Put This Guy In Charge Of The SEC

Zero Hedge: April 9, 2014

Yesterday, a retiring 38-year veteran trial lawyer’s remarks shone a brighter light on the farce that the SEC has become in recent years. The SEC has become “an agency that polices the broken windows on the street level and rarely goes to the penthouse floors,” Kidney said, adding that his superiors were more focused on getting high-paying jobs after their government service than on bringing difficult cases. The agency’s penalties, Kidney said, have become “at most a tollbooth on the bankster turnpike.” As the full letter below shows, he had a lot more to add on just how the toothless agency should be run…

“The only other item I want to be serious about, besides some personal observations in a minute, is the metric of the division of enforcement: number of cases brought. It is a cancer. It should be changed.

 

The metric we have now is built into the soul of the Division. It has to be removed root and branch

His concluding questions leave management mouths open…

Are we so sure that our own domestic corporations and audit firms are law abiding that we can spend vast quantities of staff time and taxpayer money worrying about firms in other countries because a handful of ADRs are sold on U.S. markets?

 

Are we so paralyzed by the organizational stovepipes we have created and made more and more of that we can’t flood the zone on important cases instead?

 

Do we have to preserve bureaucratic organizational boundaries by sweating the minutiae just so each organizational unit can claim to have enough to do to protect some manager’s turf?”

Kidney’s Full Retirement Comments below:

Retirement Remarks

 

Still think he must be exaggerating and is just venting after a lifetime of thankless litigation.. think again…

As The Wall Street Journal reports,

Bruce Karpati, a former top Securities and Exchange Commission lawyer, is heading to private-equity giant KKR & Co. to become global chief compliance officer, said people familiar with the matter.

 

Mr. Karpati, most recently the chief compliance officer for Prudential Financial Inc.’s mutual fund business, is expected to start at KKR later this month, one of the people said.

 

 

Mr. Karpati will oversee KKR’s compliance with regulations around the world. KKR is a registered investment adviser and has a broker dealer in the U.S. He succeeds H.J. Willcox, who left KKR last year for a similar position at AQR Capital Management LLC.

 

Mr. Karpati spent more than a dozen years at the SEC, rising through the ranks to lead the enforcement division’s asset-management unit. He oversaw investigations into a wide variety of investment firms, including a probe that ultimately led to a settlement between hedge-fund manager Philip Falcone and the SEC that banned Mr. Falcone from the securities industry for several years.

As a gentle reminder, here is what Kidney said…

Kidney said his superiors were more focused on getting high-paying jobs after their government service than on bringing difficult cases.

Shocked…? So does the C in SEC stand for Cronyism of another “C” word?

(Originally published at Zero Hedge, check them out, they do good work)

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NSA gathered “explicit sexual material regarding religious conservatives … for the purpose of exposing”

No legal means exist to challenge mass surveillance – Snowden

No legal means exist to challenge mass surveillance, said NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, testifying to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

[…]

“I would like to clarify that I have no intention of harming the US government or straining bilateral ties between any nations. My motivation is to improve the government, not to bring it down,” Snowden said.

The NSA gathered “explicit sexual material regarding religious conservatives whose political views it disfavored and considered radical for the purpose of exposing it to damage their reputations and discredit them within their communities,” Snowden told PACE.

“This is an unprecedented form of political interference that I don’t believe can be seen elsewhere in western governments,” he went on. “But no legal means currently exist to challenge such activities or to see penalties for such abuses,” he said.

Mass surveillance is also used by the NSA, as well as by its partners and adversaries, for the purposes of economic espionage, Snowden said.

“The NSA had unlawfully compromised the world’s major transaction facilities to include SWIFT and Visa. And in their reports they explicitly noted that such information provided “rich personal information” including data that “is not about our targets,” Snowden told the parliamentarians gathered in Strasbourg.

Testifying to the PACE parliamentary hearing, Snowden was asked if the NSA, Britain’s GCHQ or other spy services engage in sophisticated analysis of the data captured by surveillance programs such as PRISM. According to the whistleblower, such analysis does take place. Spy agencies also use algorithms of the kind widely used in commercial data-mining to seek out further people of interest.

He explained, in particular, how NSA analyzes the so-called “digital fingerprints.”The “fingerprint” technology is used to construct a unique signature for any individual or group’s communications, which are often comprised of “selectors, such as e-mail addresses, phone numbers or user names,” Snowden said. This allows state security agencies “to instantly identify the movements and activities of you, your computers or other devices, your personal internet accounts or even key words of other uncommon strings that indicate an individual, or group, out of all the communications they intercept in the world are associated with that particular communication.”

And that is just a small part of the NSA’s fingerprinting capability, the whistleblower said, adding that any kind of internet traffic caught by mass surveillance technologies can be analyzed and searched with little effort.

The technique allows security agencies to identify a person with a certain social or religious group, or by business interactions. In fact, “there are very few practical limitations to the kind of analysis that can be technically formed in this manner.”

Snowden also spoke about the NSA surveillance tool called XKeyscore, which gives spy agency a technical ability to track entire populations of individuals through unencrypted communications.

“It is a trivial task, for example, to generate lists of home addresses for people matching the targeted criteria… or even to analyze the nature and proximity of their social connections,” he said.

Snowden added, however, that there are no “nightmare scenarios” where the US government would, for instance, compile lists of gay people. But that still implicates human rights, Snowden said, underlining that it is necessary to develop international standards to protect people against such abuses.
Rights groups not exempt from NSA snooping

Snowden said that mass surveillance was a “global problem,” not just a problem for the US or for the European Union.

“We need to be clear with our language: these practices are abusive. This is clearly a disproportional use of an extraordinary invasive authority, an extraordinary invasive means of investigation taken against entire populations rather than the traditional investigators standard of using the least intrusive means or investigating specifically named targets or groups,” Snowden told PACE’s Legal Affairs Committee, adding that these violations of human rights must be addressed.

Giving evidence by video link to the committee in Strasbourg, Snowden said that the NSA deliberately snooped on international human rights organizations, such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

“The NSA has, in fact, specifically targeted the communications of either leaders or staff members in a number of purely civil or purely human rights organizations…including domestically, within the borders of the US,” he said in live testimony, without referring specifically to the organizations by name.

(Read the full article at RT)

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Brain ‘15-second delay’ shields us from hallucinogenic experience

Brain ‘15-second delay’ shields us from hallucinogenic experience – research

RT: April 7, 2014

Scientists have revealed the human brain has a 15-second lag that helps stabilize incoming visual information, which we don’t notice bombarding us in the course of our everyday lives.

