission. Instead, she has fought to safeguard Wall
Street money from just compensation to the legitimate victims of the
Allen Stanford $7.2 billion Ponzi scheme.
I have been involved in this Stanford issue for quite a while because
it affects a lot of folks in Louisiana, but it affects a lot of folks
in every State of the country as well. These folks first and foremost
were victims of Allen Stanford and his completely fraudulent activity,
his Ponzi scheme that literally defrauded hard-working Americans of
$7.2 billion. But they were victimized again, quite frankly, by Federal
agencies that didn't do their job--first by the SEC, which knew about
this activity for 4 years before saying anything publicly, before
warning anyone out there, before taking any action, and then by SIPC--
including Sharon Bowen at SIPC--by refusing to take appropriate action
for the victims and instead acting as if their job, their duty was to
safeguard Wall Street money, not to properly compensate victims under
the law.
If you read the letters and talk to the Stanford victims, as I have
many times, it will just break your heart.
Charles Cook of Baton Rouge said:
My family, along with thousands of others who placed their
savings in licensed brokers' hands, now faces absolute
financial ruin simply because our government and government-
appointed regulators did not perform their jobs of protecting
us. These savings include retirement accounts, trusts for
chronically ill family members, college funds, and pension
plans.
Byron Ratliff, also of Baton Rouge:
Congress needs to be aware that the agency created by
Congress to protect investors is using their fund to defy the
federal government for the sake of denying protection to
investors they helped defraud . . . We need your help now
more than ever to block this ridiculous effort by SIPC. This
is criminal.
Gilbert Gossen, also of Louisiana:
Has it changed our lifestyle? Yes, tremendously. Not only
my wife and I have been deprived of our lifetime savings, my
five children who have worked alongside with us have been
unfairly deprived of their inheritance.
Carolyn Smith in Baton Rouge goes to the core of the matter:
I cannot believe this. This is killing me and my family.
Fraudulent schemes unfortunately go on all the time, but, again, what
makes this so heartbreaking is the victimization upon victimization.
First came the original fraud; then came the SEC, which saw this going
on and did not act and did not give victims and potential victims any
notice for 4 years; and then after the SEC acted, after the SEC ordered
SIPC to compensate victims, SIPC--Sharon Bowen included--in an
unprecedented move, refused to follow
[[Page S3349]]
that mandate by the SEC, requiring the SEC to sue SIPC, which is now
tied up in court and continues to this day.
That gets us back to the issue at hand--Ms. Bowen. The name of her
current employer is supposed to be about investor protection--the
Securities Investor Protection Corporation, SIPC--but she and her
colleagues have acted in the direction of Wall Street protection.
The fund is funded by companies that pay into it. They pay their dues
to give potential investors peace of mind, and that confidence helps
build a vibrant and positive marketplace. Make no mistake that those
Wall Street member companies do not want SIPC to compensate these
victims because they are worried that their dues will increase. Well,
it is fine for them to have their concern; it is not fine for Sharon
Bowen to make those concerns win out over the law and over the facts,
to ignore a mandate from the SEC, and to not properly compensate the
victims of the Stanford scandal.
If, after all of this, Congress gives Ms. Bowen a promotion, condones
her actions here today, and votes to support her, that will be yet
another slap in the face to these victims and an action that will
certainly undermine investor confidence and encourage more to follow
Ms. Bowen's career path and the way she ran the Security Investor
Protection Commission by advancing themselves and member companies
rather than the real mission of following the law and properly
compensating victims.
This is not a partisan grudge match. This is not partisan at all. I
am opposing Ms. Bowen's confirmation for one simple reason: I think she
has proved that she is not qualified for the job based on her track
record at SIPC as well as her performance at her confirmation hearing.
Let me underscore the way in which this is not partisan at all
because there are many folks who have been following this Stanford case
who are directly involved who have written to Senators on both sides of
the aisle urging--urging in the strongest terms possible--opposition to
this nomination.
