Catching Predators is Good; Economic Justice is Better
By Danny Schechter.

Is the FBI’s Crackdown on Mortgage Crime Wave Too Little Too Late?
Stephen Colbert has a popular feature in his Comedy Channel rants of
the day. He calls it “The Word” (Rappers used to just say
“word.”) explaining how language has different meanings.
Consider the word, “predator.”
My online dictionary offers two meanings, one for the animal world and one for ours:
predator | predeter|
noun: an animal that naturally preys on others: wolves are major predators of rodents
figurative: a rapacious, exploitative person or group: her wealth made
her vulnerable to predators. (Note: poverty also can make one
vulnerable.)
In popular usage there are two others. One references companies and
scammers who engage in predatory lending. They are behind the subprime
loans that took advantage of so many people resulting in the collapse
of our markets and a threat to the global economy. Despite its
pervasive presence, this type of predatory behavior does not find its
way into the news much because of its connotation of criminality.
The other use is associated with men who use the Internet to lure young
people into sex. No one really knows how pervasive the practice is -
most of the figures have been hyped and exaggerated. Yet, because of
its salaciousness, it has been the subject of a popular prime time TV
segment, NBC’s “To Catch A Predator,” which has made
parents fearful that legions of perverts are lurking online to solicit
their kids. When the Columbia Journalism Review analyzed the show, they
found it to be exploitative, factually inaccurate and a disservice.
They showed how it inflated a problem for the sake of entertainment, as
opposed to reporting one as news.
This is an example of how TV news organizations sensationalize to
generate ratings while ignoring a far uglier and more pervasive reality
by the same name confronting many more people who are loosing their
homes and their hope.
Now that the Justice Department and FBI are indicting and rounding up
this type of predator, the criminal nature of this problem has finally
been validated. Last week, two former hedge fund managers at Bear
Sterns were busted for defrauding investors to the tune of a billion
dollars. Another 400 scammers were arrested in “Operation
Malicious Mortgage,” an FBI run investigation staffed by 180
agents serving 40 taskforces working more than 1200 cases.
So far, no TV network has announced a special series on these corporate
predators, but the New York Times business section has become a
subcrime scene with pictures of the perps. There have been reports
about an executve for a Swiss Bank that encouraged Americans to violate
the law by moving money illicitly into off shore accounts, as well as a
profile of another hedge fund crook, now on the run, chased by US
marshals as he tries to escape a jail sentence. The Times even
published a Wanted poster.
The investigation of this white-collar crime wave is a bit late since
trillions have already been lost. Legal experts say that the top dogs
may walk because of the difficulties of proving that what they did was
a crime.
Historian Carolyn Baker who follows the economic crisis for her Truth to Power site believes:
“History will prove that the number of people busted for this is
only a drop in the bucket compared to the number involved in nationwide
blatant fraud and theft which created the largest mortgage meltdown in
the history of the world. A few bad apples? Get a clue! The scam was
rampant and epdemic.”
Aaron Krowne who edits the indispensable insider Ml-implode.com mortgage site concurs:
“It’s not like the current execs would have done anything
different; this is all just plausible deniability and saving face, so
that angry investors (the general public — including aunt
millie’s pension fund) who are being diluted to oblivion
won’t be able to say ‘nothing is being done.’”
What’s worse, while these arrests capture the headlines, the
industry is busy lobbying Congress to back off on regulations of its
latest bubble-blowing exercise. Reported the Washington Post:
“Wall Street banks and other large financial institutions have
begun putting intense pressure on Congress to hold off on legislation
that would curtail their highly profitable trading in oil contracts
— an activity increasingly blamed by lawmakers for driving up
prices to record levels.”
Yes, there are criminal practices underway, but they are far more
insidious and invisible than most people realize. Example: Treasury
Secretary Paulson is using the crisis as a cover to call for more power
to the Federal Reserve Bank, which is actually an entity run by private
banks in their own interest. (The Bank itself was created in response
to a manufactured banking crisis in 1907.) Committee chairman in
Congress are not rushing to discuss his proposals reportedly, in part,
because Paulson has done so little about the worsening foreclosure
problem.
Read some history, like lawyer Ellen Brown’s well-documented
book, The Web of Debt, and you will see that a battle between financial
capital and the public interest over who controls our money supply has
been a constant over the decades. The book remind us that Former Fed
Chairman Alan Greenspan, who many now blame for allowing the housing
bubble to burst, was on the board of JP Morgan before joining the Fed.
It was the Fed, of course, which recently bailed out Bear Stearns by
giving Morgan $30 billion to buy the company. Morgan boasted last week
in an unseemly way about what a bargain it got.
Americans have been fighting for economic justice from before there was
an America. The colonists opposed taxation without representation. They
rose up against the kind of debt that is enslaving so many of us now
and seems to be leading to a total economic breakdown.
If President Dwight David Eisenhower was alive today, he might have
warned us of another complex, as well as the military-industrial
behomoth, that is threatening our economic well-being as a nation.
Imagine if his famous farewell address was updated to sound like this:
“In the councils of government, we must guard against the
acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by
the financialization of America and its CREDIT AND DEBT complex. The
potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will
persist.
We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties
or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an
alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of our
FINANCIAL SYSTEM and ECONOMIC JUSTICE so that security and liberty may
prosper together.”
– MediaChannel.org’s News Dissector Danny Schechter
directed the film IN DEBT WE TRUST (InDebtWeTrust.org). He has now
written PLUNDER, an investigation of our economic calamity, out soon
from Cosimo. Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org