Eyes tend to receive an enormous information load from dusk till dawn, and as one opens his or her eyes in the morning, the brain starts its intensive work, processing incoming pictures from the surroundings, including imagery from TV screens and computer monitors.

A team of vision scientists at the University of California, Berkeley and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) revealed this secret of the human brain: To save us from insanity induced by a constantly changing torrent of pictures, shapes and colors – both virtual and real world – the brain filters out information, failing in most cases to notice small changes in a 15-second period of time.

It actually means that what we do see is, in fact, a mixture of past and present. According to the research, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, stability is attained at the expense of accuracy.

“What you are seeing at the present moment is not a fresh snapshot of the world but rather an average of what you’ve seen in the past 10 to 15 seconds,” said study author Jason Fischer, Ph.D., a neuroscientist at MIT.

The discovery, called a continuity field, at first seems to be yet another optical illusion, good to explain why we miss errors in film editing.

“The continuity field smoothes what would otherwise be a jittery perception of object features over time,” said David Whitney, associate professor of psychology at UC Berkeley and senior author of the study. “Essentially, it pulls together physically but not radically different objects to appear more similar to each other. This is surprising because it means the visual system sacrifices accuracy for the sake of the continuous, stable perception of objects.”

However, according to the scientists, a continuity field is an advantageous mechanism, as it excludes visual ‘noise’. “The changes that continuity fields cause us to miss are most often unimportant,” Fischer said.

What is more, without such brain development humans would find the world an unsteady and frightening place to be. It might be similar to a person on hallucinogenic drugs experiencing sudden changes of color, a play of shadows and splashes of light. It would be just too overwhelming to live like this on a daily basis – a severe ordeal for the psyche.

“This is the brain’s way of reducing the number of things we have to deal with in the visual environment,” said psychologist Aaron Johnson of Concordia University in Montreal; he was not involved in the study, but was interested in its results. “If we were sensitive to every little change, our brains probably couldn’t cope.”

(Read the full article at RT)

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Police Conduct Warrantless Searches on All Transit Users

Boston Transit Police Conducts Warrantless Searches on All Bus, Subway Riders

Kit Daniels
Infowars: April 7, 2014

In accordance with the Department of Homeland Security, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority is now requiring that all Boston bus and subway riders submit to a warrantless search prior to boarding.

The MBTA transit police announced that everyone will be stopped and searched at “Transit Watch” checkpoints and that anyone declining a search will be ordered to leave the station, even though the area is public property.

“All persons choosing to use the MBTA transit system will be subject to security inspections of their handbags, briefcases and/or other carry-on items,” a Transit Watch pamphlet reads. “Any person refusing to allow a security inspection will be either denied entry or requested to leave MBTA property.”

The pamphlet also warns that anyone refusing to leave the station when requested will be subject to arrest “for trespass pursuant to M.G.L. 266, Section 120.”

“It is unclear how the trespassing law would apply given that the area is public property and it is not a crime to exercise your Fourth Amendment rights,” the Bay State Examiner reported on the subject.

The news outlet also pointed out that travelers could not see the signage warning them about the searches until they arrived at a checkpoint.

Last year, the Transportation Security Administration set up similar checkpoints inside the transit stations, making it clear that these new checkpoints are simply a continuation of the same.

And such warrantless searches on public transportation aren’t just limited to Boston. Back in 2012, TSA agents randomly interrogated bus riders in Houston, Texas while digging through their belongings without a warrant.

“I don’t feel like by purchasing a ticket or riding a bus that I have to forfeit my Constitutional rights and my protections and be subject to search or seizure,” passenger Derrick Broze told METRO board members during a heated meeting.

But DHS has every intention to do just that and even worse, governments around the world are pressuring citizens to take public transportation rather than their own vehicles.

The city of Hamburg, Germany is even working to ban cars within its city limits in the coming decades.

It isn’t too far-fetched to envision a future where individuals who want to travel have no choice but to take public transportation which requires invasive, TSA-style screening prior to boarding.

(Read the full article at Infowars)

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Al Sharpton’s Secret Work As FBI Informant

By William Bastone with Andrew Goldberg & Joseph Jesselli
The Smoking Gun: April 7, 2014

When friends and family members gathered recently at the White House for a private celebration of Michelle Obama’s 50th birthday, one of the invited partygoers was a former paid FBI Mafia informant.

That same man attended February’s state dinner in honor of French President Francois Hollande. He was seated with his girlfriend at a table adjacent to President Barack Obama, who is likely unaware that, according to federal agents, his guest once interacted with members of four of New York City’s five organized crime families. He even secretly taped some of those wiseguys using a briefcase that FBI technicians outfitted with a recording device.

The high-profile Obama supporter was also on the dais atop the U.S. Capitol steps last year when the president was sworn in for a second term. He was seated in front of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, two rows behind Beyonce and Jay Z, and about 20 feet from Eric Holder, the country’s top law enforcement officer. As head of the Department of Justice, Attorney General Holder leads an agency that once reported that Obama’s inauguration guest also had La Cosa Nostra contacts beyond Gotham, and engaged in “conversations with LCN members from other parts of the United States.”

The former mob snitch has become a regular in the White House, where he has met with the 44th president in the East Room, the Roosevelt Room, and the Oval Office. He has also attended Obama Christmas parties, speeches, policy announcements, and even watched a Super Bowl with the First Family (an evening the man has called “one of the highlights of my life”). During these gatherings, he has mingled with cabinet members, top Obama aides, military leaders, business executives, and members of Congress. His former confederates were a decidedly dicier lot: ex-convicts, extortionists, heroin traffickers, and mob henchmen. The man’s surreptitious recordings, FBI records show, aided his government handlers in the successful targeting of powerful Mafia figures with nicknames like Benny Eggs, Chin, Fritzy, Corky, and Baldy Dom.

Later this week, Obama will travel to New York and appear in a Manhattan hotel ballroom at the side of the man whom FBI agents primarily referred to as “CI-7”–short for confidential informant #7–in secret court filings. In those documents, investigators vouched for him as a reliable, productive, and accurate source of information about underworld figures.

The ex-informant has been one of Obama’s most unwavering backers, a cheerleader who has nightly bludgeoned the president’s Republican opponents in televised broadsides. For his part, Obama has sought the man’s counsel, embraced him publicly, and saluted his “commitment to fight injustice and inequality.” The president has even commented favorably on his friend’s svelte figure, the physical manifestation of a rehabilitation effort that coincided with Obama’s ascension to the White House. This radical makeover has brought the man wealth, a daily TV show, bespoke suits, a luxury Upper West Side apartment, and a spot on best seller lists.

