Editorial:Akron Beacon Journal, Akron, Ohio, on the economy

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Posted on 30th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Oct. 26, 2008

The bottom has fallen out of the housing market. The financial market is in turmoil. Jobs, home values and retirement funds are melting away. Who was keeping tabs on criminal conduct?

According to a New York Times report last week, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is not, and has not been since September 2001, in a position to pursue the types of crimes that has the economy reeling.

In the wake of 9/11, the immediate concern was to protect the nation against domestic attacks. To that end, the Justice Department gutted the FBI’s criminal investigations division, shifting resources and agents to terrorism and intelligence work.

If the focus was understandable then, it has since become a serious threat to the integrity of the financial system. …

The White House ignored repeated warnings about the extent of mortgage fraud and denied requests for funds to hire more crime investigators. The FBI could hire one new agent for its criminal division in the 2007 budget cycle, the report indicated. The financial collapse argues the need to uncover the scope of criminal conduct and to prosecute the culpable. The single-minded pursuit of terrorism, to the neglect of financial crimes, has proved costly, posing, in its own way, a threat to the nation’s security.

___

On the Net:

http://www.ohio.com/editorial/opinions/33321569.html

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

For Depression survivors, meltdown means reminder

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Posted on 29th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/29/2008

By MEGAN K. SCOTT
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) _ The words have been repeated over and over: This is the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

For those who lived through that turbulent time, the statement sparks more than a history lesson. They experienced the bank closures, the bread lines and the sudden disappearance of available work.

What was life like for them? And what are their fears about what is to come? The Associated Press interviewed several people who lived through the Depression to find out how bad things can get — and appreciate our relative affluence today.

Here are their stories, edited from their own words:

EATING IN SOUP KITCHENS

NAME: Esther Pulliam-Torres, 79, New York

HER STORY: I was born in Des Moines, Iowa. When I first came to New York people were so surprised that black people lived in Iowa. My mother was a domestic. I never knew my father.

When I was younger, I remember going to the soup kitchen and I had a red bucket and I would go and they would fill my bucket with soup and I would take it home. I remember we ate a lot of cornmeal, cornmeal pancakes, cornmeal bread. I remember bread was cheap.

I have often thought back to the time when I was in the line with that red bucket because I really loved that red bucket.

As a senior, I’m on the opposite end now. On the one end, I was a child. On the other end, I’m an adult. At that time, I didn’t know anything. Now I do.

I’m worried because in terms of my Social Security, what’s going to happen if they decide to change the way we get it? That’s something I really depend on. I earned it. I worked hard for it.

BEGGING AND BANK FAILURES

NAME: Fran Marshall, 90, Upper Arlington, Ohio

HER STORY: The Depression was really, really bad in 1933. Of course it started in 1929. Then it got worse and worse. My father was a lawyer for two banks in New York. During the Depression, the two banks started to fail. He was so upset over it, he went into a mental depression and he never got out of it. It was a sad thing. He died in a mental institution.

People were trying to get their money out. The banks finally closed and that was the end of it. There was no more money. The government didn’t bail out people back then.

I remember the long lines of people standing in line for bread or soup. They were hungry. There were a lot more people begging back then. We haven’t gotten to that yet. God help us if we do.

We would feed people who came to the door asking for food. My mother would sit them down on the back porch and always fed them. She would give them eggs and toast. She never turned anyone away. My mother was good with money and because my father was a lawyer at one time, his law partner gave her $10 a week, when my father was ill.

In 1937 or 38, we had to move out of our brick house and across the street. We lived in an apartment upstairs and had to look down to the home we had once owned. That was tough.

I don’t worry about bread lines and bank closures coming back. I really don’t think it can get that bad. Look at the way the government has stepped in and the government didn’t step in like that way back during the Depression.

I think it’s safer today. But it’s scary. The whole thing.

TENT CITIES AND BREAD LINES

NAME: Philip Flash, 90, of Mercer Island, Wash.

HIS STORY: I grew up in Seattle. My dad was a tailor — he had a little shop. My mother helped dad in the store.

It was very, very hard, although I must admit that my sister and I never missed a meal. We lived in an apartment. I slept in the dining room. My sister in the living room and my parents in the bedroom.

One of the significant things that I can recall during the Depression was tent city down on the waterfront. People lived in shacks. There were hundreds of them out there.

Things were relatively inexpensive, but people just didn’t have any money. Many jobs just kind of disintegrated. If people had a source of income, they were very, very fortunate. They had bread lines, where you could, if you were down and out, get a meal.

