Another narcissist blows the whistle

Another narcissist blows the whistle

by digby

Salon's Luke Brinker writes up a fascinating segment on Chris hayes' show with Alayne Fleischmann, a whistle-blowing lawyer, and matt taibbi who's written a fantastic story about her:
Investigative journalist Matt Taibbi returned to Rolling Stone last week with an extensive report on the case of Alayne Fleischmann, a former JPMorgan Chase diligence manager whose warnings about high-risk mortgage securities went unheeded in the run-up to the financial crisis. In the piece, Fleischmann revealed that prior to being laid off in 2008, she witnessed “massive criminal securities fraud” at the bank, but the Justice Department ultimately opted for a $13 billion civil settlement with the bank instead of pursuing criminal charges. On last night’s “All In with Chris Hayes,” Fleischmann and Taibbi discussed JPMorgan’s conduct, the Justice Department’s failure to prosecute Wall Street crime, and why the culture of Wall Street still hasn’t changed.

Despite warning that the bank was rating extremely high-risk mortgage loans as safe securities for investors, Fleischmann told Hayes that her superiors’ response was “yelling until they get the answer they want.”

“They just wanted these pushed through,” she added.

Taibbi emphasized that this kind of behavior wasn’t confined to JPMorgan.

“This was going on everywhere,” he said. “But what’s interesting in this case is that for years and years and years, the Justice Department has been telling us these cases are really hard to prove, we can’t get any evidence, that’s why we’re not pushing any prosecutions. But now we have – clearly – proof and evidence, and it’s obvious that they could make a case if they want to.”

Fleischmann agreed. “That’s the key point with these settlements,” she said. “They make it look like they’re hard cases but they’re not. … There are emails. There are reports that were ignored. There are vendor reports that were ignored. There are emails from diligence managers, from myself. There’s a letter that sets out exactly who did what and what’s wrong in our diligence process and how that’s going to cause problems in the security.”

Watch the whole segment here.

I was being snarky in the headline because it struck me so strongly that the charge lodged against Edward Snowden is a truly noxious way of saying that anyone who doesn't conform to the rules of powerful institutions, no matter how illegal or immoral, in fact any courageous act of individual conscience will be attacked by the elites for being a "narcissistic". That term is now commonly used to describe people who believe it is their duty to tell the truth. Interesting.

The Taibbi story is a blockbuster. Not that we didn't know they did this but that there was someone willing to tell the truth about it and nobody really gave a damn. This seems to be the way we do things now. There have always been crooks and tyrants. But now they don 't even suffer shame, much less any legal consequences, for what they do. I think Pharoahs and Caesars had it tougher.


.