Most importantly, he has the ear of the President of the United States, an equally remarkable and perplexing achievement for the former FBI asset known as “CI-7,” the Rev. Al Sharpton.

A lengthy investigation by The Smoking Gun has uncovered remarkable details about Sharpton’s past work as an informant for a joint organized crime task force comprised of FBI agents and NYPD detectives, as well as his dealings with an assortment of wiseguys.

Beginning in the mid-1980s and spanning several years, Sharpton’s cooperation was fraught with danger since the FBI’s principal targets were leaders of the Genovese crime family, the country’s largest and most feared Mafia outfit. In addition to aiding the FBI/NYPD task force, which was known as the “Genovese squad,” Sharpton’s cooperation extended to several other investigative agencies.

TSG’s account of Sharpton’s secret life as “CI-7” is based on hundreds of pages of confidential FBI affidavits, documents released by the bureau in response to Freedom of Information Act requests, court records, and extensive interviews with six members of the Genovese squad, as well as other law enforcement officials to whom the activist provided assistance.

Like almost every other FBI informant, Sharpton was solely an information source. The parameters of his cooperation did not include Sharpton ever surfacing publicly or testifying on a witness stand.

Genovese squad investigators–representing both the FBI and NYPD–recalled how Sharpton, now 59, deftly extracted information from wiseguys. In fact, one Gambino crime family figure became so comfortable with the protest leader that he spoke openly–during ten wired face-to-face meetings–about a wide range of mob business, from shylocking and extortions to death threats and the sanity of Vincent “Chin” Gigante, the Genovese boss who long feigned mental illness in a bid to deflect law enforcement scrutiny. As the mafioso expounded on these topics, Sharpton’s briefcase–a specially customized Hartman model–recorded his every word.

Task force members, who were interviewed separately, spoke on the condition of anonymity when describing Sharpton’s work as an informant and the Genovese squad’s activities. Some of these investigators provided internal FBI documents to a reporter.

Records obtained by TSG show that information gathered by Sharpton was used by federal investigators to help secure court authorization to bug two Genovese family social clubs, including Gigante’s Greenwich Village headquarters, three autos used by crime family leaders, and more than a dozen phone lines. These listening devices and wiretaps were approved during the course of a major racketeering investigation targeting the Genovese family’s hierarchy.

A total of eight separate U.S. District Court judges–presiding in four federal jurisdictions–signed interception orders that were based on sworn FBI affidavits including information gathered by Sharpton. The phones bugged as a result of these court orders included two lines in Gigante’s Manhattan townhouse, the home phone of Genovese captain Dominick “Baldy Dom” Canterino, and the office lines of music industry power Morris Levy, a longtime Genovese family associate. The resulting surreptitious recordings were eventually used to help convict an assortment of Mafia members and associates.

Investigators also used Sharpton’s information in an application for a wiretap on the telephone in the Queens residence of Federico “Fritzy” Giovanelli, a Genovese soldier. Giovanelli was sentenced to 20 years in prison for racketeering following a trial during which those recordings were played for jurors. In a recent interview, the 82-year-old Giovanelli–now three years removed from his latest stint in federal custody–said that he was unaware that Sharpton contributed in any fashion to his phone’s bugging. He then jokingly chided a reporter for inquiring about the civil rights leader’s past. “Poor Sharpton, he cleaned up his life and you want to ruin him,” Giovanelli laughed.

While Sharpton’s acrimonious history with law enforcement–especially the NYPD–rankled some Genovese squad investigators, they nonetheless grudgingly acknowledged in interviews that the activist produced for those he would go on to frequently pillory.

Genovese squad members, however, did not share with Sharpton specific details about how they were using the information he was gathering for them. This is standard practice since FBI affidavits in support of wiretap applications are filed under seal by Department of Justice prosecutors. Still, Sharpton was briefed in advance of his undercover sorties, so he was well aware of the squad’s investigative interest in Gigante and his Mafia cronies.

Sharpton vehemently denies having worked as an FBI informant. He has alleged that claims of government cooperation were attempts by dark forces to stunt his aggressive brand of civil rights advocacy or, perhaps, get him killed. In his most recent book, “The Rejected Stone,” which hit best seller lists following its October 2013 publication, Sharpton claimed to have once been “set up by the government,” whose agents later leaked “false information” that “could have gotten me killed.” He added, “So I have been seriously tested in what I believe over the years.”

In an interview Saturday, Sharpton again denied working as a confidential informant, claiming that his prior cooperation with FBI agents was limited to efforts to prompt investigations of drug dealing in minority communities, as well as the swindling of black artists in the recording industry. He also repeatedly denied being “flipped” by federal agents in the course of an undercover operation. When asked specifically about his recording of the Gambino crime family member, Sharpton was noncommittal: “I’m not saying yes, I’m not saying no.”

If Sharpton’s account is to be believed, he was simply a concerned citizen who voluntarily (and briefly) joined arm-in-arm with federal agents, perhaps risking peril in the process. The other explanation for Sharpton’s cooperation–one that has uniformly been offered by knowledgeable law enforcement agents–presents the reverend in a less noble light. Worried that he could face criminal charges, Sharpton opted for the path of self-preservation and did what the FBI asked. Which is usually how someone is compelled to repeatedly record a gangster discussing murder, extortion, and loan sharking.

(Read the full report and source documents at The Smoking Gun)

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Media Blackout over Syria

Brad Hoff
Global Research: April 6, 2014

Media Blackout of New Syria Revelations

On April 6, The London Review of Books published in its online journal Seymour Hersh’s “The Red Line and the Rat Line.” Hersh continues to expose details surrounding the staged August 21 chemical attack incident in Syria, which apparently pretty much everyone in Washington’s intelligence bureaucracy suspected was carried out by the rebels as soon as it happened.

Seymour Hersh is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist whose 40+ years career includes the exposing of the My Lai Massacre  and its cover-up, as well as the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. His December 19 report, “Whose Sarin?” -was his first report to expose the Syria chemical attack hoax based on close contact with US Intelligence officials. While “Whose Sarin” was originally prepared for the Washington Post, the newspaper rejected it and a media blackout followed in American press. Currently, Hersh’s newest investigative findings are going unacknowledged in mainstream US media.