One day my father said that there were some jobs in the sawmills. He left the store and never went back. My mother operated it for a couple of years. Things got worse and she had to give it up. I guess it just wasn’t paying for itself.

I’m real concerned about what’s going on today. We’ll come out of this, but it might take some time. I might not even see the day when it gets back to normal because I don’t know long it will take.

FARMING AND HARDSHIP

NAME: Louise McGee, 90, of Tiffin, Ohio

HER STORY: We lived on a farm and of course we didn’t have it too awful because dad raised a lot of our food. You only had one potato and a few vegetables. There were five of us girls. We worked out in the field the same as the boys. He farmed 80 acres.

One year we had to kill all the little pigs and burn the corn because there was a disease.

My parents didn’t have any money. Period. Not back in that time. The grain they could sell, you didn’t hardly get anything for it. Dad took our weeds and made flour. He took corn and had it ground and we had cornmeal.

I worked for other people who needed my help when I got older. The women had babies. I would go and work for them. You were lucky if you got three or four dollars a week. I gave that to my family.

In 1938, I got married to a farmer. It was kind of rough the first couple of years. In 1940, he joined the Army.

If something doesn’t straighten out, we’ll have another hard Depression like we had back then.

There are going to be a lot of people out of work and government is going to have to furnish food for them. There’ll be a lot more stealing and stuff then there was back then.

I’m on Social Security and I moved in with my son and his wife. I have got it pretty good right now. But when you go through it once, you do kind of wonder.

OUT OF WORK

NAME: Marty Evans, 80, Boca Raton, Fla.

HIS STORY: I was born in Philadelphia. My father owned a grocery store. That didn’t last once things got really tough. He allowed people to buy on credit. They couldn’t pay. He lost that business.

We moved to New York and he worked in the food business. Then we moved back to Philadelphia. My father borrowed some money, bought a truck and went around collecting batteries and tires and selling the m.

I remember things being really tight. I remember not being able to get that ice cream cone I wanted so badly from time to time. I remember being taught to be very careful with my clothes. I remember my mother having to go to work. She was a salesperson in department stores, which left me in charge of my younger brother.

I don’t think it’s going to get to the point where it was back then. You know anything is possible, but as clumsy as the powers that be are, at least they are doing something today that they didn’t do in ‘29.

I’m not as free as I was two years ago. I clip coupons now out of the newspaper. My wife is recovering from a stroke; even with the insurance, medical bills are murder. Medication is another story.

If I had to, absolutely I would go back to work. But then who the heck is going to hire me?

CHILI MAC FOR 20 CENTS

NAME: George Eckhoff, 95, Seattle

HIS STORY: It was bad. We had to dig up rent money and go around to the meat market and get a soup bone for a dime maybe to make up some soup and scrounge up some vegetables. I remember seeing lines of people trying to get their money out of the bank. And of course the bread lines.

My dad was out of work. I delivered telegrams. That helped quite a bit.

We had clothing and shoes — food was the hard part. I used to get a tip now and then. I could get my own meals when I was working. I could get a chili mac and a nice piece of French bread for 20 cents.

I had an idea this was coming on. I read the news. They are overbuilding — they did that before the Depression. A lot of buildings didn’t get finished.

I don’t know how people will make it this time. Everything is up so high. We could get food pretty cheap. You can’t do that now.

WILL THERE BE ANYTHING LEFT?

NAME: Ruth Swan, 92, Washington, D.C.

HER STORY: The day that the crash came, I lived in a coal mining town in Pennsylvania. My dad was in the real estate business, but he also had a lot of stocks on margin (borrowing money from a broker to buy stock). I remember he was home all day long on the telephone. I can still see him sitting at the telephone.

My dad tried to find other real estate activity in the area but was not successful. Nobody was buying and nobody was selling. My dad was lucky. He came from a big family. He was one of 12 children and he borrowed money to keep us going.

So we did not starve, we were not deprived, but it was a difficult time I’m sure for my mother and father.

He had a driver take him to New York up and down all the real estate places and he finally got a job. So the year that I graduated college in 1937, he moved the whole family plus the maid to New York City.

It’s not cheap living here (in a senior community). But what can I do? I just want to be able to continue to pay for what I have to pay for while I’m alive, and of course, I save money for the kids, but who knows if there is going to be anything left?


