With the announcement that JP Morgan Chase will pay a $13 billion fine for
past crimes against its customers - while the bankers who actually committed
the crimes will remain not only unprosecuted but unnamed - a lot of people
are wondering how it is that crimes worthy of billions in restitution don't
rate a single perp-walk. Earlier this year a senator wondered the same thing
in a hearing and got some illuminating answers. From Harper's Magazine:
Too Big
To Jail
From the transcript of a March 7 Senate Banking Committee hearing on
enforcement of the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970, which requires U.S. financial
institutions to help the federal government prevent money laundering. Elizabeth
Warren is a Democratic senator from Massachusetts; David Cohen is the Treasury's
undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence; Jerome Powell
is a governor of the Federal Reserve.
ELIZABETH WARREN: In December, HSBC admitted to laundering $881 million
for Mexican and Colombian drug cartels, and also admitted to violating our
sanctions against Iran, Libya, Cuba, Burma, the Sudan. They didn't do it
just one time. It wasn't like a mistake. They did it over and over and over
again over a period of years. And they were caught doing it. Warned not to
do it. And kept right on doing it. And evidently making profits doing it.
Now, HSBC paid a fine, but no one individual went to trial. No one individual
was banned from banking. And there was no hearing to consider shutting down
HSBC's activities here in the United States. So what I'd like is -- you're
the experts on money laundering. I'd like your opinion. What does it take?
How many billions of dollars do you have to launder for drug lords and how
many economic sanctions do you have to violate before someone will consider
shutting down a financial institution like this? Mr. Cohen, can we start
with you?
DAVID COHEN: Certainly, Senator. No question, the activity that was the
subject of the enforcement action against HSBC was egregious. For our part,
we imposed on HSBC the largest penalties that we had ever imposed on any
financial institution. We looked at the facts and determined that the appropriate
response there was a very, very significant penalty.
WARREN: But let me just move you along here, Mr. Cohen. What does it take
to get you to move toward even a hearing? Even considering shutting down
banking operations for money laundering?
COHEN: Senator, we at the Treasury Department don't have the authority to
shut down a financial institution.
WARREN: I understand that. I'm asking, in your opinion, you are the ones
who are supposed to be the experts on money laundering. You work with everyone
else, including the Department of Justice. In your opinion, how many billions
of dollars do you have to launder for drug lords before somebody says, "We're
shutting you down"?
COHEN: We take these issues extraordinarily seriously. We aggressively prosecute
and impose penalties against the institutions to the full extent of our authority.
And one of the issues that we're looking at --
WARREN: I'm sorry, I don't mean to interrupt. I just need to move this along.
I'm not hearing your opinion on this. Treasury is supposed to be one of the
leaders in how we understand and work together to stop money laundering.
I'm asking, what does it take, even to say, "We're going to draw a line here,
and if you cross that line, you're at risk for having your bank closed"?
COHEN: We will, and have, and will continue to exercise our authority to
the full extent of the law. The question of pulling a bank's license is a
question for the regulators.
WARREN: So you have no opinion on that? You tell me how vigorously you want
to enforce these laws, but you have no opinion on when it is that a bank
should be shut down for money laundering? Not even an opinion?
COHEN: Of course we have views on --
WARREN: That's what I asked you for. Your views.
COHEN: I'm not going to get into some hypothetical line-drawing exercise.
WARREN: Well, it's somewhere beyond $881 million of drug money.
COHEN: Well, Senator, the actions that we took in the HSBC case we thought
were appropriate in that instance.
WARREN: Governor Powell, perhaps you can help me out here?
JEROME POWELL: Sure. So the authority to shut down an institution or hold
a hearing about it, I believe, is triggered by a criminal conviction. And
we don't do criminal investigation. In the case of HSBC, we gave essentially
the statutory maximum civil money penalties. We gave very stringent cease-and-desist
orders. And we did what we have the legal authority to do.
WARREN: I appreciate that, Mr. Powell. So you're saying you have no advice
to the Justice Department on whether or not this was an appropriate case
for a criminal action?
POWELL: It's not our jurisdiction. They don't do monetary policy. We collaborate
with them, and we did on HSBC. They ask us specific questions. We answer
those questions. That's what we do.
WARREN: So you are responsible for these banks, but you have no view on
when it's appropriate to consider even a hearing to raise the question of
whether or not these banks should have to close their operations when they
engage in money laundering for drug cartels?
POWELL: I'll tell you exactly when it's appropriate. It's appropriate where
there's a criminal conviction.
WARREN: I'll just say here, if you're caught with an ounce of cocaine, the
chances are good you're going to go to jail. If it happens repeatedly, you
may go to jail for the rest of your life. But evidently if you launder nearly
a billion dollars for drug cartels and violate our international sanctions,
your company pays a fine and you go home and sleep in your own bed at night.
I think that's fundamentally wrong.
When the Savings & Loan industry gorged on junk bonds and self-dealing
and imploded in 1990, the Justice Department sent hundreds of industry insiders
to jail and fined hundreds more. This time around, has anyone gone to jail?
Apparently not. A cynic might say that Treasury, Justice and the Fed now operate
more like in-house council for Wall Street, cleaning up messes and negotiating
settlements that keep the deals flowing without touching the deal makers.
This isn't hyperbole. It is now generally accepted that a stint in congress
or a regulatory agency is an extended job interview, giving the lobbying firms
and big banks a chance to look you over and see if you're a team player. So
negotiating a fig-leaf settlement is a sign of initiative, while going after
individual bankers upsets your future bosses and dramatically lowers your long-term
earning potential. Hence the unwillingness of Powell and Cohen to state obvious
truths.
On the other hand, the increasing size of the fines seems to indicate that
something has changed. Maybe, having won re-election, the president is thinking
more about his legacy and less about ad spending, and is willing to forego
some of Wall Street's millions in order to seem tough on the banking aristocracy.
Wonder what the democrats who do have to run for election think of this sudden
change?
But if legacy is the motivating factor here, the strategy is failing, because
the size of the fines only serves to illustrate the magnitude of the crimes
- and the outrageousness of letting the actual people who committed the crimes
go untouched and unshamed.