MF'ing Justice
by
Jim
Karger
The Dollar Vigilante
Previously
by Jim Karger: Lies,
Damned Lies and Government Statistics
"I
simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have
not been reconciled to date. I do not know which accounts are unreconciled
or whether the unreconciled accounts were or were not subject to
the segregation rules." ~ John Corzine
Jon Corzine
is a contemporary Richard Nixon: a low rent thief, liar, and American
success story.
Corzine, you
may recall, bet $6.3 billion on the wrong side of European sovereign
debt, a wager his own risk department at MF Global told him was
nuts, and a wager so big and so wrong that it wiped
out the entire firm.
After the news
hit the wire and blood hit the water MF's customers started jumping
ship and that is when MF deliberately took customer money as its
own to keep its head above water. It was too little, too late. The
company filed for bankruptcy protection and Corzine resigned.
Over $1 billion
in customer funds remain missing in action.
Depending on
who you listen to, Corzine may have known the funds he ordered transferred
were customer money. He certainly should have known and there
is little dispute he has a serious gambling problem and that he
destroyed the savings and lives of hundreds of investors and businesses.
Now, after
10 months of a pretend investigation, one that has not involved
so much as an interview by the FBI of Corzine himself, federal prosecutors
have decided they are not going to charge him with anything.
Nothing. Nada.
Vaya con dios, amigo.
Such is the
nature of justice in America's fast lane.
Plausible
Deniability Retested
Taking a cue
from Nixon's "plausible deniability" gambit, Corzine has
reminded us of a few important political truths that every American
should remember as they struggle to find a safe place for themselves
and whatever money they have left:
1. Former CEOs
of Goldman Sachs, like Goldman Sachs itself, are too big and too
connected to fail, no matter how egregious their conduct. And, to
make sure we all know that, in addition to giving Corzine a pass,
the government also announced last week that they are ending an
investigation into whether Goldman Sachs misled investors in a $1.3
billion sale of residential mortgage-backed securities in 2006,
shortly before the housing crash. You may recall that Goldman was
packaging this rancid financial trash so that one client (John Paulson)
could short them, while simultaneously selling the other side of
the deal to their own clients, conveniently failing to disclose
that these instruments were specifically designed to fail.
2. Former US
Senators won't be prosecuted for anything, ever, even if caught
with underage boys on videotape. They know where too many bodies
are hidden, as evidenced by the softballs a fourth grader could
have handled when Corzine testified in Congressional hearings on
what happened to the money.
3. Big-dollar
supporters of any sitting President and his party are too important
to lose to jail. Corzine was one of Obama's biggest
campaign "bundlers", a way for the rich to gain direct
access to a candidate by leaning on people inside their organizations
to contribute far more than ostensibly they would have without implicit
threats to do so.
Proven Techniques
of Truth Suppression
Not wanting
to bet the farm solely on his political connections, but needing
to make sure the fix was in, Corzine used several of the time-tested
"Thirteen
Techniques of Truth Suppression", favorites of politicians
and their owners who don't want to go to jail, which I estimate
to be all of them.
In Corzine's
case, he selected from the liar's list as if were a menu of fine
wines, first using technique number nine:
Come
half-clean. This is also known as 'confession and avoidance' or
'taking the limited hang-out route.' This way, you create the
impression of candor and honesty while you admit only to relatively
harmless, less-than-criminal "mistakes.' This stratagem often
requires the embrace of a fall-back position quite different from
the one originally taken."
Corzine played
this gambit well, even professionally, first suggesting that he
knew nothing, a proposition so absurd that it fell apart like a
cheap suit, then subtly implying that he actually was a moron, a
gambler with a problem, too
stupid to be held liable for anything, though not in those exact
words. His prepared testimony was, in a word, disturbing: "I
simply do not know where the money is, or why the accounts have
not been reconciled to date. I do not know which accounts are unreconciled
or whether the unreconciled accounts were or were not subject to
the segregation rules. Moreover, there were an extraordinary number
of transactions during MF Globals last few days, and I do
not know, for example, whether there were operational errors at
MF Global or elsewhere, or whether banks and counterparties have
held onto funds that should rightfully have been returned to MF
Global."
Yes, Corzine
swore to all that with a straight face.
To make sure
no stonewall was left unturned, Corzine borrowed from the crook's
playbook once more, this time technique number ten: Characterize
the crimes as impossibly complex and the truth as ultimately unknowable."
This worked well when the big banks got behind Henry Paulson, another
former Goldman Sachs CEO during the housing meltdown, as he explained
not-so-patiently that we, the general public, were far too ignorant
to ever understand what went wrong and so we should stop trying.
Matt Taibbi
observed in his brilliant
article in Rolling Stone:
"Theres
been an intense effort at trying to convince the public that no
crime has been committed. Whoever is handling MF Globals
P.R. . . . appears to have convinced the companys officers
to emphasize the word 'chaos' in describing the last days of the
firm as though $1.2 billion wasnt intentionally stolen,
per se, but simply lost in a kind of uncontrolled whirlwind of
transactions that magically carried the money out of accounts
off to worlds unknown."
No one with
good sense professes to believe Corzine except those who matter,
Congress, and federal prosecutors.
