01 June 2013

Taibbi: Allegedly SEC Policy Not To Pursue Investment Management Fraud Allegations LIke Madoff


It sometimes looks like open season on the small investor and the public at large with some very selective enforcement of the laws.

"All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others."

Why Didn't the SEC Catch Madoff? It Might Have Been Policy Not To
By Matt Taibbi
May 31, 5:20 PM ET

More and more embarrassing stories of keep leaking out the SEC, which is beginning to look somehow worse than corrupt – it's hard to find the right language exactly, but "aggressively clueless" comes pretty close to summing up the atmosphere that seems to be ruling the country's top financial gendarmes.

The most recent contribution to the broadening canvas of dysfunction and incompetence surrounding the SEC is a whistleblower complaint filed by 56-year-old Kathleen Furey, a senior lawyer who worked in the New York Regional Office (NYRO), the agency outpost with direct jurisdiction over Wall Street.

Furey's complaint is full of startling revelations about the SEC, but the most amazing of them is that Furey and the other 20-odd lawyers who worked in her unit at the NYRO were actually barred by a superior from bringing cases under two of the four main securities laws governing Wall Street, the Investment Advisors Act of 1940 and the Investment Company Act of 1940.

According to Furey, her group at the SEC's New York office, from a period stretching for over half a decade through December, 2008, did not as a matter of policy pursue cases against investment managers like Bernie Madoff. Furey says she was told flatly by her boss, Assistant Regional Director George Stepaniuk, that "We do not do IM cases."

Some background is necessary to explain the significance of this tale...

Read the entire news story here.