Friday, September 26, 2014

Secret recordings by Federal Reserve bank examiner, Carmen Segarra

"Our financial regulatory system is obviously dysfunctional. But because the subject is so tedious, and the details so complicated, the public doesn't pay it much attention.
That may very well change today, for today -- Friday, Sept. 26 --- the radio program "This American Life" will air a jaw-dropping story about Wall Street regulation, and the public will have no trouble at all understanding it.

...This sort of thing occurred often enough -- Fed regulators denying what had been said in meetings, Fed managers asking her to alter minutes of meetings after the fact -- that Segarra decided she needed to record what actually had been said. So she went to the Spy Store and bought a tiny tape recorder, then began to record her meetings at Goldman Sachs, until she was fired.

...I don't want to spoil the revelations of "This American Life": It's far better to hear the actual sounds on the radio, as so much of the meaning of the piece is in the tones of the voices -- and, especially, in the breathtaking wussiness of the people at the Fed charged with regulating Goldman Sachs. But once you have listened to it...consider the following:
  1. You sort of knew that the regulators were more or less controlled by the banks. Now you know.
  2. The only reason you know is that one woman, Carmen Segarra, has been brave enough to fight the system. She has paid a great price to inform us all of the obvious. She has lost her job, undermined her career, and will no doubt also endure a lifetime of lawsuits and slander.
So what are you going to do about it? At this moment the Fed is probably telling itself that, like the financial crisis, this, too, will blow over. It shouldn't."
-Listen here

Correction: originally I attributed this article to Tyler Durden, but it was written by Michael Lewis at Bloomberg View.

13 comments:

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

The playing field is not leveled.

I think a lot of people suspect that.

ricpic said...

The Federal Reserve is a creature of Goldman Sachs? Goldman Sachs may be king of the hill at the moment but like all corporations it could be severely reduced or gone in a decade or two. The Federal Reserve is forever. Or at least until total implosion of the country the Federal Reserve owns.

Titus said...

Love This American Life and NPR, natch.

They did a great show on how the Clinton welfare to work program basically just moved all those people, and their children, on disabiity.

Do you know there are more children on disability today than on welfare?

tits.

Lydia said...

Am I wrong to be troubled by the fact that Segarra was willing to settle her complaint with the Fed for $7 million?

edutcher said...

This kind of thing is why the market dropped 250 points yesterday.

deborah said...

Lydia, you sly minx. Doesn't worry me. The reason regulators play nice is because they later want to be hired by the banks they regulate, specifically because of their inside knowledge on how to finesse the Fed. She gave up a lot of moola being a whistle blower.

Lydia said...

But was she a whistle-blower? To be that, she'd have to reveal info while employed by the Fed, right? She got fired and filed a wrongful termination lawsuit re that firing. These secret recordings have come out in connection with that.

deborah said...

She was only there four months, I think. That wasn't enough time to really develop anything. She comes off as a loose cannon/hot head, but at least there is something out there.

Her recordings are inadmissible, of course.

Lydia said...

I don't know. Segarra may be nothing more than a first-class hustler. Here she is, for example, appearing on Fox News in an earlier role as something-or-other for the Hispanic Bar Assocation.

Yes, I'm a skeptic by nature. And also experience.

XRay said...

"Yes, I'm a skeptic by nature. And also experience."

A very healthy perspective.

William said...

Corzine was a director at Goldman Sachs. Compare the coverage of his various scandals versus that of Christie's weight problems.....They say that the devil's greatest trick was convincing people he didn't exist. That trick is dwarfed by the ability of Democrats to convince people that Wall St. crooks and manipulators are in some way Rpublican operatives.

deborah said...

Lydia, your you tube link is dated about six weeks before she signed on at the Fed, Oct. 31, 2011.

Making a splash and exposing corruption are not mutually exclusive. This seems to recap the story told in the podcast. I want to follow the link about why the judge threw her case out tomorrow.

Cheers.

deborah said...

Just neoliberals, William, nothing to see here...