One of the
constantly recurring leitmotifs that mark out most major white-collar criminal
activities is the negligence and more often, the incompetence of the regulators
put in place to oversee the relevant market sector. Prior to the introduction
of the regime of statutory self-regulation introduced in the original Financial
Services Act 1986, the financial market in the UK was regulated by the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), later christened the Department of
Timidity and Incompetence. The civil servants who comprised this huge
Department were very much imbued with the need to focus on 'Policy', which all
civil servants love, while being remarkably unwilling to get involved with the
more basic elements of dealing with the criminal elements of their brief.
Not all DTI
officials should be included in this group. One, a brilliant investigator
called Chris Cooke sought to make a significant difference, but he was a man on
his own, and I never felt that his robust methods were fully appreciated by his
departmental colleagues.
In the case
of David Langford, the incompetence and yes, arrogance of the DTI was laid
bare, and for once, the good guys got the right result in this case. Its
outcome however, would have ramifications in years to come which did not bode
so well for financial losers in later criminal cases.
David
Langford was what was called a financial intermediary, and he operated as a
financial adviser by dint of his possession of a licence to deal in securities,
issued by the DTI. In order to qualify for such a licence, Langford had to show
that he was a 'fit and proper' person to handle other people's money, and he
had to be regularly assessed by the DTI officials who were part of the
Licensing Branch, to ensure his continued suitability for the licence.
I shall not
dwell on Langford's business tactics, as they were remarkably mundane, and ironically,
did not have a huge bearing on the case or its outcome, except in the one area
of his lack of capital adequacy.
More financial
intermediaries, and financial businesses, including banks get themselves into
trouble and slip down into criminality because their capital adequacy is
insufficient for their business needs. They start 'borrowing' from their client
accounts, always firmly intending to pay back the money at some stage. I do
believe that when such a practice begins, most practitioners genuinely do
believe they will pay it back, and that they are only 'borrowing' the money in
the short term, to tide them over a temporary difficulty in cash-flow.
This is
where the regulators need to be punctilious in ensuring that the capital adequacy
levels are maintained scrupulously, and not merely in a series of dubious
accounting practices designed to give an impression of solvency whereas the
reality is that the firm is going down the tubes!
Langford
offered a form of investment strategy to people with limited means who needed
to earn capital for their living needs. One technique was called 'Bond Washing'!
He would offer to sell Local Authority Bonds ( normally a very secure form of
investment) to clients, but instead of holding these investments for a full 12
months, when they would pay income tax on the full amount of the income from
the bond, he would sell them after 6 months, and roll the proceeds over into a
new bond. The profits from the half-year investment would only attract tax at
capital gains rates, and this legitimate form of tax avoidance, made the
practice very attractive to small investors.
What Langford's
clients did not know however, was that he was already in deep financial trouble
arising from the financial collapse of an earlier company, which had gone down
owing significant sums of money to investors, and some very shady City spivs as
well! He was already under investigation by another Department of the DTI
regarding the collapse of this company.
The full
facts of this sorry case can be read in my earlier book 'Fraud In The City -
Too Good To Be True', but the most important element in this brief synopsis is
that Langford had early on, admitted to a DTI investigation, stealing money
from an existing client of his present company, to reimburse a former client in
his earlier collapsed company. He admitted the theft during his interviews with
DTI officials, but for some unknown reason the investigation department of the
DTI did not pass this information on to the Licensing Branch of the DTI , and
they renewed Langford's licence permitting him to carry on trading. In this
latter period, Langford solicited a considerable amount of new investor's
money, all of which was unlawfully diverted and used to defray the debts owed
to yet further investors. He was robbing Peter to pay Paul at an alarming rate.
All in all
the DTI investigated Langford's two companies from October 1980 until February
1983, generating a voluminous amount of correspondence, a vast edifice of
buck-passing, hand-washing, denials of responsibility, assertions of the need
to protect Langford's civil rights to possess a licence to deal in securities,
but at no stage did anyone bother to concern themselves with the interests of
the investors from whom Langford was busy stealing even more money.
