How America's biggest banks took part in a bid-rigging
conspiracy
Someday, it will
go down in history as the first trial of the modern American mafia. Of course,
you won't hear the recent financial corruption case, United States of
America v. Carollo, Goldberg and Grimm, called anything like that. If you
heard about it at all, you're probably either in the municipal bond business or
married to an antitrust lawyer. Even then, all you probably heard was that a
threesome of bit players on Wall Street got convicted of obscure antitrust
violations in one of the most inscrutable, jargon-packed legal snoozefests
since the government's massive case against Microsoft in the Nineties – not
exactly the thrilling courtroom drama offered by the famed trials of old-school
mobsters like Al Capone or Anthony "Tony Ducks" Corallo.
But this
just-completed trial in downtown New York against three faceless financial
executives really was historic. Over 10 years in the making, the case allowed
federal prosecutors to make public for the first time the astonishing inner
workings of the reigning American crime syndicate, which now operates not out
of Little Italy and Las Vegas, but out of Wall Street.
The defendants in
the case – Dominick Carollo, Steven Goldberg and Peter Grimm – worked for GE
Capital, the finance arm of General Electric. Along with virtually every major
bank and finance company on Wall Street – not just GE, but J.P. Morgan Chase,
Bank of America, UBS, Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Wachovia and more – these
three Wall Street wiseguys spent the past decade taking part in a
breathtakingly broad scheme to skim billions of dollars from the coffers of
cities and small towns across America. The banks achieved this gigantic rip-off
by secretly colluding to rig the public bids on municipal bonds, a business
worth $3.7 trillion. By conspiring to lower the interest rates that towns earn
on these investments, the banks systematically stole from schools, hospitals,
libraries and nursing homes – from "virtually every state, district and
territory in the United States," according to one settlement. And they did
it so cleverly that the victims never even knew they were being cheated. No
thumbs were broken, and nobody ended up in a landfill in New Jersey, but money
disappeared, lots and lots of it, and its manner of disappearance had a
familiar name: organized crime.















