A
number of readers of my recent blogs have commented upon my observations about
the way in which the financial sector is regulated, and have asked why, if the
organised criminality of the City is so blatant and so obvious, should more of
the most egregious criminals not be prosecuted with more dynamism and
effectiveness?
Viewers
who watched my interview on the critical Max Keiser Report will recall Max
Keiser's genuine annoyance at the way in which the criminals in the City appear
to get away with the most serious offences, because the police are prohibited
from going after them.
Max
referred to them as 'financial terrorists', and challenged me to share his
views. While I can sense the outrage in his arguments, I am a lawyer by
training, a fraud detective by inclination still, and a financial criminologist
through academic discipline, and I know
that phrases such as 'terrorist' and 'terrorism' have academic and juridical
definitions which we mistake and mis-use at our peril.
For
these reasons, I could not share his use of the phrase, but I am still happy to
adopt the use of the phrases 'organised crime' and 'organised criminals' to
define the people who engage in this institutionalised level of gross
criminality within the financial sector! They behave in the same way as any
mafia or organised crime enterprise, they obey the same codes of 'Omerta' and
they have strictly hierarchical structures which tend to insulate the upper
reaches of the organisation, and remove them from the more blatant exercises of
criminality, allowing them deniability, while permitting them to profit from
those excesses. For all these good reasons, I have no qualm in calling them
what they are, taken together they are organised criminals; their institutions
are mafias, and their top executives behave like gangland bosses.
Watching
'Roberto Diamante', Godfather of Barclays, giving his nauseating evidence to
the Select Committee, while backed up by his consigliore's, getting all chummy
and personal with the Committee Members, calling by their first names, and
telling them how much he loved his banking 'family', reminded me of nothing so
much as a scene which could have come direct from the 'Godfather'!
William
Chambliss, an American criminologist put it this way;
‘...One of the reasons we fail to
understand business crime is because we put crime into a category that is
separate from normal business. Much crime does not fit into a separate
category. It is primarily a business activity...’
When dealing with such people, it is
necessary to confront them with the correct and proper tools and resources, and
that is why I say that the present regime of financial regulation is useless,
because in this country we have traditionally failed to adopt the proper
mechanisms and employ the right people to go up against these criminals. And
this is why we consistently fail!
For some reason which I have never
understood, there is an accepted wisdom within the British administrative
psyche that teaches that the only people who should be allowed to have any
responsibility when it comes to dealing with those from the upper
socio-economic class, are people who come from the same class and cultural
background!
Quite how this piece of inspired lunacy was
allowed to become embedded in the British sub-culture is hard to understand,
but there it is, as immutable as the
laws of the Medes and the Persians!
As Edwin Sutherland, the original author of
the phrase 'White Collar Crime' once put it so succinctly;
"...The behaviour of persons of respectability, from the
upper socio-economic class, frequently exhibits all the essential attributes of
crime, but that it is only rarely dealt with as such. This situation arose, he
said, from a tendency for systems of criminal justice in Western societies to
favour certain economically and politically powerful groups and to disfavour
others, notably the poor and unskilled who comprise the bulk of the visible
criminal population..."
So, when the agencies of social control
like the Civil Service, the financial regulators or the agencies which provide
for financial self-regulation come to hire their staff, they perennially hire people
like themselves, 'one of us', a 'safe pair of hands', someone who isn't going
to rock the boat.
The financial sector culture demands that
they be treated wholly differently from ordinary criminals. indeed, in my
experience, the financial sector and its compliance officers completely reject
the concept that theirs is in any way a 'policing function'. They will deny on
a stack of bibles any suggestion that their role is intended to provide any
sort of policing control mechanism, and they refuse to adopt policing tactics.
To make things worse, very few of them have any experience or knowledge of the
definitions or workings of the criminal law.
This of course is a huge mistake, because
the banksters they are regulating are behaving like criminals in every sense.
If the people who are required to supervise their compliance with the law. don't
know the wider law, then they are never going to be competent or capable at dealing
with these professional criminals.
But they will never, ever, stop to consider
hiring former senior detectives to be posted to these roles. It is something
that just will not happen, because the police and the way in which they want to
deal with the criminal class, doesn't fit nicely with the accepted way of
dealing with these banksters and their satraps.
Detectives don't differentiate between
classes of criminal, people who deliberately go out of their way to break the
criminal law are viewed as criminals, regardless of the cut of their suit!
I experienced this first hand when I was head
of investigations and enforcement at one of the UK's early self regulating
organisations. I was hired by the chief executive who had known me when I was a
detective, and he was very happy to employ my skills. But they were deeply
resented by the other members of the Compliance Department, who were always
accusing me of treating our members with scant regard for their status.
