Friday, January 6, 2023

it was two years ago today


 

Two years ago today, Donald Trump incited an armed mob to storm the United States Capitol in what amounted to an attempted coup d’etat by a defeated president for the first time in our nation’s history.

The congressional January 6th Committee demonstrated beyond a shadow of doubt that Trump (and others) committed numerous crimes designed to keep Trump in office illegally. The committee has presented its evidence to the Department of Justice. And the DOJ is conducting its own extensive investigation.

Donald Trump must be held accountable — both to appropriately punish him for his egregious, unprecedented crimes and to deter him (or anyone else) from repeating those crimes in 2024 (or beyond).

As we mark two years since the January 6, 2021, attack on our very democracy, we invite you to join Public Citizen in sending a direct message to Donald Trump:

As the saying goes, “If you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime.” You committed numerous crimes in an attempt to remain in power illegally despite the incontrovertible FACT that you LOST the 2020 election. You — Donald Trump — deserve to be convicted for your crimes and punished accordingly.

Click now to add your name.

Allow me a few more words about the imperative of marking this moment and holding Trump accountable.

January 6, 2021, will forever be a date that lives in infamy in American history.

But January 6 was not a one-day, one-time event.

It was the product of years of anti-democratic backsliding engineered by right-wing forces:

  • The lies, racism, and propaganda of Fox News and the far-right media ecosystem.
  • Years-long maneuvers by Republicans to disenfranchise voters of color.
  • Big Business dominance of our politics and economy that has left many voters alienated and hurting.
  • Extreme racial and partisan gerrymandering that has led to the election of far-right extremists that traffic in conspiracy and fascism.
  • Embrace of authoritarianism by Donald Trump and the Trump cult.

And here’s the most important thing: We are not out of the woods.

The lunacy going on right now in the House of Representatives is a direct continuation of the trends that brought us January 6.

It is very tempting to dismiss all of this as a clown show. That would be a profound mistake. Fascism often rises amidst buffoonery and farce.

Reversing all these trends — and deepening and expanding our democracy — must be our guiding light.

And accountability for Donald Trump is central to that effort.

Thank you for taking action.

For democracy and justice,

- Robert Weissman, President of Public Citizen
 
 

Public Citizen | 1600 20th Street NW | Washington DC 20009


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January 2023 Vol. 1
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FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | A Somber Anniversary


 

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06 January 23

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Journalist and news anchor Dan Rather. (photo: Getty)
FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | A Somber Anniversary
Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner, Steady
Excerpt: "The calendar turns again to that somber anniversary. The second one. And still so raw, so unresolved, so dangerous."  

January 6.

The calendar turns again to that somber anniversary. The second one. And still so raw, so unresolved, so dangerous.

A date to mark, to reckon with, to never forget.
Another date that will live in infamy.

We have had many dates in our national story that were likewise seared in the memory of those who lived through them — moments when history suddenly swerved in a new and unanticipated direction, creating a "before" and an "after" in the American psyche.

April 15: Lincoln’s assassination.
December 7: Pearl Harbor.
November 22: Kennedy’s assassination.
And of course, 9/11.
Just to name a few.

These tragedies rend our national fabric. They were attacks on our nation and on our head of state.

But what about 1/6? Its denouement remains unresolved, questions without answers, a story without an ending. Purgatory.

It was an attack on the very meaning and security of American democracy orchestrated by a man who had sworn to uphold the Constitution as the chief executive of our nation. Unbelievable. But believable. Buttressed by reams of evidence, including the man’s own words and deeds.

And yet, here we are. Rather than unifying us as a nation, this date and all it represents divides us, weakens us, challenges the confidence we have in what we once believed was inviolable.

The scene of the insurrection — our mighty Capitol — is once more beset by chaos. This time it is coming from within the House, quite literally. But the two events are inextricably linked. For the most part, the rebels of January 2023 are marinated in the same Big Lie and nihilism that fueled the mob in 2021. In fact, many of these congressional office holders were cheerleaders and even participants in the earlier attacks on American democracy we now commemorate.

As shameful as these events are, they are as much a part of who we are as a country in 2023 as “We the people” or “a more perfect union.” We cannot afford to look away. These forces of autocracy and the extreme far right might have been tempered in the recent midterm elections, but they were far from vanquished. As we see in the spectacle of choosing a speaker of the House, the chaos is endemic to the current Republican Party.

Is this really what the American people want? Not if recent elections are any indication. When you look around this country, there are many reasons for hope that our nation “conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal...can long endure.”

To endure, we will have to find a way out of this quagmire. And to do that, we will have to find a way to move beyond one of the most disgraceful and dangerous chapters in our history.