Let's take a letter written by a self-proclaimed and lifelong
Democrat from Ann Arbor, MI, a constituent of Senator Stabenow. Senator
Stabenow is the chairman of the Senate agriculture committee. That
certainly has a significant role in this nomination.
The letter says:
I've been writing to you over the past days regarding the
growing opposition to the nomination of Sharon Bowen to the
CFTC. I am writing once more to stress that this is not
merely an effort to block an Obama nominee. As a lifelong
Democrat I would not get behind such an initiative if I
thought that's what it was. Opposing Ms. Bowen's confirmation
is not a partisan issue. Simply put, it makes no sense to
appoint a regulator who is being sued by another regulator
(SEC vs. SIPC)! In this climate of growing cynicism toward
our financial regulators, can we really afford to put one
more fox outside the hen house?
In a similar way, a constituent of Senator Nelson of Florida wrote
Senator Nelson and said:
We hope you will vote AGAINST confirming Ms. Bowen as a
CFTC Commissioner as she does not support protecting
investors. Sharon Bowen's loyalty to Wall Street instead of
hard-working people like us has devastated our lives because
her actions resulted in us not being able to recover our
savings.
A constituent of Senator Pryor's wrote him in a similar vein:
Based on the facts set forth below, I certainly hope you
will vote against confirming Ms. Bowen as a CFTC Commissioner
in order to protect the investors who rely on the CFTC's
regulatory supervision.
In a similar way, Madoff victims have also weighed strongly into this
matter. They have written their Senators urging them to oppose the
Bowen nomination.
One Madoff victim wrote:
SIPC Chairwoman Sharon Bowen is neither a qualified nor
appropriate nominee for the all-important Commodity Futures
Trading Commission. As a SIPC board member, SIPC Chairwoman
and an attorney representing members of the financial
industry, Ms. Bowen has demonstrated repeatedly that her
interest is in protecting Wall Street's interests.
Again, frauds happen all the time. It is always tragic, but it does
happen. What makes this case so ``tripley'' tragic is that the victims
of the original Allen Stanford fraud were victimized again by failed
bureaucracies and regulators who failed to do their jobs and continued
to fail to carry out their true mandate of protecting investors.
First, the SEC dragged its feet and took way too long to take any
action in this matter or to give anyone in the real world notice of
what was clearly happening in the Stanford case--4-plus years--and then
the SEC finally acted and agreed that these victims required
compensation under the law. They told SIPC to set about giving them
this compensation, and in a completely unprecedented way, never before
and never since, Sharon Bowen of SIPC said: No. We are not doing what
the SEC has told us to do. We are refusing to do that.
They had to be sued by the SEC, and that legal matter is still
tangled up in court with the victims of the Stanford mess, and they
still have not gotten any compensation.
We can't prevent every bad thing from happening in the world, but
surely we can ensure that agencies in Washington and regulatory bodies
do their jobs, follow their mandates and their missions and work for
investors and citizens and not be captured by narrow interests--in this
case, Wall Street interests. Surely we can do that, and that,
ultimately, is what this vote is all about. Are we going to do that or
are we going to promote someone who has failed at her current job? Are
we going to promote someone who has proved in her current job that she
does not have the right mindset, the right understanding of a pro-
investor, pro-consumer mission to handle that job or any other?
I urge all of my colleagues, Republicans and Democrats--and there is
nothing partisan about this--to oppose this Sharon Bowen nomination.
The victims of the Stanford scandal need some justice. They need to see
that someone cares and that someone is fighting on their behalf. The
victims of the Madoff scandal need exactly the same and feel exactly
the same way.
Please oppose this nomination. Please vote for those consumers, those
Americans, and those investors. Please vote to begin to right the ship
and fix the regulatory system.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, is the Senate in a quorum call?
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Schatz). Yes.
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded and that I be allowed to speak for up to
12 minutes in morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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