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Hunt for retirement jobs stepped up in bad economy

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Posted on 29th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/29/2008
By DAVE CARPENTER/AP Business Writer

CHICAGO (AP) _ It sounds like an oxymoron, but the concept of working in retirement is fast becoming the norm for many older Americans — forced by dwindling financial resources and a recessionary economy to stay in or return to the job market.

Longer lifespans and a desire to remain productive and connected already had begun pushing the number of older workers higher. Now the financial crisis is accelerating interest in working later, with career sites and organizations for seniors and older workers reporting a surge in job-hunting efforts.

Sixty-three-year-old Marian Austin of Alfred, Maine, is among those who need to work again just to make ends meet in retirement. In this economy, her late ex-husband’s Social Security isn’t nearly enough.

“It’s been difficult,” said the former gift shop owner and retail manager, who retired two years ago. “I don’t know how I will pay for fuel oil for heating. I can’t walk into a grocery store and buy what I want. I don’t look forward to Christmas because I can’t buy gifts this year.”

AARP, the nation’s largest advocacy group for older Americans, saw dramatic evidence of the trend in September when more than 2,000 people attended its annual job fair in Washington, D.C., more than double the previous year’s attendance. The job-seekers included many who had been recently laid off and retirees worried about the economy and the pressure on their limited resources.

“We’ve definitely seen an increase in the sense of urgency in terms of jobs,” said Deborah Russell, the organization’s director of work force issues.

A market for retirement jobs essentially emerged a decade or so ago. Now postings for those at or approaching retirement age are an important and growing phenomenon in the labor market, as evidenced by online job boards that include RetirementJobs.com, RetireeWorkforce.com and Seniors4Hire.org, which cater to not just retirees but anyone 50 and older.

Demand for such resources is only likely to grow with the graying of the work force expected to continue. Workers age 65 and over are expected to account for 6.1 percent of the labor force by 2016, up sharply from 3.6 percent in 2006, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“For decades we’ve been making it easier for people to get out of the labor market,” said Marc Freedman, CEO of Civic Ventures, which focuses on helping older baby boomers launch second careers involving social contribution. “Now there’s a growing need in the opposite direction.”

Despite the increased opportunities, seniors may find the job market for them is as tight as for everyone else in a struggling economy.

Going back to work part-time should help Austin get by, but getting hired for a worthwhile job in retail, merchandising or working with disabled people is proving tough. She wonders if age discrimination is a factor.

“A lot of these folks who are hiring are in their 20s or 30s and they think people in their 60s are ancient,” she said. “If it comes down between you, with a lot of experience, and a younger person, I feel they’re going to go with the younger person.”

One concern is that, despite their strengths, older workers often are perceived to resist training, dislike answering to younger bosses or have poor computer training, according to AARP’s Russell. Seniors need to assess their skills and seek out job-searching tips, particularly if they haven’t gone through the process in recent years, she said.

“The job market has changed,” Russell said. “Employers are accepting job applications online, they expect to see your resume online, interviewing has changed, so it’s important to keep up.”

AARP has a program that helps age 50-plus workers with job opportunities — its National Employer Team, which connects job-seekers with a wide variety of opportunities.

RetirementJobs, which lists more than 30,000 jobs across all 50 states, has seen a surge of retirees come to its site since the economy soured, with traffic doubling to 400,000 visitors a month between July and September.

“About four to six months ago we started seeing a significant new group of people, already retired, who needed to return to work,” said Bob Skladany, chief career counselor at RetirementJobs and an adviser to AARP on work-related issues.

On top of that, he said, the wave of layoffs this fall has been bringing in younger job-seekers from 50 to 53.

The good news is there are still plenty of jobs available for the 50-and-up work force, he said. Sectors that are hiring in significant numbers include health care and home health care, retail and hospitality, and customer service openings of all kinds exist, Skladany said.

On the plus side, mature workers appeal to many employers because they are seen as hard-working and more dependable and loyal than younger peers. That makes it much more common for companies to now hire people up to their mid-60s, according to Bob Hoberman, a partner at Holmdel, N.J.-based RW Consulting Group, which operates RetireeWorkforce.com.

Still, getting hired at 65 or over by a new firm can be challenging, he said. Employers may not want to hire older workers because of health concerns or other issues.

“I think companies certainly are looking to retain their own people over 65, and it’s not going to be unusual at all for people to work till age 70,” Hoberman said. “But whether they’re as willing to hire someone over 65 from the outside remains to be determined.”

