“When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."
Bill Black is a former bank
regulator who played a central role in prosecuting the corruption responsible
for the S&L crisis of the late 1980s. He is one of America's top experts on
financial fraud. And he laments that the US has descended into a type of crony
capitalism that makes continued fraud a virtual certainty - while increasingly
neutering the safeguards intended to prevent and punish such abuse.
In this extensive interview,
Bill explains why financial fraud is the most damaging type of fraud and also
the hardest to prosecute. He also details how, through crony capitalism, it has
become much more prevalent in our markets and political system.
A warning: there's much
revealed in this interview to make your blood boil. For example: the Office of
Thrift Supervision. In the aftermath of the S&L crisis, this office brought
3,000 administration enforcements actions (a.k.a. lawsuits) against identified
perpetrators. In a number of cases, they clawed back the funds and profits that
the convicted parties had fraudulently obtained.