Hersh’s report confirms the following:

  • Obama’s push for attack on Syria was halted last minute when evidence that the Syrian government had nothing to do with the August 21 chemical attack became too overwhelming
  • It had been well known to US government officials throughout the summer of 2013 that Turkish PM Erdogan was supporting al-Nusra Front in attempts to manufacture Sarin
  • US military knew of Turkish and Saudi program for bulk Sarin production inside Syria from the spring of 2013
  • UN inspectors knew the rebels were using chemical weapons on the battlefield since the spring of 2013
  • As a result of the staged chemical incident, the White House ordered readiness for a “monster strike” on Syria, which included “two B-22 air wings and two thousand pound bombs” -and a target list which included military and civilian infrastructure targets (note: most of these are in densely populated civilian areas)
  • Full military strike was set for September 2
  • UK defense officials relayed to their American counterparts in the lead up to planned attack: “We’re being set up here.”
  • CIA, MI6, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey set up a “rat line” back in 2012 to run Libyan weapons into Syria via Turkey, including MANPADS; the Benghazi consulate was headquarters for the operation
  • Obama OK’ed Turkish-Iranian gold export scam (that went from March 2012 to July 2013) which erupted in a Turkish scandal that nearly brought down the Erdogan government
  • US Intelligence community had immediate doubts about Syrian regime responsibility for Aug. 21 attack, yet “reluctant to contradict the president”
  • US government will not expose continued Turkey support of terrorism simply because “they’re a NATO ally”

In addition, last Thursday freelance Middle East journalist Sara Elizabeth Williams broke the story of a CIA/US Military run training camp for Syrian rebels in the Jordanian desert. VICE UK ran her story, “I Learned to Fight Like an American at the FSA Training Camp in Jordan,” yet it too failed to make it across the Atlantic into American reporting. International Syria experts thought her story hugely significant, but it got little attention. Top Syria expert in the US, Joshua Landis, announced on his Twitter account Thursday: “Sara Williams gets the scoop on the top secret FSA Training Camp in Jordan.” This courageous young freelancer revealed, with photos, the ins and outs of this secretive facility -yet the mainstream carefully shielded Americans from knowledge of the explosive report.

In email conversation with her this weekend, Williams told me: “The access was tough to get, but I think it was worth the effort: to my mind, it’s important that people know what their government is doing in their name, with their tax dollars.”

According to her investigative report:

  • Confirmed: “US-run training camp” for Syrian rebels in Northern Jordan
  • Rebel recruits go “off the grid” while in secretive training camp
  • Rebel fighter: “The Americans who taught us wore military uniforms I did not recognize. We called them by their first names and they spoke English to us.”
  • Camp awash with “American food and American dollars”: recruits eat Kentucky Fried Chicken and live in temporary “pre-fabricated housing” units
  • Recruits sent through intense 40 day program, which includes exercise, training in anti-tank missiles, and boot camp style atmosphere with orders given by US military instructors
  • Upon graduation, US trained insurgents slip back across Syria’s southern border
  • Experts say there are more camps like this one
  • American trained rebel insurgent says: “America is benefiting from the destruction and the killing in order to weaken both sides.”
  • (Republished with permission from Global Research)


    Brad Hoff served as a Marine from 2000-2004 at Headquarters Battalion, Quantico. After military service he lived, studied, and traveled throughout Syria off and on from 2004-2010. He currently teaches in Texas.

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Goldman Sachs’ sick con: How they made money off your misery

Documents and emails show manipulation was part of the game at Goldman — and what led them to win big on the crash

By Simon Head
Salon : April 6, 2014

In the financial crisis of 2007-08, Computer Business Systems (CBS) performed on a much bigger stage than any we have encountered so far. The scope and impact of the systems extended beyond the corporate and the national to the global, and the damage inflicted was correspondingly great. In the financial crisis, CBSs and their constituent technologies came together with an unprecedented malignancy. The operations of Wall Street’s mortgage machine before and during the crash, and the role of CBSs within the machine, closely fits what Joseph Schumpeter called the “mechanization of progress,” whereby innovation becomes “depersonalized and automated” and “bureau and committee work” replaces individual actions and judgments.

The Wall Street machine relied on information technologies to create a virtual assembly line on which something as simple as a single subprime mortgage at the start of the line could become by the time it reached the end a molecule within a financial derivative so complex that it was beyond the powers of the IT systems themselves to manage or keep track of. Amid these highly complex IT systems, it was easy to forget that this vast, inverted pyramid of financial manipulation pivoted on the creditworthiness of countless middle- and lower-income families obtaining mortgages for the first time for homes they could ill afford.

As with the making of Ford’s Model T, the making of a financial derivative moved through multiple stages, with each stage responsible for adding an essential component to the product. On the Wall Street line, in contrast to Ford’s, these way stations were also independent financial agencies, each exacting hefty fees and markups as the product passed through its segment of the line. The U.S. government—J. K. Galbraith’s “countervailing power”—which might have set limits on the machine’s operations, was in fact actively working on the machine’s behalf. In their book “Thirteen Bankers,” Simon Johnson and James Kwak show in detail how the regulatory regime that allowed the machine to run amok was as much the work of Wall Street Democrats such as Robert Rubin and Larry Summers as it was of Reagan Republicans such as Donald Regan and Senator Phil Gramm of Texas.

As the machine worked flat-out in the run-up to the crisis, there were eight principal businesses at work along the line: the mortgage brokers who worked directly with the subprime clients; the mortgage bankers, who, benefiting from the recommendations of the brokers, underwrote the subprime mortgages, bundled them together, and passed them on to investment bankers as mortgage-backed securities (MBSs); the mortgage servicers responsible for collecting the monthly mortgage payments from the subprime clients, even as the ownership of the mortgages moved from one remote owner to another along the line; the investment bankers who bundled the MBSs with further bundles of debt—student loans, credit card debt—to form collateralized debt obligations (CDOs); the rating agencies—Moody’s, S&P, Fitch—who examined the CDOs and, with a stroke of financial alchemy worthy of Merlin the magician, transformed CDOs heavy with poorly rated MBSs into top-rated derivatives with a AAA rating; the insurers, such as AIG, who made it possible for anyone, whether they owned a CDO or not, to take out an insurance policy—a credit default swap (CDS)—against a CDO’s possible default; the CDO brokers who marketed the newly sanitized derivatives; and at the very end of the line the purchasers of the CDOs and MBSs beyond Wall Street—foundations, universities, pension funds, midwestern school districts, German regional banks, all very big losers once the MBSs and CDOs went bad.

The millions of mortgages, student loans, and other debt contracts that constituted the raw material of the machine had a dual existence both as documents in the safekeeping of legal custodians, themselves a minor component of the machine, and as electronic bits in digital space. Once the transformation from the physical to the digital had taken place, the transactions could be assembled, subassembled according to risk, and moved between way stations at high speeds.