Lest we forget. January 6.


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After 16 Months, There Are Still No Arrests in the Fed’s Trading Scandal

 

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After 16 Months, There Are Still No Arrests in the Fed’s Trading Scandal

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 5, 2023 ~

Robert Kaplan, President of the Dallas Fed

Robert Kaplan, Former President of the Dallas Fed

This coming Saturday will mark the 16-month anniversary of former Wall Street Journal reporter Mike Derby setting off a media firestorm with his reporting that the then President of the Dallas Fed, Robert Kaplan, had “made multiple million-dollar-plus stock trades in 2020,” a year in which Kaplan was a voting member of the Fed’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) with access to inside information.

While the trading scandal spread to numerous other Fed officials, including Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, the case against Kaplan seemed like a prime candidate for a criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Not only was Kaplan sitting on inside information gleaned from the Fed, but he was making market-moving statements himself on television.

When Wall Street On Parade obtained Kaplan’s trading records from the Dallas Fed shortly after Derby’s article appeared, it became clear that the stock trading was the least of the problem. Kaplan had also engaged in a far more brazen type of trading for a man sitting on inside information.

With the apparent approval of the then General Counsel/Ethics Officer of the Dallas Fed, Sharon Sweeney, who had signed her name to Kaplan’s trading records for years, Kaplan had repeatedly placed million-dollar-plus trades in S&P 500 futures and had been doing so for the entire five years he had been at the Dallas Fed. (See Kaplan’s financial disclosure forms from 2015 through 2020 here.)

S&P 500 futures allow an individual to trade almost around the clock from Sunday evening to Friday evening, while stock exchanges in the U.S. are open only on weekdays from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET. S&P 500 futures gave Kaplan access to making directional bets on where the market would go after the stock market closed, which is typically when the Fed makes market-moving announcements. The most popular and liquid S&P 500 futures contract is the E-mini. A trader can obtain as much as 95 percent leverage on this contract – far more than the 50 percent leverage that is available for stock trades.

There was also the strong stench that Kaplan had intended to defy the public disclosure requirements of the Federal Reserve that mandated that he disclose the specific dates of his trades. Kaplan simply typed the word “multiple” where the specific date of each trade should have been entered on the disclosure form. (In the early part of Kaplan’s career, he was a CPA for Peat Marwick Mitchell. He should have known that how he listed his trading transactions violated the very clear instructions that came with the reporting form.) Wall Street On Parade, other members of the press, as well as Senator Elizabeth Warren demanded that the Federal Reserve turn over Kaplan’s trading dates. The Fed refused. (For how cavalierly Wall Street On Parade’s Freedom of Information Act request was handled by the Fed, see here.)

Kaplan was a sophisticated Wall Street veteran who worked at Goldman Sachs for 22 years, rising to the rank of Vice Chairman. As such, he would have certainly understood that the type of trading he was doing could subject him to an investigation for insider trading. (Goldman Sachs has refused to tell Wall Street On Parade if Kaplan did his trading at Goldman Sachs while serving as President of the Dallas Fed. The fact that Kaplan lists proprietary products from Goldman Sachs as “GS” on his financial disclosure forms suggests that he did at least some of his trading there.)

The year 2020 presented an ideal opportunity for a sophisticated trader (with inside information on actions the Fed planned to take) to make large profits in the stock futures market from short-term trading, going both short and long. As a result of the lockdowns from the pandemic, GDP fell by 31.4 percent in the second quarter of 2020 – the largest decline on record. At numerous times during 2020, the Fed was making dramatic market-moving announcements of interest rate cuts and the creation of a multitude of emergency lending facilities and emergency measures that caused the stock market to soar.

Since it does not appear that any brokerage firm that was executing trades for Kaplan blew the whistle on him, the obvious question is, why not? Was there a quid pro quo going on between Kaplan and a Wall Street trading house?

Every licensed broker that would have been placing Kaplan’s “over $1 million” trades is required under regulatory rules to “Know Your Customer.” The rule states that “Every member shall use reasonable diligence, in regard to the opening and maintenance of every account, to know (and retain) the essential facts concerning every customer and concerning the authority of each person acting on behalf of such customer.”

In this case, knowing your customer should have meant frantically calling your compliance department when an officer of the U.S. central bank, who sits on some of the most sensitive, non-public market intelligence in the world, instructs you to make “over $1 million” trades, multiple times, in S&P 500 futures contracts. The S&P 500 futures trades by Kaplan should have resulted in an immediate, all-hands-on-deck meeting of the entire compliance department of the brokerage firm. Instead, the trading went on unimpeded for more than five years, according to Kaplan’s financial disclosures.