___

On the Net:

www.aarp.org

www.retirementjobs.com

www.retireeworkforce.com

www.seniorsforhire.org

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

White House to banks: Start lending now

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Posted on 28th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/28/2008

WASHINGTON (AP) — An impatient White House prodded banks and other financial companies Tuesday to quit hoarding billions of dollars flowing into their vaults from Washington and start making more loans.

Hoping to thaw the credit freeze that has chilled the economy, the Bush administration sent banks an unmistakable message to put aside fears and open up loan windows for cash-starved businesses and consumers who have pulled back on spending.

While there are limits to Washington’s power to affect banks’ behavior, the White House decided it was time to use its bully pulpit.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Democrats, Republicans agree on something: anxiety

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Posted on 27th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/27/2008 2:50 PM


By HEATHER LALLEY


CHICAGO (AP) _ Victoria St. Gelais is panicky. Tami Brewster-Barnes feels the nerves in the pit of her stomach. Steven Valentine is losing sleep as his mood rises and falls with John McCain’s poll numbers.

Voters around the country, whether they support McCain or Barack Obama, say they are experiencing nail-biting, ulcer-inducing anxiety ahead of next week’s election and all that’s riding on it.

“I have kind of a general feeling of near panic on occasion,” says St. Gelais, a 48-year-old McCain supporter in Ormond Beach, Fla. “The thought of Obama winning right now is scaring me to death. … I’m just anxious and even a little depressed.”

St. Gelais, like many, says she’s not sleeping well, is watching Fox News nearly all day, and “lives on her computer,” following all of the polls and the latest news. If Obama wins, she’ll be devastated.

“I would equate it to a death,” she says.

Although polls favor Obama a week before the election, it’s not just Republicans getting the jitters. Democrats are on high alert after losing two close elections to President Bush in the last eight years.

Democratic blogger Cynthia Liu has dubbed it “Post-Traumatic Election Anxiety Disorder,” with hallmarks including restless Web surfing for election information, sleeplessness and making desperate calls to undecided voters.

“It’s a very high-stakes election,” says Liu, a writer in Los Angeles.

Nancy Molitor, a psychologist in Wilmette, Ill., says this is the most anxious she has seen her patients in 20 years of practice.

“Human beings, generally we do better in periods of calm, stability and certainty,” Molitor says.

And right now — with war, a historic election and a looming financial crisis — is most certainly not a time of calm. People are reporting trouble sleeping, edginess, irritability, and increased absences and distractions at work, Molitor says.

Add to that 24-hour cable news shows and near nonstop reporting, blogging and commenting online, and you’ve got a virtual stressfest for political junkies.

Elections generate so much stress because people vote out of a “very, very core place in their personalities,” says Lisa Miller, an associate professor of psychology and education at Columbia University Teachers College in New York.

“It has to do with their existential view of how the world works,” Miller says. “The fear is that a candidate who shares a different fundamental view of human nature is rattling.”

Plus, we project all of our hopes and fears onto a candidate to protect us and keep us safe, she says — so much so that the president becomes a “father figure.”

“It certainly makes sense that the uncertainty of a parental figure could be evocative,” she says.

Brewster-Barnes, a 40-year-old health-insurance company employee in Vancouver, Wash., wants to be able to tell her grandchildren that she voted for the first black president. But she also worries that Obama’s racial background might turn off other voters.

So she’s done all she could, including making phone calls on behalf of the campaign and donating to the cause even though money is tight.

“It was something I had to do,” she says.

The election is even affecting the timing of Ray Brun’s move. Currently, Brun and his family live in the swing state of New Hampshire, but they’re packed up and ready to move to Kentucky — after casting their votes for McCain, he says.

“I think our votes up here will be a little more influential,” says Brun, 29.

Voting early, talking to friends or donating money are all healthy, pro-active responses, says Gretchen Rubin, a New York-based writer whose book, “The Happiness Project,” comes out next year. Rubin spent a year testing every theory, study and self-help axiom on happiness that she could find.

“One thing I’ve learned from my study of happiness that is crazily effective is that you should act the way you want to feel,” Rubin says. “We really feel because of the way we act.”

When all else fails, she says, remember this: “No one’s trying to ruin the country. Everybody’s going to try to do their best.”

Kellie Brown knows that. But the 32-year-old mom and technical recruiter in Evergreen, Colo., desperately wants Obama to be the next president. Even the polls showing him in the lead are no solace.

“I hate hearing those polls because I feel like it gives people the false thought that they can just relax and maybe not go to vote,” Brown says.

What will happen when America wakes up on Nov. 5 and the results are in?