Later, an
official of the DTI would assert that the information about the thefts could
not be used in the departmental investigation because it had was privileged
information and should not have been disclosed. While the relevant officials of
the DTI argued about this minutiae and how many angels could dance on the head
of a pin, Langford finally burned the entire contents of his office in a skip
behind his premises, and closing the building, went on the run!
I wasn't unduly
worried about Langford's disappearance, although even that aspect is a whole
story in itself, I always knew he would come back to notice again, so having
posted him as a wanted man, I set about re-constructing the books of his
business. It took me five and a half months in total, (we didn't have computers
in those days), painstakingly identifying every payment, every security, every
client, every client's individual funds, until I knew Langford better than I
knew myself.
I was forced
to undertake the enquiry on my own and without any help from the DTI, even
though they had all the relevant files and papers. They claimed that these
documents were privileged and that they could not be shared with Police because
that would completely countermand the element of trust that company directors
were permitted to expect in their dealings with the DTI. Throughout, they refused
to assist me in any way, even though they must have known that their documents
would have been of untold value to me.
I would
later learn that their refusal was an attempt to cover up their own ineptitude
and incompetence, because once these documents became police evidence, they
would at some stage see the light of day in a Court of Law. So they turned
their backs on my requests and ignored me. When I tried to suggest that they
might be standing in the way of my getting recompense for the losers, they
accused me, sneeringly, of engaging in petty 'consumerist' thinking. It was not
their job to be concerned with the interests of investors, they told me, all
investors needed to operate on the basis of 'caveat emptor', and they were on
their own. If they lost money with Langford, that was their own stupid fault!
What had truly
scandalised me were the losses caused to the latest group of investors who were
solicited after the second re-granting of the licence to deal. The vast
majority were men and women who had invested their life's savings, or their
pension funds in Langford's schemes, believing that his possession of a licence
issued by the Government meant that he was an utterly trustworthy person to
handle their money. The schemes he offered were not madcap speculation, but
money deposited in the bonds of municipalities, as safe, literally, as the
houses they built. What they didn't know was that as soon as their money hit
Langford's bank account, it was paid out to other shadowy figures to whom he
owed a great deal more money arising out of some seriously speculative share
dealings he had undertaken on behalf of a group of crooked merchant bankers and
financiers, who were putting immense pressure on Langford to reimburse their
losses.
Two of the
losers and my witnesses, were elderly Welsh miners from South Wales, who had
invested some significant part of their savings in Langford's schemes. They had
written to the relevant Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Corporate
and Consumer Affairs, asking for official assistance in getting an
investigation and recompense for their losses. The answer they received was
that having reviewed the facts of the case, the Department's actions were
considered to be reasonable throughout, and no assistance could be offered or
would be forthcoming.
I will admit
that these men, so close in background, culture, geography, and dangerous occupation
to members of my own family, brought out an almost unreasoning anger in me for
the attitude of the civil servants towards them and their losses. I decided
that If I was going to be accused of 'consumerist' thinking, then I would do it
properly.
I advised
them to seek the assistance of their own M.P, and having later visited him in
the House of Commons I gave him all the facts in my possession, and he then agreed,
at my request, to refer the whole case to the Parliamentary Commissioner for
Administration, more commonly known as the Ombudsman.
This
excellent gentleman made a full enquiry into the affair, the DTI were forced to
hand over all their files and papers which had been denied to me, and his
report contained a series of bombshells which had never before exploded
underneath the complacent DTI with such devastating force.
He found
their conduct 'surprising', other actions were described as 'extraordinary', he
criticised the whole Department for 'their poor performance here and for their
apparent lack of regard for the protection of the public interest'. He found
other failings which he believed 'merited criticism', and he considered their
overall handling of matters to be 'ineffective and ill-judged'. His most
telling phrase was saved for the end when he opined that '...the Department
showed a lamentable lack of concern for the interests of those members of the public
who had a right to assume that the DTI's licensing system offered them a
reasonable measure of protection for their investments...'
