Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Travis Waldron — Sen. Elizabeth Warren Questions Regulators’ Willingness To Prosecute Wall Street Banks

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D) isn’t letting regulators off the hook for their lack of prosecutions of Wall Street banks in the wake of the financial crisis. After using her initial Senate Banking Committee hearing to press regulators about whether big banks are “too big to trial,” Warren is doing so again — this time in a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Justice Department, and the Federal Reserve.
The letter questioned regulators’ willingness to pursue settlements instead of prosecutions, and asked them to provide any analysis to justify that practice, The Hill reports:
“I believe strongly that if a regulator reveals itself to be unwilling to take large financial institutions all the way to trial — either because it is too timid or because it lacks resources — the regulator has a lot less leverage in settlement negotiations,” Warren wrote in the letter.
“If large financial institutions can break the law and accumulate millions in profits and, if they get caught, settle by paying out of those profits, they do not have much incentive to follow the law.”
Bingo. Fines in the US are just like bribes in other countries — just a cost of doing business.

Think Progress
Sen. Elizabeth Warren Questions Regulators’ Willingness To Prosecute Wall Street Banks
Travis Waldron

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

She's a national treasure!

Have we found our Pecora?