As we have seen, speed is also achieved in mass production by automating as far as possible the cognitive functions that may have to be performed at points along the line. That is why call-center agents deal with their clients with the use of digital scripts and why HMOs are constantly pressing their physician clients to observe standard treatment protocols that, according to the HMO database, are faster and cheaper than the alternatives. Unless this happens, and if instead employees are allowed to exercise their own judgment free of rigorous time constraints, then the business process or subprocess will not achieve management’s targets for time and cost—its key performance indicators—and, from management’s perspectives, the system will have failed.

The Wall Street machine was able to achieve the speed that it did only by automating, at three critical points along the line, complex judgments about financial instruments that should have been subject to painstaking, time-consuming analysis. But once again, the rules of this automated decision making were always the outcome of executive decision making that, once embedded in the system, had to be followed by front-line employees. The Wall Street machine was therefore as much an example of digital industrialism as the call centers of the front office. The operatives of the Wall Street machine relied on software-born indexes of risk to pass favorable judgment on the derivatives as they moved along the line.

The first of the three indexes at the heart of the crisis was the FICO score, used to estimate the creditworthiness of mortgage borrowers, that could be gamed by system designers to show that a Mexican immigrant worker with an income of twenty thousand dollars could handle a subprime mortgage worth three hundred thousand dollars. The second of the indexes was the rating agencies that treated subprime borrowers as if they were small businesses and, looking at the historical record for small business failures, found that the probability of subprime default was low. Finally, the value-at-risk (VAR) indexes pioneered by Professor Philippe Jorion of the University of California were heavily relied on to assess the risk of CDOs. For its failure to allow for the unexpected and exceptional, Nassim Taleb of the Black Swan characterized this index, a decade before the debacle, as “charlatanism” and “potentially dangerous malpractice” for a “school for sitting ducks.”

* * *

We will now, in the language of CBSs, drill down and look at how integration within the mortgage machine shaped the conduct of one of Wall Street’s leading actors, Goldman Sachs. Goldman’s handling of the Wall Street crash during its critical, formative months between the middle of 2006 and the end of 2007 must be among the most heavily documented events in modern business history. Pride of place in this bibliography goes to the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations’ (the Levin Committee’s) 266-page report on Goldman, “Failing to Manage Conflicts of Interest: A Case Study of Goldman Sachs,” which is just one section within a 639-page report on the role of investment banks in the crisis. The report draws on the tens of thousands of e-mails subpoenaed from Wall Street firms by the committee and provides a day-to-day, and sometimes hour-by-hour, account of what went on at Goldman during those months. A companion volume to the report is the transcript and video footage of the hearings before the Levin Committee, which took place on October 27, 2010, when Goldman’s crisis team, from CEO Lloyd Blankfein down to the humblest traders, gave their side of the story.

In addition, there is the growing list of lawsuits against Goldman, all with their accompanying texts, brought by government agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Federal Housing Authority, and also by aggrieved clients of Goldman such as the now defunct Australian hedge fund Basis Capital and by ACAS Capital, which collaborated with Goldman in the creation of the Abacus CDO, notorious for the role of the hedge-fund manager John Paulson in selecting the securities to be included in the CDO. In July 2010, the SEC fined Goldman $550 million to settle charges that it “failed to disclose to investors vital information about the Abacus CDO . . . particularly the role that Paulson and Co. played in the portfolio selection process.” In other court actions against Goldman the actions are still pending and Goldman’s level of culpability has yet to be decided. But the Levin Committee’s report and hearings provide, I believe, strong evidence that the deception and manipulation of clients eventually became an integral part of Goldman’s trading strategy.

In trawling through the documents, it is essential never to lose sight of the role of the Goldman corporate hierarchy in the crisis and the highly disciplined way in which it managed the company. The answer to the old Watergate question “What did the president know, and when did he know it?” is, in the case of Goldman’s big three—Lloyd Blankfein, CEO; Gary Cohn and Jon Winkelried, co-presidents—that they knew everything that mattered (and in real time). The big three’s point man for the crisis, Goldman’s own H. R. Haldeman, was co-president Gary Cohn, whose name turns up frequently in the e-mail flow of his subordinates. Although the e-mail vocabulary between Blankfein, Cohn, and their subordinates has a certain locker-room familiarity about it, there is never any doubt about who is in charge.

Blankfein, Cohn, and their team were men of the machine and, as it turned out, among the most skillful manipulators of the machine on Wall Street. By the early 2000s, Goldman’s derivatives trading could no longer be called banking in any meaningful sense of the term, but had become an industrial activity, turning out virtual products whose fortunes depended on the efficient management and coordination of processes: the accumulation of mortgages and other forms of debt from bankers and brokers, their transformation into financial derivatives, and their selling on to clients.

In Goldman’s culture these processes were of supreme value because they were vehicles for the creation of Goldman’s earnings and profits, and so critical for the health of the Goldman stock price, the size of the salaries and bonuses paid out to Goldman executives, and the reach of Goldman’s power and fame on Wall Street and beyond. As long as house prices continued to rise and those along the process chain continued to make money, the model’s flaws could be ignored, notably the dismal quality of the subprime mortgages upon which the whole system depended.

But once the housing market turned, the system collapsed. The difference between Goldman and the other leading players on Wall Street was that Goldman saw it coming and was able to recalibrate its machine so that not only did it avoid the catastrophic losses that destroyed Lehman Brothers and crippled Citicorp, but it actually came out ahead. But to achieve this Goldman behaved, I will argue, with ruthless cynicism, above all in deceiving and exploiting its clients. Why did Goldman do this? The simple answer is that for Goldman, wealth creation on its own behalf took priority over everything else, and nothing was going to stand in its way. In histories that tell of how Goldman acted on its view of the deteriorating markets and came out ahead, the word warehouse often appears, a choice word that is revealing both as a pointer to the heavily industrial character of Goldman’s trading activities and as providing a mental diagram to locate the various financial instruments Goldman was dealing in. But warehouse does not fully capture the reality of what was going on at Goldman.

A real warehouse is a place where finished goods are stored before they are shipped off to customers or retailers, whereas Goldman’s “warehouse” was much more like a factory where industrial processing of financial instruments took place on a virtual assembly line. The Goldman “factory” was an electronic space where the “raw materials” of loans coming in from such mortgage brokers as New Century, Long Beach, and Countrywide were processed on the virtual line into financial instruments such as mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, and credit default swaps, which then were marketed to clients. In the precrisis world, where it was assumed that house prices would go on rising indefinitely, the processes of “securitization,” that is, the processing of the raw loans coming in from the brokers, were relatively straightforward.