David
Langford re-appeared one day as I had always predicted, and he was sentenced at
the Old Bailey to one years' imprisonment for various offences arising out of
his management of his companies.
As a result
of the Ombudsman's report. all the investors in Langford's companies were
reimbursed their losses in full, together with full interest. The report had
the effect of a nuclear explosion inside the DTI. I don't believe any senior
civil servants' career was damaged by it unduly, no-one, as far as I know was
ever disciplined for their part in this scandalous case, but it had
long-lasting repercussions.
The decision
in Langford's case would later be used to reimburse all the victims in the
Barlow Clowes investment fraud case, and it was the catalyst for the inclusion
of certain elements of the Financial Services Act 1986, which made certain that
no further such cases which occurred after the Act came into force, would be
allowed to be referred to the Ombudsman, but would have to take their chances
under the Investors' Compensation Scheme, and even more scandalously, regulator
incompetence would no longer be a reason for recompense!
For me
personally, the case earned me the lasting enmity of certain senior civil
servants inside the DTI, elements of which would re-appear later in my career
when I dealt with another appalling DTI handling of yet another investment
fraud case, of which more later. As a mere detective, I had, for the very first
time, managed to shake the very foundations of arrogance and privilege which
these complacent civil servants considered to be nothing more than their due,
and in so doing had exposed them to public ridicule and even worse, the public
exposure of their incompetence.
The case
taught me another series of important lessons about the white collar criminal
dimension. It taught me that no matter how elevated the public servant, he or
she will fight like a cornered alley cat if their cloistered privileged
existence becomes threatened. It taught me that in order to cover up their
ineptitude, they will go to any lengths to deny others access to documents or
papers needed to bring criminals to justice. It taught me that no regulator has
the monopoly when it comes to active professional knowledge, and that they will
always seek to lay claim to greater wisdom and understanding, but will never be
willing to share it with other agencies. It taught me that Ministers and
Parliamentarians are in so many cases, very badly served by their civil
servants, but they will always defer to them and protect them rather than
expose them. It taught me that civil servants actively despise the police,
viewing them as a bunch of 'Plods', and will never share their information
unless it is absolutely forced out of them, and it taught me that all these
problems are widely exploited by white collar criminals, because they know just
how ineffective the civil servants are, and they are not frightened of them!
I also
learned that civil servants are not predisposed to undertake criminal investigations,
despite their possession of special powers to do so in certain cases. They do
not like conducting criminal investigations, they don't like dealing with
criminals, and they are no good at it. They feel it puts them on a par with
mere 'Plods', which they so resent, and whom they so despise. The jury system
to them is a dangerous lottery and they don't like the odds of possibly losing
an important case, and being subsequently criticised in the department or in
the press, because it might have bad influences on career development. (We
shall see this element re-appear in the Vegas Trust case). So, they will avoid
bringing criminal cases wherever possible, unless absolutely forced so to do.
Their
successors live on in the FSA today, and in reality, very little has changed,
despite the changes in the law and the processes. Many elements of financial
crime enforcement may change, but the culture of general ineptitude and a lack
of willingness to use the criminal powers entrusted to them, still lives on
today, the Department of Timidity and Incompetence has become the Frankly
Supine Authority. They may be changing the names of the relevant Departments,
but that is only to protect the guilty!
2 comments:
Really good piece Rowan.It is clear from you observations that changing the names of these regulatory authorities does nothing to increase their effectiveness and not doubt costs a small fortune to impliment. I suspect their main purpose is to merely to exist in an effort to convince us there is adequate regulatory control in the financial sector.
I agree with the previous comment - another really good piece which goes to the heart of the problem - ARSE COVERING. Whether it is public officials, regulators, lawyers, accountants or others in the financial services gravy chain, maintenance of personal position/security is paramount and supersedes the justice imperative. This may explain why Barclays are looking at an ANZ director for its next CEO. The prospect of an outsider who might actually lift the lid and ask a few questions is far too radical.
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