I couldn't have given a flying fuck for
their status, I saw my function as protecting the interests of the investing
public and if these criminals were intent on getting in my way, then my intention
was to disabuse them of that idea pretty quickly. I used my professional
detective skills to get the evidence we needed to discipline these criminals,
and this became deeply resented, not only by those I put out of membership and
thus out of business, but by my colleagues who felt that I was not giving them
as much leeway as they felt that their membership allowed them.
When I pointed out that these people were
stealing their client's money or cheating them out of what they were lawfully owed,
offences which I always reported to the police at every occurrence, and for
which I would give evidence, once they were charged, because I would have
already acquired the necessary evidence, it became clear that my policies were
considered to be unfair, and because I was adopting 'policing tactics', the
other members of the Compliance Executive looked for ways of getting rid of me.
How we change this state of affairs, I do
not know. I do know that employing lawyers whose only experience is in civil
litigation is not the right way to go about acquiring the necessary skills needed
to be able to deal with professional banksters.
Civil litigation is an entirely different
set of skills from criminal prosecution, so hiring civil litigators is a waste
of time, because they simply do not have the mental state of aggression needed
to take on the biggest criminals. What we need are efficient and previously
successful prosecutors who have a deeply
engrained knowledge of the criminal law, supported by former detective
investigators who have the experience and skills for going after criminals, the
more elevated, the better, and who enjoy taking them down and locking them up.
But a broadly based knowledge of the criminal law and its implications is the primary
requirement.
Look at the rubbish promulgated by Martin
Wheatley and the FSA about the supposed absence of relevant criminal
legislation to deal with the LIBOR scandals! As I have previously written,
there are enough laws to go after the criminals for LIBOR offences, for PPI
fraud, and for a whole raft of criminality, so let's get on with it.
If the Government were to adopt these
proposals, bring in a retiring criminal Judge as CEO of the FCA, hire a leading
criminal barrister as the Head of Enforcement, and bring in some decent former fraud
detectives, none of whom would be frightened of going up against Chief
Executives of banks, then we would begin to see a real change.
No sooner would rumours of bank scandals
begin to surface, then these investigators would be in the banks, using their
powers to seize evidence, arresting potential suspects, and undertaking
searching and aggressive investigations. There wouldn't be any 'deferred prosecutions'
or convenient little sweetheart deals, just paying a few fines while all the
gangsters retained their profits and their dividends.
There would be aggressive charges laid to
which the alleged perpetrators would be invited to nominate pleas at an early
stage to mitigate the length of prison sentence they were going to serve if
they were convicted. There would be huge personal fines, pension funds would be
frozen and used to capitalise compensation or asset recovery actions.
In this way, the Government could begin to
demonstrate a real commitment for going after city criminals and doing something
proactive to start to put the City back on a fair and even footing.
None of this requires any change in the
law; none of it requires any alteration of the existing regime. It just needs
an exercise of the will to see the job done!
3 comments:
Great piece Rowan. You are so right; we have to move away from the patently dumb compliance regime whereby the regulators are reluctant to 'cause offence' by holding the banksters feet to the fire. Criminal behaviour is just that - criminal.
Rowan,
The NarcoticsTerrorists of the Gay Community followed IndiaPakistan's direction while they pushed World War II Nazi Code linked to all of Gehlen's activities.
#Gay & Entertainment Commuinity
#IndiaPakistan expats of any Citizenship
Ian Flemming's KeyNamed Contacts were Puppeted, placed around Ian Flemming, who wrote books about IndiaPakistan pushing the agenda. "The World is Not Enough." #HueGrant_ElizabethHurley_Actors are the head of the NarcoticsTerrorist Community organized around Felicity Thompson, Emma Thompson's mother.
1970-1980's IndiaPakistan then led the LuxIrishGermanic down the rosey path of Racist hatred, committed War Crimes to include pushing/puppeting "Silverado" & bragging about "Silverado" NeilBush with the exact repeat in Enron.
#ArtificialIntelligence
#SIMCity Technology
Your tact is correct, simply expose the links to Nazi Organizing at the same time & you'll find many home runs!
READ: "Silverado," & books on MCI WorldCom, Enron, find the similarities SELF EVIDENT.
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If you don't know Rowan, the debate needs to be widened. Some kind of organisation needs to come into the being, consisting of the concerned and interested and intelligent, to think up ways to do something and publicise them.
Your blog is great but the next step has to be proper discussion and some real plans and publicity for these ideas.
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