Finally, Corzine
called on technique number twelve, Require the skeptics to
solve the crime completely," which was easy in this case since
he was never interviewed by federal law enforcement, making their
inability to prosecute true, albeit pathetic. The fact that MF Global
was a client of Attorney General Eric Holder's, and Assistant Attorney
General Lanny Breuers, former law firm Covington & Burling,
didn't hurt Corzine's chances either, and the all clear signal was
given when Holder (an accomplished criminal in his own right) refused
to appoint a Special Prosecutor.
Like Nixon,
Corzine is a one man epidemic of deceit, a thug with the conscience
of a rabid hyena, and like Nixon, he is not going to jail.
Epilogue
Not only is
Corzine avoiding prosecution, but under the heading of "in
your face, MF'er," he is going into business again. Doing what
you ask? Handling the money of others, of course. Max
Keiser summarized the situation best: "Corzine is considering
opening a new hedge fund, though the notion that anyone even
a slack-jawed muppet happy to buy whatever Goldmans prop traders
want to sell would seed Corzine money so he can trade or
steal it away seems absurd rather like putting a child molester
in charge of a day-care."
Absurd, yes,
but true nonetheless and odds are he will raise millions, and if
not become a high-priced political or financial consultant.
The Big
Ugly Picture
Corzine is
just another poster child for fraud and malfeasance at the highest
levels, public and private. His photo is not alone on that wall
of shame.
In the big
picture, he is small potatoes. Other bigger players are being given
passes for far more egregious crimes. JP Morgan, infamous manipulator
of silver, stepped closer to the edge by losing $6 billion in a
single trading loss. It's megalomaniacal CEO, Jamie Dimon, no stranger
to truth suppression, expertly employed technique number four: Knock
down straw men. Deal only with the weakest aspect of the weakest
charges. Even better, create your own straw men. Make up wild rumors
and give them lead play when you appear to debunk all the charges,
real and fanciful alike." Dimon took full responsibility (for
a nanosecond) before blaming it all on a straw man, a rogue trader
who turned out to have all the authority he exercised. No one is
going to jail. To the contrary, almost as a gift, the US Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) dropped a four-year investigation
(mainly held behind closed doors) into JP Morgan's obvious and rampant
silver price manipulation just to show there were no hard feelings.
Still another
shining example of "justice", as that term is now defined
by the owners, is Barclay's Bank, believed to be a mastermind in
the virtually incalculable LIBOR fraud. Its execs have skated criminal
prosecution and the bank has paid a relatively meager $350 million
fine for everyone to forget it ever happened, except its former
CEO, Bob Diamond, who used technique number two: Wax indignant.
This is also known as the how dare you? gambit..."
after British Parliament observed the obvious that he is
an unmitigated
filthy liar like all the rest.
And, then there
is Standard Chartered who will pay a $340 million to settle charges
that it illegally funneled hundreds of billions of dollars to Iran
in violation of innumerable US and international sanctions. No criminal
charges, mind you, just $340 million to take care of what amounted
to a $250 billion conspiracy. Some might characterize that as
a good investment.
Finally, it
would be unfair to leave out Morgan Stanley, lead underwriter of
the now infamous Facebook offering, who took a play from Goldman
Sachs and the great Paulson short. They marketed Facebook stock
to the unwitting
while shorting it all the way down, making another $100 million.
It is not just
about Corzine anymore. The pathology of cronyism is endemic and
spreading.
Immoral
Of The Story
So, what is
the moral of this hideous little tale? What are the lessons for
our children?
Perhaps we
should sit them down and wax philosophical:
"Kids,
you know the old saying that 'crime doesn't pay?' Well, that's
bullshit. Crime pays and pays big unless you are poor and without
political connections in which case you will likely join the American
gulag and soon.
"And
that rule about always telling the truth? How can I put this gently?
That's bullshit, too. Liars, good ones, rise to the top of government
and corporations. They are sociopaths by nature and have no empathy
for anyone other than themselves. They are sick, but they are
rich. You can make more money from five minutes knowing the right
insider than you can from a lifetime of hard work.
"And,
finally, about that Biblical 'suggestion' to 'do unto others as
you would have them do unto you?' Well, that will get you a job
selling printer cartridges at Best Buy or teaching yoga to the
woo-woos if you are limber.
"No,
my children, If you want to make it big in this world, smile,
lie, follow the money, suck the ass of those on the fast train,
step on the little people and fuck anyone who gets in your way.
"Make
Daddy proud."
"Getting
Your Gold Out of Dodge" is available here. It is free
to TDV and TDV
Golden Trader subscribers or for a one-time price of $44.95
USD. It may be the best use of your fiat Federal Reserve Notes
you've ever spent. Reprinted with permission from The
Dollar Vigilante.
August 22, 2012
Jim
Karger is a lawyer, and frequent contributor to The
Dollar Vigilante, who has represented American businesses against
incursions by government and labor unions for 30 years. In 2001,
he left Dallas and moved to San Miguel de Allende in the high desert
of central Mexico where he sought and found a freer and simpler
life for he and his wife, Kelly, and their 10 dogs. Karger's website
is www.crediblyconnect.com.
Copyright
© 2012 The
Dollar Vigilante
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