Valentine, a 19-year-old sophomore at Franciscan University of Steubenville in Ohio, says he doesn’t know what he’ll do if McCain loses.

“The College Republicans have given up countless hours of our time,” Valentine says. “I haven’t really prepared myself for (a McCain loss). I don’t know what I’m going to do when the election is over.”

As the race wraps up, Molitor is concerned about those who have the most emotional investment in the election.

“Some people are going to have to mourn this,” she says. “This is going to be like a loss. It’s going to be like a death. Some have been very passionate. It’s become their life. It’s become an obsession. And those people I’m worried about.”


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Foreclosure crisis vexes government

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Posted on 26th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/26/2008 12:18 PM


By ALAN ZIBEL
AP Business Writer


WASHINGTON (AP) _ Each day from July through September, more than 2,700 Americans lost their homes in foreclosure.

That number, up from 1,200 a day a year ago, is a sign that the mortgage industry and government programs have done little to help troubled homeowners.

The mortgage market’s troubles have proved to be far more serious and intractable than most in government or the private sector had predicted a year ago.

“We are behind the curve. We are falling behind,” Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. told a Senate hearing Thursday. “There has been some progress, but it’s not been enough, and we need to act. And we need to act quickly, and we need to act dramatically to have more wide-scale, systematic (loan) modifications….”

More than 4 million homeowners with a mortgage were at least one month behind on their payments at the end of June, according to the latest data from the Mortgage Bankers Association, and a record 500,000 had entered the foreclosure process.

So why is the foreclosure crisis so hard to fix?

There are five main reasons:

— Crashing home prices:

A massive speculative bubble in housing prices caused millions of Americans to think of their homes as an investment, rather than a place to live.

Now prices are plummeting, especially in once-sizzling markets like California, Florida and Nevada. And the bleeding might not stop until the end of next year.

The median home price in the U.S. dropped 9 percent in September from a year ago to $191,600, and is down 17 percent from the peak in July 2006, the National Association of Realtors said Friday.

Already, 23 percent of homeowners with a mortgage owe more on their loans than their homes are worth, and that figure is expected to rise to 28 percent by this time next year, according to Moody’s Economy.com.

While the majority of homeowners will continue to make their payments and wait for values to recover, some will mail their keys to their lender and walk away, leaving the lender with no choice but to foreclose.

Sophie Lapointe, a mortgage broker and owner of Five Star Mortgage in Las Vegas, has found there’s little that can be done to help people who owe more than their homes are worth. “The biggest problem is negative equity,” she said.

When homeowners in that position ask her about refinancing, Lapointe tells them to contact their current lender and ask about a loan modification because she already knows no new lender will give them a loan.

Loan modifications vary depending on many conditions, but can include deferring payments, allowing partial payments, lowering the interest rate and lowering the principal balance.

— Investor speculation:

Plunging prices have had even more impact on investors than on homeowners because investors have less emotional attachment to a house. They’re even more likely to walk away, especially if they’ve put little money into a property.

Investors purchased one of every five homes last year, and almost one of every three when the market peaked in 2005, according to the Realtors trade group.

They flocked to hot markets like California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, as television shows such as A&E;’s popular reality series “Flip This House” touted the easy money that could be made buying and selling homes.

They took advantage of risky loan products that didn’t require down payments or proof of income. Other loans allowed the borrower to pay only the interest on the loan, or even less, and none of the principal for a certain time.

Now, more than 30 percent of properties in the foreclosure process are owned by someone with a different address, indicating the home is likely owned by an investor, according to foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc.

Government programs to help homeowners are specifically designed not to help such investors, though in reality it may be hard to weed them out.

— Complex investments:

Traditionally, lenders evaluated borrowers carefully because they held onto the mortgages for the life of the loan. That process started to change in the late 1980s, as Wall Street found new ways to package the loans into securities to sell to investors.

Investors were attracted to these new mortgage-backed securities because they paid better returns than government bonds.

At the beginning of this decade, the Federal Reserve started cutting interest rates to historic lows. So investors poured money into the U.S. mortgage market, particularly into securities made up of high-interest mortgages made to borrowers with poor credit records.

The high-interest, risky mortgages, called “subprime,” boomed, from $160 billion in new loans in 2001 to more than $600 billion in both 2005 and 2006, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication.

Lenders stopped worrying about the creditworthiness of borrowers and offered them ever-riskier mortgages. Most of those loans were made by commission-driven mortgage brokers, who had nothing to lose if the mortgage went bad because it had been resold.