Every brokerage firm is required to have a compliance department that monitors the trades being placed by its brokers. The compliance department has access to the personal data for each client that indicates who their employer is, along with significant other personal information. Clients whose jobs involve having access to confidential market information, like an investment banker or a central banker, should have their trades closely monitored in a properly functioning compliance department.

In addition to the Know Your Customer Rule, the U.S. Treasury Department’s FinCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network) has its own Customer Due Diligence Rule (CDD Rule). One of the requirements under the rule is that financial institutions “use a specific method or categorization to risk rate customers; or automatically categorize as ‘high risk’ products and customer types that are identified in government publications as having characteristics that could potentially expose the institution to risks.”

Every single safeguard that is built into the U.S. trading system to detect improper trading appears to have failed when it came to Kaplan. That suggests there were plenty of aiders and abettors – the very kind of case that belongs at the Justice Department, not at the Fed’s Inspector General’s Office, which reports to the Fed’s own Board of Governors. And yet, as far as the public knows, the Kaplan case remains in the hands of this conflicted investigator.

Senator Elizabeth Warren called out a “culture of corruption” among high-ranking Fed officials and called for an independent insider trading investigation. But for the past 16 months, only silence has emanated from the Department of Justice on this critical matter of vital public interest.

Yes, the Department of Justice has been deluged with fraud and corruption matters to investigate over the past 16 months. But this is not some minor issue. This is the central bank of the United States where a loss of confidence in its integrity impacts confidence in the U.S. financial system itself.

On January 6 of last year, Dennis Kelleher, the President and CEO of the financial watchdog, Better Markets, said this regarding how Fed Chair Jerome Powell has handled the scandal:

“Rather than condemn that shameful conduct and come clean with the American people, the Fed has engaged in a cover up, refusing to disclose the facts or punish anyone. Indeed, the Fed Chairman himself has repeatedly minimized if not exonerated the trading, inaccurately and misleadingly blaming outdated Fed policies. Having taken those public positions, he then merely called for a self-investigation of the Fed by the Fed’s in-house Inspector General, who the Chair appointed and who reports to the Chair. The Fed’s IG investigating the trading, including his boss’s trading, and determining if his boss’s many public statements exonerating everyone at the Fed were inaccurate, false, or misleading will have little if any credibility.”

In an effort to quiet the public uproar over the Fed’s trading scandal, on February 18 of last year, the Fed formally adopted new trading rules for its officials. But there is startling evidence that Fed officials are back to business as usual.

On October 20 of last year, Jeanna Smialek, who reports on the Fed for the New York Times, broke the news that the President of the St. Louis Fed, James Bullard, gave a private, invitation-only briefing on October 14 to clients of Citigroup – a Wall Street megabank that is supervised by the Fed and which received the largest bailout from the Fed from 2007 to 2010 in global banking history – a cumulative sum of $2.5 trillion in secret loans according to a government audit.

Smialek noted in her article that “About 40 people attended the event, which had a formal agenda and was advertised to Citi clients.” Bullard answered questions from attendees, according to Smialek’s reporting. Bullard was at the time a voting member of the FOMC and had access to insider information on the Fed’s market-moving monetary policy actions.

On the very day that Bullard was giving his private briefing to Citigroup clients, the President of the Atlanta Fed, Raphael Bostic, released a seven-page statement in which he admitted to failing to list a multitude of trades that were conducted on his behalf by trading firms on Wall Street over a period of five years; failing to properly report income on his assets on his financial disclosure forms; trading during blackout periods when trading was barred by the Federal Reserve; and providing inaccurate values on his financial disclosure forms.

Despite these jaw-dropping disclosures, the Board of Directors of the Atlanta Fed did not ask Bostic to step down. (See our report: Atlanta Fed President Bought Low and Sold High in 2020 as the Fed Bailed Out Wall Street; Then He Failed to Report those Trades.) And, thus far, Bullard also appears to be keeping his job.

On August 11, the Attorney General of the U.S. Department of Justice, Merrick Garland, told the American people at a press conference that: “Faithful adherence to the rule of law is the bedrock principle of the Justice Department and of our democracy. Upholding the rule of law means applying the rule of law evenly, without fear or favor.”

Until the Department of Justice provides some sunshine on the Robert Kaplan case, those words will ring hollow to millions of Americans.

Related Article:

After Funneling Trillions of Dollars in Repo Loans to Serial Bank Offenders, Lorie Logan Gets a $440,000 Job Running the Dallas Fed 


LINK





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