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Federal
Cases of Stock Fraud Drop Sharply
By Eric Lichtblau
The New York Times
December 25, 2008
WASHINGTON — Federal
officials are bringing far fewer prosecutions as a result of
fraudulent stock schemes than they did eight years ago, according to
new data, raising further questions about whether the Bush
administration has been too lax in policing Wall Street.
Legal and financial experts
say that a loosening of enforcement measures, cutbacks in staffing
at the Securities and Exchange Commission, and a shift in resources
toward terrorism at the
F.B.I. have combined to make
the federal government something of a paper tiger in investigating
securities crimes.
At a time when the
financial news is being dominated by the $50 billion
Ponzi scheme that
Bernard L. Madoff is accused
of running, federal officials are on pace this year to bring the
fewest prosecutions for securities fraud since at least 1991,
according to the data, compiled by a
Syracuse University research
group using Justice Department figures.
There were 133 prosecutions
for securities fraud in the first 11 months of this fiscal year.
That is down from 437 cases in 2000 and from a high of 513 cases in
2002, when Wall Street scandals from
Enron to WorldCom led to a
crackdown on corporate crime, the data showed.
At the S.E.C., agency
investigations that led to Justice Department prosecutions for
securities fraud dropped from 69 in 2000 to just 9 in 2007, a
decline of 87 percent, the data showed.
Federal officials took
issue with some of the data compiled by the Syracuse group and said
that they had maintained a strong commitment to rooting out fraud
and abuse in the stock markets. While the S.E.C. could not provide
numbers of its own on criminal cases arising from its
investigations, Scott Friedstad, the deputy director of enforcement
at the commission, said the numbers did not reflect "the reality
that I see on the ground."
"We are as committed as
ever to vigorous enforcement efforts," he said.
But a number of investor
advocates and securities lawyers who are critical of the S.E.C.’s
recent performance say they will be anxiously watching the incoming
Obama administration to see what steps it may take to restore the
agency’s battered credibility and re-establish it as a watchdog
against corporate abuse.
President-elect
Barack Obama has named
Mary Schapiro, head of the
Financial Services Regulatory Authority, to lead the S.E.C, and he
has promised an overhaul of the agency and other financial
regulatory offices to provide tougher oversight.
"I think the S.E.C. has
completely fallen down on the job," said Jacob H. Zamansky, a New
York lawyer who specializes in representing investors who have lost
money in fraud cases. "They’re more interested in protecting Wall
Street than protecting investors. The new administration has to do a
complete overhaul of the S.E.C."
The F.B.I., which
frequently investigates stock fraud cases either on its own or in
partnership with the S.E.C., has also had a sharp decline in the
number of white-collar cases it has brought in the last several
years — partly a reflection of a huge shift in staffing and
resources to counterterrorism operations since the Sept. 11 attacks,
officials said.
David Burnham, co-director
of the Syracuse research group, which is known as the Transactional
Records Access Clearinghouse, or TRAC, said the decline in stock
fraud prosecutions growing out of the F.B.I. "really is no surprise.
It’s a reflection of a choice that was made right after 9-11 to move
investigators into terrorism, and this is the cost of that.
"Maybe it’s the correct
call," he added, "but with both the F.B.I. and the S.E.C., the
federal government is really the only place that does white-collar
crime on a systematic basis."
The economic collapse of
the last few months has brought intense scrutiny of the S.E.C. amid
accusations that it failed to foresee and prevent the collapse of
one major financial institution after another as a result of risky
overinvestment in mortgage-backed securities.
"As an overheated market
needed a strong referee to rein in dangerously risky behavior, the
commission too often remained on the sidelines,"
Arthur Levitt, who served as
chairman of the S.E.C. during the Clinton administration, told the
Senate Banking Committee in October.
The Madoff scandal, now
under investigation by federal prosecutors in Manhattan, has
ratcheted up criticism even further.
Christopher Cox,
chairman of the S.E.C., ordered an internal investigation last week
into what he said were the agency’s "multiple failures" to
investigate credible allegations of wrongdoing by Mr. Madoff.
The S.E.C.’s own data
suggests that the agency has put increasing emphasis on using
non-criminal means, like civil fines and what are known as deferred
prosecution agreements, in dealing with allegations of wrongdoing.
The number of S.E.C. cases handled through civil or administrative
remedies has grown from 503 in 2000 to 636 this year.
Critics of the S.E.C. also
attribute the decline in criminal cases to shortages in staffing and
resources in the agency’s investigative units, policy changes that
have reduced the authority of investigators to pursue cases on their
own, and a "revolving door" phenomenon that has led investigators to
leave the agency for high-paying jobs in the industry that they once
helped to monitor.
"It’s been awful," Sean
Coffey, a former fraud prosecutor in New York who now represents
investors in securities litigation, said of the S.E.C.’s recent
enforcement record. The agency has "neutered the ability of the
enforcement staff to be as proactive as they could be. It’s hard to
square the motto of investor advocate with the way they’ve performed
the last eight years."
Mr. Coffey said he believed
the declining number of stock fraud prosecutions is partly a result
of the backlash the Bush administration experienced after its
aggressive pursuit of corporate crime following the Enron collapse
in 2002, which led to the creation of a national task force on
corporate wrongdoing.
In the last few years, he
said, "the administration has been sending the message that we’re
going to loosen the binds on the market to compete in the global
marketplace, and they’ve pulled the throttle back on prosecutions
because it wasn’t politically necessary anymore."
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