In the case of mortgage-backed securities, the incoming loans were bundled together by Goldman, their ownership vested in a trust, with the trust issuing securities to investors, which gave them the right to the cash flows generated by the loans as householders paid off their mortgages. With collateralized debt obligations, several MBSs would be bundled together, along with bundles of student, consumer, or corporate loans, again with ownership of the loans vested in a trust, with the trust issuing securities to investors. In addition, there was a whole superstructure of insurance, known as credit default swaps, attached to the MBSs and CDOs. The owners of the MBS and CDO securities, or indeed anybody, could take out an insurance policy against their loss of value and receive compensation if this happened. Equally, the owners of the securities, if they were confident that they would hold their value, could be the providers of insurance and receive regular premium payments from the policy holders. If the securities lost value, then, as with any insurance policy, the issuer of the insurance was obliged to compensate the policy holder for their loss.

Whether Goldman was pursuing a coherent trading strategy during these crisis months is a fraught issue, because it is claimed by those suing Goldman that it had a consistently pessimistic view of the market, and although this pessimism shaped its trading on its own behalf, Goldman hid this pessimism from many of its clients, fed them an upbeat view of the market that it did not believe in, and persuaded them to buy assets that it knew were flawed and would lose value, and indeed did. Goldman’s defense all along has been that it had no aggressive moneymaking strategy at all and was simply the prudent guardian of its clients and its own interests. In its own words, “The risk management of the firm’s exposures and the activities of our clients dictated the firm’s action, not any view of what might or might not happen to any security or market.”

This was also the line taken by Lloyd Blankfein himself during his appearance before the Levin Committee on October 27, 2010, where he spoke of Goldman as virtually a charitable organization, the passive counterparty in deals where strong-minded clients came in and told Goldman exactly what they wanted, and Goldman respectfully executed their instructions. So Blankfein: “The customers who are coming to us for risk in the housing market wanted to have a security that gave them exposure to the housing market, and that is what they get. . . . [T]he security itself delivered the specific exposure that the client wanted to have.” And again: “What clients are buying, or customers are buying, is they are buying an exposure. The thing that we are selling to them is supposed to give them the risk they want. They are not coming to us to represent what our views are. . . . [T]he institutional clients we have wouldn’t care what our views are. They shouldn’t care.”

At the Senate hearings the Goldman team from Blankfein on downward was much helped in its own defense by the extreme complexity and variety of the derivatives Goldman traded during the crisis period and the difficulty for laymen, including those on the Levin Committee, of distinguishing between them, and especially the differing legal obligations attached to each of them. It was here that the Levin Committee hearings fell short in ways that undermined the impact of the report and the hearings in the public policy debate. In his preamble to the hearings, Senator Carl Levin (D-Mich.) drew attention to Goldman’s differing obligations to its clients as market maker and underwriter, but Levin and his fellow senators lost sight of this distinction when questioning Blankfein and his colleagues, allowing them to slip away again and again behind a fog of obfuscation.

One way of cutting through this obfuscation is to imagine for a moment that Goldman was a real industrial company making and selling real products, rather than a virtual industrial company making and selling virtual products. Imagine Goldman for a moment as the Goldman Motor Manufacturing Company, or GMMC, a Detroit competitor of Ford in the early days of mass production in the 1920s. One day GMMC discovers to its horror that there is a serious flaw in its manufacturing processes so that a significant percentage of the engines installed in its best-selling model, the Model G, break down after just a few weeks on the road. The vice president for manufacturing tells the CEO that GMMC must immediately close its plant for retooling, recall the products it has already sold, and strip down the models it has in stock, selling off the uncontaminated engine parts to local component dealers.

But the vice president for finance quickly does his sums and persuades his colleagues that the cost of this plan A is too great, and they must decide instead on plan B. With plan B, GMMC instructs its salesmen to avoid its local Detroit dealers, whom the company suspects have gotten wind of problems at the plant, and tells the GMMC salesmen instead to ship the problem Model Gs to the South and sell them directly to unsuspecting farmers in rural Kentucky and Tennessee. Without telling these customers that there is anything wrong with the Model Gs, GMMC quietly takes out an insurance policy with a local Detroit company that will pay out to GMMC every time one of its cars goes wrong. When the owners of the stricken vehicles demand a refund, GMMC refuses. This is a simplified but essentially accurate account of what Goldman frequently did in its derivatives trading. Looked at day- to-day, Goldman’s trading strategies were complex, sometimes counterintuitive, and lacking in obvious direction. The GMMC fable can be a helpful guide as we try to make sense of what Goldman was doing.

* * *

Drawing on its vast e-mail trove, the Levin Committee report shows Blankfein’s image of Goldman as a charitable organization to be entirely fictitious and repeatedly quotes chapter and verse to prove it. The report shows that from late 2006 onward, Goldman’s senior executives had a consistently pessimistic view of the housing market and the financial instruments attached to it and thenceforth pursued an aggressive trading strategy to maximize its gains from the crisis, with the manipulation of clients becoming, I will argue, an integral part of Goldman’s chosen strategy. The evidence of how Goldman’s top executives really viewed the markets is therefore germane to this whole history, and some of it now follows.

In an internal “self-review” dated September 26, 2007, Michael J. Swenson, head of the Goldman Sachs Mortgage Department’s Structured Products Group, wrote that “during the early summer of 2006 it was clear that the market fundamentals of subprime and the highly leveraged nature of Collateralized Debt Obligations were going to have a very unhappy ending.” On December 7, 2006, Daniel Sparks, head of Goldman’s Mortgage Department and a key link between the trading floor and the Goldman big three, exchanged e-mails with Thomas Montag, a senior Goldman executive and co-head of Global Securities for the Americas, “about why Goldman was not doing more to reduce the firm’s risk associated with its net long positions” in housing-related assets.

On December 14, 2006, David Viniar, chief financial officer and therefore number four in the Goldman hierarchy after the big three, convened a meeting in the conference room next to his office on the thirtieth floor (the seat of power where the big three also had their offices), where they conducted an in-depth review of the Mortgage Department’s holdings because its “position in subprime mortgage related assets was too long, and its risk exposure was too great.”

The next day Viniar e-mailed Montag about the deteriorating markets and the opportunities it opened up: “My basic message was lets [sic] be aggressive distributing things because there will be very good opportunities as the markets [go] into what is likely to be even greater distress and we want to be in a position to take advantage of them.”