“By the time it defaults, it’s somebody else’s headache,” said Barry Ritholtz, CEO of research firm FusionIQ.

When mortgages are packaged into securities, borrowers’ monthly payments are divided up and sent to thousands of investors around the world. With so many owners, helping troubled borrowers is tougher. Many of these investors have been reluctant to agree to drastic loan modifications, such as reducing the principal balance, because they don’t want to take a big loss.

“We and others have gone to these investors, and they’re just not having it,” said Evan Wagner, spokesman for Pasadena, Calif.-based IndyMac Federal Bank, which has been run by the FDIC since July. “They don’t want to take more losses than they have to.” Without such modifications, many homeowners can’t avoid foreclosure.

Democrats on Capitol Hill are frustrated.

On Friday, six House Democrats, including Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., accused hedge fund investors in a letter of blocking loan modifications and called them to a hearing on the issue next month.

“For the hedge fund industry, which has flourished for much of the past decade, to take steps so actively in opposition to what is currently in the national economic interest is deeply troubling,” they wrote.

— Job losses:

The No. 1 reason people fall behind on their mortgage is loss of a job, or some source of income, perhaps from a divorce or death of a spouse. If a borrower is unemployed, lenders don’t have many options but foreclosure.

Two years ago, about 36 percent of mortgage delinquencies were caused by loss of income or unemployment, according to research by mortgage finance company Freddie Mac. But that number has risen to 45 percent this year as the unemployment rate has ticked up to a five-year high of 6.1 percent.

Jon Falen, 33, put his four-bedroom house in Olathe, Kan., with high-end appliances, granite kitchen countertops and a landscaped lot, on the market more than two years ago after health problems forced him to leave his job as an air traffic controller.

Falen and his wife, now delinquent on their two home loans, are finally scheduled to sell their house next month.

But there’s a big catch: The buyer has agreed to pay only $490,000, which is $70,000 less than what the couple paid for it in 2002.

Making matters worse, Falen and his wife owe $675,000 to two lenders because they used their home equity — which soared during the housing boom — to pay off student loans and remodeling expenses.

Though Falen and his family seem to have avoided becoming another foreclosure statistic by cashing out on retirement plans and dipping deeply into savings, he is chastened by the drawn-out experience.

“Any debt right now scares me to death,” he sai d.

— Falling behind again:

It’s hard to fix something that keeps breaking. Roughly one-third of all subprime loans modified in the third quarter of last year were delinquent again within 10 months, according to a Credit Suisse report released this month.

Maria Martinez, 57, an administrative worker at the county jail in Stockton, Calif., is typical of homeowners who have gotten help, but not enough. She is three months behind on her mortgage, even after receiving a loan modification earlier this year.

Though Martinez bought the house more than a decade ago for only $76,000, she now owes about $230,000 because she refinanced her home loan several times.

“I was trying to borrow some money to pay some bills,” said Martinez, who is on leave from her job this month after being diagnosed with cancer. “I didn’t really think…that I would get into a bind like this.”

Until the summer, she was paying an interest rate of about 8.5 percent on her mortgage. The modification lowered that amount to 7.75 percent.

If she had been given a more generous loan modification, she might be in a better situation. But most efforts to help homeowners have been slow and weak.

— So what has and should be done?

The scale of the mortgage crisis became clear in July 2007 when Countrywide Financial, then the nation’s largest mortgage lender, reported an unexpected surge in defaults in high-quality mortgages.

Three months later, the Bush administration announced a new mortgage industry coalition — dubbed the Hope Now alliance. The coalition had an “aggressive plan to reach more homeowners and help them find a way to stay in their homes,” Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said at the time.

The Hope Now group says the industry has modified 765,000 loans since last July, and put 1.5 million borrowers on temporary repayment plans. There are no data on how many of those homeowners have fallen behind again.

Faith Schwartz, the coalition’s executive director, said the effort was never meant to be the only solution to the foreclosure crisis. She says there “has been a tremendous effort” on the industry’s part, noting that 1.9 million households have received letters urging them to call a housing counselor.

Industry and government responses have also drawn fire from consumer advocates for being too slow and too narrow.

The Federal Housing Administration, a government agency that backs loans to borrowers with weak credit, says it has helped about 400,000 borrowers refinance over the past year, though only about 1 percent were behind on their loans.

This month, the FHA started the “Hope for Homeowners” program, included in legislation passed over the summer by Congress. It is designed to let another 400,000 troubled homeowners swap their mortgages for traditional 30-year fixed rate mortgages , but only if lenders agree to reduce the value of a loan and take a loss.

