This former Enron prosecutor explains why it’s so difficult to convict companies and their executives

Apparently, Buell hasn’t read any of the securitization “seamless automation” computer software patents – at least not in depth or he’d be more likely to see the deception.

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Many who follow the depredations of large corporations share a feeling that U.S. criminal law and its enforcers too often fail to hold these institutions accountable. Writers ranging from U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in New York to muckraking journalist Matt Taibbi have complained of the paucity of convictions for financial crime.

Now comes Samuel Buell, a law professor at Duke University, whose new bookCapital Offenses: Business Crime and Punishment in America’s Corporate Age, explains why the white-collar criminal justice system comes up short. Despite being thin on proposed reforms, this new offering deserves attention from anyone concerned with the topic.

The author brings two excellent credentials to his task: a breezy writing style and deep prosecutorial experience. He led the U.S. Justice Department’s Enron Corp. Task Force and earlier worked on the prosecution of notorious Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger. When it comes to errant corporations, Buell writes, the government runs into a structural problem: As a…

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Here are the companies stashing the most cash overseas

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

The amount of money stashed overseas by U.S. multinationals has exploded in recent years, doubling between 2008 and 2014 to more than $2 trillion.

For some perspective on the numbers, cost-estimating website HowMuch.net crunched the most recent data and created a telling interactive chart.

Topping the list: Apple AAPL, +1.52% and its massive $181.1 billion overseas stash, a $70 billion increase from the prior year. That total corresponds to $59.2 billion in deferred taxes, which is enough to cover more than two-thirds of the federal budget for education, training and employment, according to the 2014 numbers compiled by Citizens for Tax Justice last October.

Elsewhere, General Electric’s GE, +0.35%  taxes could take care of almost 5% of our Social Security costs, while taxes from Microsoft MSFT, +0.99% had it kept its money in the U.S., could have covered a fifth of all federal spending on veteran’s benefits.

Read:Dodging tax…

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Adam Levitin: Why the PSA Violations Must Be Heard

Excellent presentation. Reposted position – Why PSA Violations Must be Heard.

Unknown's avatarLivinglies's Weblog

Levitin makes an important distinctions between “enforcing” the PSA and REFERRING to the PSA to show that the loan never made it into the trust. If the loan never made it into the trust, then the trust is not a proper party. It means that the trustee has no rights or authority in connection with the loan. It means that the servicer is making false claims that it is authorized to collect or enforce the debt. It means that the attorneys for the banks and servicers are proffering false evidence to the detriment of both the borrower and the creditor.

Note that people who have really done the research continually come back to the UCC, which is adopted in all 50 states as statutory law — Article 3 as to the enforcement of the note and Article 9, as to enforcement of the mortgage. If the rule of law were…

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Trump Names Wall Street And Real Estate Titans As Economic Advisers

Sad – there is no hope. This presidential (doesn’t deserve a capital “P”) election is between Wall Street and Wall Street. Riganation.

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Top row, left to right: David Malpass, Howard Lorber, Harold Hamm; Bottom row, left to right: Steve Mnuchin, Tom Barrack, John Paulson

Top row, left to right: David Malpass, Howard Lorber, Harold Hamm; Bottom row, left to right: Steve Mnuchin, Tom Barrack, John Paulson

This is Trump’s economic team that he chose. And yes, Steven Mnuchin who benefitted from the housing crisis is on the list. Enough said.

Donald Trump has released the names of his economic advisers, a list heavy with Wall Street and real estate industry figures, but short of actual economists.

The names include several people from the world of hedge fund and private equity firms, including Steven Feinberg, chief executive and co-founder of Cerberus Capital Management; Thomas J. Barrack, chief executive of Colony Capital Management; and John Paulson, president of a hedge fund company bearing his name.