Then on February 11, 2007, and from the thirtieth floor itself, Blankfein urged the Mortgage Department to get on with the task of selling off its deteriorating assets: “Could/should we have cleaned up these books before and are we doing enough right now to sell off cats and dogs in other books throughout the divisions?” On February 14, 2007, Daniel Sparks reported further on the deteriorating markets and the trading opportunities it opened up: “Subprime environment—bad; and getting worse. Everyday [sic] is a major fight for some aspect of the business. Credit issues are worsening on deals and pain is broad. . . . [D]istressed opportunities will be real, but we aren’t close to that time yet.”

In 2006 and 2007 Goldman originated twenty-seven CDOs and ninety-three MBSs with a total value of about $100 billion. The problem for Goldman from the summer of 2006 onward was that its “factory” was clogged with components of MBSs and CDOs in varying stages of manufacture—raw loans just in from the brokers and not yet bundled, loans in the process of being bundled, bundles of MBSs not yet put together as CDOs, finished CDOs and MBSs not yet marketed, and securities of old CDOs and MBSs that Goldman had not yet sold and were still in the factory. Goldman had acquired and processed these assets on the assumption that the housing market was strong and that there would be an equally strong demand for the finished CDOs and MBSs.13 But now the market was about to collapse, and Goldman had billions’ worth of what it believed would become failing assets on its hands. So what to do with them?

Much of what Goldman then did was what any owner of a big stock portfolio would do if faced with a collapsing market. Goldman stopped taking in any more loans from the mortgage dealers; it abandoned some CDOs and MBSs that were still “under construction” and liquidated others that were fully formed, selling off their components in the markets, as it also did with some of the “raw” loans recently acquired from the brokers that had yet to enter the securitization process. If this is all that Goldman had done, there would be no Goldman story, Blankfein would be esteemed on Wall Street as the great survivor, and Goldman would not be the target of multiple lawsuits that could still cost it hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars.

But what Goldman also did, and this has been the source of its troubles, was to persist with the creation of new CDOs and MBSs and to continue with the marketing of existing ones, even bringing some of its own proprietary assets into the factory so that they too could become part of a new CDO. Goldman also began taking the insurance structure pivoting on the CDOs, the credit default swaps, much more seriously as a potential source of revenue. Although the trading strategies involved in these activities were sometimes complex, the motive underlying them was simple and straightforward. Goldman believed that it could make more money by disposing of its factory assets as components of CDOs, MBSs, and CDSs than by just selling them off unadorned in the market.

The problem that then arose for Goldman was that in marketing the three kinds of financial derivatives, the company was acting as underwriter and placement agent and not simply as market maker or trader on its own behalf. As underwriter and placement agent, Goldman was subject to rules on fair disclosure that as market maker it was not. In the Levin Committee hearings, the Goldman team, from Blankfein on down, went to very considerable lengths to blur the distinction between the different roles and to cast themselves, whenever possible, as humble market makers. There can be little doubt that in preparing for the hearings, a high-risk event for Blankfein et al., Goldman’s extremely high-priced lawyers got together with their clients and advised them that, in view of their record, obfuscation on the distinction between underwriter and market maker was advisable.

This evasion was much in evidence at the hearings and especially in the gladiatorial contest between Senator Levin and Blankfein on the final day, when Levin searched with increasing frustration for the smoking gun that would sink Blankfein but never quite managed to find it. In reading the committee transcript, and simultaneously watching the contest on a podcast available at the Levin Committee website, I was reminded not so much of Watergate and the search for the Nixonian smoking gun as a remarkable scene that appears in several versions on YouTube.

In it a gigantic Alaskan brown bear sits on a slab of rock overlooking a fast-moving river full of salmon. The bear is trying to scoop up one of the salmon with his paws, but most of the time the salmon are much too quick for him and he fails. But just occasionally, he succeeds and has a terrific meal. There was something bearlike about Senator Levin peering down at Blankfein from his senatorial perch as he flailed around, trying to land his quarry, but with the slippery Blankfein swimming clear every time. The blurring of the distinction between market maker and underwriter was central to Blankfein’s evasive strategy, as the following exchanges reveal:

Senator Levin: Is there not a conflict when you sell something to somebody and then are determined to bet against that same security and you didn’t disclose that to the person you are selling it to? Do you see a problem?

Lloyd Blankfein: In the context of market making, that is not a conflict. What clients are buying, or customers are buying, is they are buying an exposure. The thing that we are selling to them is supposed to give them the risk they want.

Senator Levin wasn’t satisfied:

Senator Levin: How about you are investing in these securities. This isn’t a market making deal. This is where you have a decision to bet against, to take the short side of a security that you are selling, and you don’t think there is any moral obligation here?

Lloyd Blankfein: Every transaction Senator, and this is—and I think it is important and again, I am not trying to be resistant but to make sure your terminology—when as a market maker, we are buying from sellers and selling to buyers . . .

Levin cuts him off but later returns to the attack:

Senator Levin (with increasing frustration): You are betting against that same security you are out selling. I have just got to keep repeating this. I am not talking about generally in the market. I am saying you have got a short bet against that security. You don’t think the client would care?

Lloyd Blankfein: I don’t, Senator. I can’t speak to what people would care. I would say that the obligations of a market maker are to make sure your clients are suitable and to make sure they understand it. But we are a part of a market process. We do hundreds of thousands, if not millions of transactions as a market maker.

Again the Uriah Heep side of Blankfein as he relegates Goldman to being just another humble market maker along with all the others on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange. This was a clever strategy, but also high risk. It was clever because anyone with a serious interest in the stock market, which presumably included most of the members of the Levin Committee, knew what market makers do. They hold a supply of a stock for those who wish to buy or sell it. They adjust the price with shifts in supply and demand, and they are obliged to buy and sell at prices broadly in line with the rest of the market. It is not their role to advise investors about the wisdom of buying a stock, and they are not at fault if a stock loses 20 percent of its value within an hour of its purchase.

With his answers to Senator Levin, Blankfein was trying hard to cloak Goldman and himself in the passive neutrality of the market maker. But this was also high risk because it would have taken only one senator with forensic lawyerly skills to rip through this defense and reach—at last—the smoking gun. With the marketing of CDOs and MBSs to its clients, Goldman was not a market maker but an underwriter or placement agent and was therefore subject to rules of disclosure about the suitability of its product for the investor that it had manifestly violated. To grasp the sheer chutzpah of Goldman’s marketing, one needs to look at one of these deals in detail. Among the most revealing was Goldman’s marketing of the Timberwolf CDO between September 2006 and June 2007, the very months when its own view of the housing market soured and when it began to dispose of its own flawed assets.

