By Bill Frezza
Justice may be blind, but who works overtime to make
it deaf, dumb, and stupid?
Which would you imagine might attract more
aggressive enforcement from the Justice Department: the theft of $1.2 billion
from supposedly segregated customer brokerage funds, or lying about an alleged
incident of whistling to attract the attention of a whale so that whale
watchers could get a better peep? If you said the latter, then you appreciate
the extent to which federal law enforcement priorities have run off the rails.
We know for a fact that enormous sums of money legally off limits have disappeared into the maw of disgraced Senator John Corzine's gambling counterparties, all of whom seem to have taken the oath of omerta. We know that Corzine personally asked employees at MF Global, the financial firm he headed until recently, to transfer the funds. We know that his underlings balked at signing false statements attesting the transfers to be legal. So how is it that the man ultimately responsible for this brazen theft and spectacular bankruptcy gets away with performing a perfunctory Sergeant Schultz "I know nothing" routine in front of his old Senate buddies, after which he is left free to walk out the door without handcuffs?
Meanwhile, marine biologist and whale watching ship
captain Nancy Black faces 20 years in prison, not for "harassing"
whales (which believe it or not is a crime), but because she has been charged
with lying to Justice Department prosecutors investing allegations that some of
her crew members whistled at a whale to keep it hanging around their boats.
You can't make this stuff up.
Title 18, Section 1001 of the United States Code is
the successor to the False Claims Act of 1863, originally intended to punish
crooked Civil War contractors. It has since metastasized into an all-purpose
bludgeon that federal prosecutors routinely use to squeeze fines and plea
bargains out of anyone unfortunate enough to become ensnared in one of the
hundreds of thousands of regulations that govern everything from selling
goldfish to the volume of your toilet flush.
As Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg
characterizes it, Section 1001 has conferred "extraordinary authority"
for prosecutors to "manufacture crimes." That is because Section 1001
charges are both entirely discretionary and subsidiary to any primary charges,
making every indictment an act of selective prosecution. In fact, Section 1001 prosecutions
are so selective that primary charges are not even necessary, meaning you can
go to jail even if there is no underlying crime. Ask Martha Stewart about that.
This is a horrendous misapplication of justice. But as
long as it has become the norm in federal law enforcement whenever prosecutors
are directed by their political masters to send a message about policy, why
haven't Section 1001 charges been thrown at John Corzine? How long do we have
to wait for the feds to collect evidence from the hapless employees on whom
Corzine has tried to pin the blame before the big fish gets hauled in for the
perp walk?
Are prosecutors even trying to get their man or have
friends in high places waved them off? Why haven't Corzine's gambling
counterparties been squeezed to turn over evidence in return for immunity from
prosecution - as well as the first pick in next year‘s draft of who gets to
rotate back out of government service to return to one of the firms they used
to regulate? It's not as if prosecutors couldn't bring all manner of securities
cases against companies that did business with MF Global until they found
someone willing to throw the mendacious Senator under the bus.
With all the securities regulations we now have on the
books - from Sarbanes Oxley to Dodd Frank - and politicians incessantly
bloviating about the importance of bringing Wall Street miscreants to justice,
what are the rest of us supposed to think if the befuddled whale watcher gets
hauled off to prison while the Willie Sutton of derivatives brokers hops in his
limo and rides off into the sunset to collect his Senator's pension?
Who has set the priorities at the Justice Department
that is allowing this to happen, and why? How can an SEC that can't catch a
Bernie Madoff before he blows himself up or nail a guy like John Corzine after
his hand, arm, neck, and head are caught in the cookie jar be expected to
professionally, effectively, and impartially enforce the thousands of
regulations inflicted on the rest of us?
But woe to anyone who messes with the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's rules on harassing marine mammals. Or runs
afoul of the Environmental Protection Agency when their backyard is declared a
wetland. Or gets in a Davis Bacon labor dispute with a powerful union. Or fails
to file accurate Affirmative Action Plan paperwork. Yet it seems that if you‘ve
got the right Washington connections you can pick your clients' pockets and
even burn the economy to the ground without suffering any consequences.
This is more than just justice gone awry. It is the
systematic destruction of the rule of law and its replacement by shameless
cronyism.
No comments:
Post a Comment