But there are still questions about how eager lenders will be to participate.

Faced with public outrage that they passed a $700 billion plan to rescue the financial industry, politicians in Washington are going to keep trying to find ways to fix the foreclosure crisis. One promising approach came this month when 11 states entered into a more than $8 billion settlement with Countrywide Financial and its new parent Bank of America Corp.

The settlement, which goes into effect Dec. 1. is projected to help an estimated 400,000 Countrywide borrowers by allowing them to replace risky loans with ones at substantially lower interest rates.

And in Washington, the FDIC’s Bair has proposed a plan in which the government would provide guarantees for mortgages that have been reworked by banks, lowering payments to more affordable levels.

All eyes now are on Bair, Paulson and other top officials to see if the government can craft a plan that gets at the heart of the global financial meltdown — the U.S. foreclosure crisis.

____

AP Business Writer Daniel Wagner contributed to this report.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

www.wis-law.com


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

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Alaska’s Gas Pipeline: Pipe Dream?

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Posted on 25th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/25/2008 12:17 PM


By JUSTIN PRITCHARD and GARANCE BURK

Associated Press Writers

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) _ Gov. Sarah Palin’s signature accomplishment — a contract to build a 1,715-mile pipeline to bring natural gas from Alaska to the Lower 48 — emerged from a flawed bidding process that narrowed the field to a company with ties to her administration, an Associated Press investigation shows.

Beginning at the Republican National Convention in August, the McCain-Palin ticket has touted the pipeline as an example of how it would help America achieve energy independence.

Despite Palin’s boast of a smart and fair bidding process, the AP found that her team crafted terms that favored only a few independent pipeline companies and ultimately benefited the winner, TransCanada Corp.

And contrary to the ballyhoo, there’s no guarantee the pipeline will ever be built; at a minimum, any project is years away, as TransCanada must first overcome major financial and regulatory hurdles.

In interviews and a review of records, the AP found:

—Instead of creating a process that would attract many potential builders, Palin slanted the terms away from an important group — the global energy giants that own the rights to the gas.

—Despite promises and legal guidance not to talk directly with potential bidders, Palin had meetings or phone calls with nearly every major candidate, including TransCanada.

—The leader of Palin’s pipeline team had been a partner at a lobbying firm where she worked on behalf of a TransCanada subsidiary. Also, that woman’s former business partner at the lobbying firm was TransCanada’s lead private lobbyist on the pipeline deal. Plus, a former TransCanada executive served as an outside consultant to Palin’s pipeline team.

—Under a different set of rules four years earlier, TransCanada had offered to build the pipeline without a state subsidy; under Palin, the company could receive a maximum $500 million.

“Governor Palin held firmly to her fundamental belief that Alaska could best serve Alaskans and the nation’s interests by pursuing a competitive approach to building a natural gas pipeline,” said McCain-Palin spokesman Taylor Griffin. “There was an open and transparent process that subjected the decision to extensive public scrutiny and due diligence.”

There were never more than a few players that could execute such a complex undertaking — at least a million tons of steel stretching across some of Earth’s most hostile and remote terrain.

TransCanada estimates it will cost $26 billion; Palin’s consultants estimate nearly $40 billion.

The pipeline would run from Alaska’s North Slope to Alberta in Canada; secondary lines would take the gas to various points in the United States and Canada.

Building such a pipeline had been a dream for decades. The rising cost and demand for energy injected new urgency into the proposal.

When Palin was elected governor two years ago, she vowed to take on Exxon Mobil Corp., ConocoPhillips and BP, the multinational energy companies that long dominated the state’s biggest industry.

Palin ousted fellow Republican Gov. Frank Murkowski, who negotiated a secret pipeline deal with the “Big Three” energy companies. That deal went nowhere.

The new governor tackled the pipeline issue with gusto, meeting with representatives from all sides and assembling her own team of experts to draw up terms.

Palin invited bidders to submit applications and offered the multimillion-dollar subsidy. Members of her team say that without the incentive, it might not have received any bids for the risky undertaking.

Palin’s team was led by Marty Rutherford, a widely respected energy specialist and veteran of state government. Rutherford solidified her status when, in 2005, she joined an exodus of Department of Natural Resources staff who felt Murkowski was selling out to the oil giants.

What the Palin administration neglected to mention in its announcement of Rutherford’s appointment was that in 2003, Rutherford left public service and worked for 10 months at the Anchorage-based Jade North lobbying firm. There she did $40,200 worth of work for Foothills Pipe Lines Alaska, Inc., a subsidiary of TransCanada.