One major oil industry executive is on the list: Harold Hamm, CEO of Continental Resources, who made a fortune in Bakken Shale formation and is said by Forbes to be worth…

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The Dangers of Disregarding the Uniform Commercial Code

Unknown's avatarLivinglies's Weblog

There is a trend nationwide where judges are ruling that broken chains of title are not relevant.


The UCC is one of the least favored courses in law school. Judges hate it because they didn’t pay attention during class. But it’s the law. So the courts are ruling by the seat of their pants instead of following the law. Banks like it for now but be careful what you wish for — these rulings are undermining the marketplace for negotiable instruments.


Eventually lenders and factoring companies are going to come face to face with the “law” they have created through the courts — the UCC doesn’t mean anything and there are no protections against a party with a broken chain pursing a competing claim. The end result is that they will start lending or trading in negotiable instruments or even non-negotiable instruments. That could stop the economy dead in its…

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Feds propose guidelines to replace expiring foreclosure relief efforts

There have probably been more settlements, modifications (other than HAMP) and massive foreclosures than whatever the HAMP scam produced. HAMP was designed to help foam the runway for the banks and scammed homeowners into missing payments in order to “qualify” for modifications.

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

Begun as the government’s response to the foreclosure crisis, the Treasury Department’s Home Affordable Modification Program wasn’t supposed to last forever.

The Dec. 31 end of the foreclosure relief program, which offered a more affordable payment by adjusting interest rates, extending the loan term, and reducing or forbearing principal, will leave a gap that the government is trying to fill.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created under the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, is proposing consumer protection principles to guide mortgage servicers, investors, government housing agencies and policymakers as they develop foreclosure-relief solutions to replace what is better known by its acronym HAMP.

The Home Affordable Refinance Program, known as HARP, which was designed to help homeowners who’ve seen a drop in home values refinance with better mortgage terms, also expires Dec. 31.

Read on.

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Researcher: Fed Could Have Saved Lehman Brothers From Bankruptcy

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

On a side note: Lehman Brothers was turned down by then NY Fed President Tim Geithner to be a bank holding institution yet Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were not turned down. If Lehman was not turned down, like Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, Lehman would have received a bailout…

The collapse of Lehman Brothers in a record-setting bankruptcy could have been avoided, but the political will was lacking at the Federal Reserve to rescue the troubled investment bank, according to newly published research.

“Fed officials have not been transparent about the Lehman crisis. Their explanations for their actions rest on flawed economic and legal reasoning and dubious factual claims,” says Laurence M. Ball, chairman of the economics department at Johns Hopkins University and author of the report.

Lehman’s $639 billion bankruptcy filing occurred as a bubble in the U.S. housing market contracted from a 2006 peak. The U.S. economy…

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The American Ream is Alive and Hell

Don’t you find it remarkable that the U.S. is 40 countries below #1 Romania 96% and Cuba 90% in worldwide homeownership? We are in a tighten market along with Germany and  Hong Kong, China. Where’d you say the democracy went?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_home_ownership_rate
List of countries by home ownership rate
This is a list of countries by home ownership rate, the ratio of owner-occupied units to total residential units in a specified area.[1]

