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- Corporate death penalty; financial crisis; financial institutions; financial services; financial industry; banks; regulation; prosecution; fraud; fraud prevention; mortgages; securities; Wall Street (1)
- Large banks; Bank of America; settlement; JPMorgan; Chase; Wells Fargo; Goldman Sachs; Citigroup; too big to jail; white collar crime; financial crisis; regulations; regulatory model; regulators; Securities & Exchange Commission; SEC; Department of Justice; DOJ; Commodity Futures Trading; CFTC; Federal Reserve Board; the Fed; prosecution; executives; financial services; fines; Wall Street (1)
- Secured Credit; Subsidiaries; Inefficiency; Fraud; Asset Partitioning; Non-transparency; Corporate Disclosure; Corporate Structure; Allocation of Assets; Affiliates; Enforcement; Secured Creditor Model; Secured Credit Law; Credit Security Transparency; Commericial Transaction; Corporation; International Finance; Corporate Responsibility; Transparency (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Business Organizations Law
Transparency In Corporate Groups, Jay Lawrence Westbrook
Transparency In Corporate Groups, Jay Lawrence Westbrook
Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law
This Article addresses a remarkable blind spot in American law: the failure to apply the well-established principles of secured credit to prevent inefficiency, confusion, and fraud in the manipulation of the webs of subsidiaries within corporate groups. In particular, “asset partitioning” has been a fashionable subject in which the central problem of non-transparency has been often mentioned but little addressed. This Article offers a concept for a new system of corporate disclosure for the benefit of creditors and other stakeholders. It would require disclosure of corporate structures and allocations of assets among affiliates to the extent the affiliates are to …
Regulating The “Too Big To Jail” Financial Institutions, Jerry W. Markham
Regulating The “Too Big To Jail” Financial Institutions, Jerry W. Markham
Brooklyn Law Review
This article addresses the “too big to jail” regulatory model in which large banks pay hundreds of billions of dollars to settle multiple and duplicative regulatory charges brought by a horde of state, federal, and even foreign regulators. The banks pay those massive settlements in order to keep their banking charters and to obtain immunity from prosecution for senior executives. In turn, regulators benefit from the headlines these fines generate. Much criticism has been directed at these settlements because the banks are allowed to continue business as usual and no senior executives are jailed. Other critics contend that these settlements …
Opacity, Fragility, & Power: Lessons From The Law Enforcement Response To The Financial Crisis, Gregory M. Gilchrist
Opacity, Fragility, & Power: Lessons From The Law Enforcement Response To The Financial Crisis, Gregory M. Gilchrist
Brooklyn Law Review
Review of Mary Kreiner Ramirez and Steven A. Ramirez, THE CARE FOR THE CORPORATE DEATH PENALTY: RESTORING LAW AND ORDER ON WALL STREET (New York 2017) The Case for the Corporate Death Penalty, by Mary Kreiner Ramirez and Steven A. Ramirez, argues that the limited law enforcement response to the 2008 financial crisis represented an unprecedented failure of the rule of law. It further maintains that the weak response by law enforcement was caused by the economic and political power of the largest financial institutions and those who run them. It concludes that the failure to vigorously prosecute the people …