(Read the full article at Salon or buy the book it’s taken from at Amazon)

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Temporary Foreign Workers Taking Jobs From Canadians CONFIRMED: McDonalds franchise caught

McDonald’s accused of favouring foreign workers

By Kathy Tomlinson
CBC News: April 6, 2014

McDonald’s is under federal investigation over possible abuses of the Temporary Foreign Worker program at a franchise outlet in B.C.

“The pattern is that the temporary foreign workers are getting more shifts and that the Canadians are getting less,” said employee Kalen Christ, a McDonald’s “team leader” who has worked at the Victoria location for four years.

As a result of Go Public’s inquiries, the government has suspended all pending foreign worker permits for the three McDonald’s locations owned by franchisee Glen Bishop and has blacklisted his franchise from using the program, pending the outcome of the probe.

“Many, many people have been complaining about it,” said Christ.

Employment Minister Jason Kenney’s office said investigators now want to hear from any other affected employees or job applicants, from any McDonald’s outlets in Canada.

The government probe began after Christ told Go Public the fast food outlet is bringing in Filipino workers while cutting local staffers’ hours and turning away dozens of seemingly qualified Canadians seeking jobs.

“I saw them walk in and apply. I saw the resumés, and there were lots,” said Christ. He said he has seen 50 resumés submitted by local applicants at the Pandora Avenue franchise in recent months.

“It’s sad. Some of them would have university on their resumé, and they weren’t being hired, even at McDonald’s.”

He said a manager told staff the store wasn’t hiring because up to nine new Filipino workers were coming, who still haven’t arrived.

“I don’t understand how they could even use an excuse like that,” said Christ.

Filipinos in, Canadian out

McDonald’s confirmed the three Victoria locations have 26 temporary foreign workers on staff. Christ said that out of 11 of those who work at his store, seven came in recent weeks.

Tim Turcot is a 21-year-old local resident who said he applied to work there during the same period. He wasn’t hired, despite his four years of restaurant experience.

“I don’t know why they didn’t hire me. I told them I am available 24/7 and just never got the job,” said Turcot.

He said he’s dropped off 60-odd resumés at several McDonald’s locations on Vancouver Island in the last two years. He’s since found work at another restaurant.

When asked what it was like being shut out of McDonald’s during a time of 14 per cent youth unemployment, he said, “It’s not fun. Why not give us [Canadian applicants] a chance, instead of people who don’t actually live here yet?”

Federal rules say employers can’t hire even one temporary foreign worker if there is a qualified Canadian available for the job.

“It feels like laws are being broken here. And the fact they can get away with it — and it takes someone [junior] like me to come out and say something — is kind of horrifying,” said Christ.

(Read the full article at CBC)

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Tony Blair ‘was fully aware’ of CIA kidnap and torture program

RT: April 6, 2014

Former British PM Tony Blair was fully informed “every step of the way” about details of the CIA’s secret interrogation program, developed in the wake of the September 11 attacks, and “knew about everything” including torture, states a new report.

Blair and then-foreign secretary Jack Straw were repeatedly briefed by MI6 and took an ‘active interest’ in the program, according to an anonymous security source who spoke to the Telegraph.

The source said it was laughable to suggest any approval for UK security service cooperation with the CIA program was only approved by Straw.

“The politicians took a very active interest indeed. They wanted to know everything. The Americans passed over the legal opinions saying that this was now ‘legal,’ and our politicians were aware of what was going on at the highest possible level,” the source said.

“The politicians knew in detail about everything – the torture and the rendition. They could have said [to M16] ‘stop it, do not get involved’, but at no time did they,” they added, appearing to contradict numerous previous statements made by UK officials.

After 9/11, the CIA launched its rendition program, involving global kidnap, detention and torture operations. It emerged at the beginning of 2013 that at least 54 countries – many European – had acted in cooperation with the US and several of them were European.

(Read the full article at RT)

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Fort Hood Shooter Was On Psychiatric Drugs & Was Denied Leave On Day Of Attack

The man at Fort Hood who killed three and wounded 16 of his fellow soldiers last week had requested leave shortly before the shooting rampage.

After a meeting where he had requested a leave to attend to personal matters, he was clearly agitated and disrespectful when his request was denied, reports the New York Times:

Fort Hood officials and a spokesman for Army investigators declined to comment on Friday about the meeting and its role in the shooting, but they confirmed in an afternoon news conference that the specialist,[] became angry with soldiers from his unit before the attack. Two of those he killed were in his unit, a transportation battalion of the 13th Sustainment Command. Officials stressed that they had still not established a clear motive.

But in an interview with a local Mississippi television station, Theodis Westbrook, of Smithdale, Miss., the father of Sgt. Jonathan Westbrook, who was wounded in the attack, said he was told that a soldier came to Fort Hood’s personnel office, where Sergeant Westbrook worked, to get a leave form. When one of the soldiers told the man to come back the next day to pick that form up, the man left, then returned with a gun and opened fire.

Lt. Gen. Mark A. Milley has acknowledged that the attacker was taking psychiatric medication before the shooting. Infowars reports:

“Was he on any sort of medications….SSRI’s, anti-depressants, anything of that nature,” an Infowars reporter asked Milley, to which the General responded, “He was on medications that’s correct.”

In a subsequent report, officials also admitted that Lopez had been prescribed Ambien, a sleeping pill associated with accidents and aggressive outbursts.
[…]
As the website ,SSRI Stories profusely documents, there are literally hundreds of examples of mass shootings, murders and other violent episodes that have been committed by individuals on psychiatric drugs over the past three decades. The number of cases is staggering, but the media has completely failed to generate a national conversation about the issue due to its obsession with exploiting mass shootings to demonize the second amendment.

A $65 million study produced three research papers which were published by The Journal of the American Medical Association Psychiatry. The study found that suicide rates for soldiers who served in Iraq and Afghanistan more than doubled from 2004 to 2009 to more than 30-per-100,000, the trend among those who never deployed nearly tripled to between 25- and 30-per-100,000. USA Today reports:

Suicide rates soared among soldiers who went to war in Iraq and Afghanistan and those who never left the United States, according to the largest study ever conducted on suicide in the military.
[…]
The research tracked soldier records through the end of 2009. But suicides in the Army continued to rise thereafter, reaching a record high in 2012 before dipping last year.

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