Rank Country Home ownership
rate(%) Date of
Information
1 Romania 96.1 2014[2]
2 Cuba 90.0 2014[3]
3 Lithuania 89.9 2014[2]
4 Slovakia 90.3 2014[2]
5 Singapore 90.3 2014[4]
6 Hungary 88.2 2014[2]
7 Croatia 89.7 2014[2]
8 India 86.6 2011[5]
9 Bulgaria 84.3 2014[2]
10 Russia 84.0 2012[6]
11 Poland 83.5 2014[2]
12 Norway 84.4 2014[2]
13 Latvia 80.9 2014[2]
14 Estonia 81.5 2014[2]
15 Malta 80.0 2014[2]
16 Czech Republic 78.9 2014[2]
17 Mexico 80.0 2009[7]
17 Thailand 80.0 2002[8]
18 Spain 78.8 2014[2]
19 Iceland 78.2 2014[2]
20 Slovenia 76.7 2014[2]
21 Trinidad & Tobago 76.0 2013[9]
22 Greece 74.0 2014[2]
23 Brazil 74.4 2008[10]
24 Portugal 74.9 2014[2]
25 Cyprus 72.9 2014[2]
26 Finland 73.2 2014[2]
27 Italy 73.1 2014[2]
28 Luxembourg 72.5 2014[2]
29 Belgium 72.0 2014[2]
30 China 70 1990[11]
31 Ireland 68.6 2014[12]
32 Sweden 69.3 2014[2]
33 Canada 67.6 2013[13]
34 Israel 67.3 2014[14]
34 Turkey 67.3 2011[15]
35 Netherlands 67.0 2014[2]
36 Australia 67.0 2011[16]
37 New Zealand 64.8 2013[17]
38 United Kingdom 64.8 2014[2]
39 United States 64.5 2014[18]
40 France 65.0 2014[2]
41 Denmark 63.3 2014[2]
42 Japan 61.6 2008[19]
43 Austria 57.2 2014[2]
44 South Korea 54.2 2010[20]
45 Germany 52.5 2014[2]
46 Hong Kong 51.0 2014[21]
47 Switzerland 44.0 2013[2]

Unknown's avatarLivinglies's Weblog

fire 33

By William Hudson

The number of Americans that own a home has fallen to its lowest recorded level ever. The second quarter of 2016, reflected that the non-seasonally adjusted homeownership rate fell to 62.9 percent, the same percentage reflected when the U.S. Census began tracking homeownership rates back in 1965.


Since the recession, and through the Obama presidency, the percentage of Americans that own a home has decreased significantly. The American middle class is now a minority- for the first time ever. Homeownership and consumer demand are driven by the middleclass purchaser who holds a middle class job. The United States economy is suffering from income stagnation, flat wages, and inflated consumer and home prices. The average median household income of only $51,939 only goes so far after half of that income goes to some type of tax.


An after tax salary of 30k doesn’t buy much, and forget any…

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The Securitization Debacle – A U.S. Pension Shortfall: $3.4 Trillion+ [$3,400,000,000,000]

By Sydney Sullivan

looting the pension fundsShortfall. Unfunded. Underfunding. Sounds like a minimal pension issue – however, it is anything but that. You may have heard the words “shortfall” when your state refers to it’s government budget or pension plan; and, if you are young (say, under 40), you’ve probably not given it a second thought. Just so you know “shortfall” is defined as “a failure to come up to expectation or need” and at 40 it seems like there will be plenty of time and ways to make up a shortfall… not so much when you are 60.

If you’re like many Americans, you’re worried about retirement. Maybe before the new century securitization scheme was launched, a “shortfall” might have been more easily explained and handled. But after 2000, the Wall Street securities system ramped up and took deficits to a new high while lining the pockets of Wall Street traders. How did this happen?

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Hillary Clinton Talks Tough on Shadow Banking, But Blackstone Is Celebrating at the DNC

justiceleague00's avatarJustice League

July 28 2016, 10:38 a.m.

And yes, Wall Street and big corporation donors are crawling around at the DNC event. Money needs to be out of politics for good. And a definite NO for Hamilton “Tony” James, Blackstone COO, for U.S. Treasury head if there is a Clinton Administration!!! Great reporting, David!

Blackstone, the giant Wall Street private equity firm, will hold an invitation-only reception before the final night of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia. The event, at the swanky Barnes Foundation art museum, includes the usual perks for attendees: free food, drink, and complimentary shuttle buses to the final night of the convention.

What’s unusual is that the host is precisely the kind of “shadow banker” that Hillary Clinton has singled out as needing more regulation in her rhetoric about getting tough on Wall Street.

But Blackstone President and Chief Operating Officer Hamilton “Tony” James doesn’t seem…

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