Foothills Pipe Lines Alaska Inc. paid Rutherford for expertise on topics including state legislation and funding related to gas commercialization, according to her 2003 lobbyist registration statement.

Palin has said she wasn’t bothered by that past work because it had occurred several years before. But Rutherford wouldn’t have passed her new boss’ own standards: Under ethics reforms the governor pushed through, Rutherford would have had to wait a year to jump from government service to a lobbying firm.

Rutherford also has downplayed her work for Foothills.

“I did a couple of projects for them, small projects,” she told a state Senate committee examining the TransCanada bid earlier this year. While a partner, Rutherford said, she “realized that my heart was not in the private sector, it was in the public sector.”

At one point, Palin’s pipeline team debated Rutherford’s role, but concluded there was no problem, said Revenue Department Commissioner Pat Galvin, another team member.

Patricia Bielawski, Rutherford’s former partner at Jade North, spent last summer in Juneau, the state capital, serving as TransCanada’s lead private lobbyist. While the Legislature debated — and ultimately approved — the TransCanada deal, Bielawski met with lawmakers and sat in on the public proceedings, several legislators said.

Bielawski told AP that Rutherford never directly lobbied the Legislature for Foothills, and that Rutherford broke no rules.

But others say it’s a legitimate question.

“I’m not saying someone’s getting paid off for a sweetheart contract, but it’s very hard to ignore that this is your former partner and your former client standing there before you,” said Republican Sen. Lyda Green, a Palin critic who in August voted against awarding TransCanada the license.

Tony Palmer, the TransCanada vice president who leads the company’s Alaska gas pipeline effort, rejects the suggestion that his company benefited.

“We have gained clearly no advantage from anything that Ms. Rutherford did for Foothills some five years ago on a very much unrelated topic,” he said.

Rutherford did not respond to interview requests. But McCain-Palin spokesman Griffin said Rutherford “had no decision-making role or authority,” and contended that such matters were handled by others on the Palin pipeline team.

TransCanada also had a connection to the team hired by the Palin administration to analyze the bid. Patrick Anderson, a former TransCanada executive, served as an outside consultant.

In January 2007, Palin spoke the first of at least two times to Vice President Dick Cheney, the Bush administration’s point person on energy issues, according to calendars obtained by the AP. Cheney’s staff pressed the Palin administration to draw in the energy companies, said current and former state officials involved in those discussions.

As the governor’s approach unfolded in the spring of 2007, Palin said she saw problems if the firms that own the gas also owned the pipeline. They could manipulate the market or charge prohibitive fees to smaller exploration firms, discouraging competition.

Several important requirements in the legislation were unpalatable to the big oil companies. In the talks under Murkowski, the firms asked that the rates for the gas production tax and royalties be fixed for 45 years; Palin refused to consider setting rates for that long.

Under her process, pipeline firms had an advantage because they simply pass alo ng taxes paid by oil and gas producers.

Oil company officials warned lawmakers they wouldn’t participate under those terms. Still, in a near unanimous vote, the Legislature passed the Alaska Gasline Inducement Act in May 2007, as generally written by Palin’s pipeline team.

Once the state issued its request for proposals on July 2, 2007, the level of communication between the government and potential bidders was supposed to decrease drastically. State lawyers advised public officials to keep their distance, and bidders were told to submit questions on a public Web site.

But Palin had conversations with executives at most of the major potential bidders during that period, according to her calendars, which indicate that the pipeline was the subject of the discussions, or that the conversations occurred immediately after a briefing with Palin’s pipeline team.

TransCanada’s Palmer described communication with state officials as nonexistent.

According to the governor’s official schedule, however, Palin called TransCanada President and CEO Hal Kvisle on Aug. 8, 2007. Palmer said the call was to clarify the bidding process.

Griffin said that in keeping with legal guidance, Palin never spoke in any of the meetings about the competitive bidding process.

By the Nov. 30 submission deadline, there were five applications. But the state disqualified four for failing to satisfy the bill’s requirements.

That left TransCanada.

The Canadian giant had been pursuing an Alaska pipeline since at least 2004, when the company negotiated a deal with Rutherford that the state ended up shelving. While the details remain confidential, six people familiar with the terms told the AP that TransCanada was willing to do the work then without the large state subsidy.

In testimony this July before the state Senate, Rutherford described the 2004 deal as presenting different trade-offs.

Others who reviewed the deal think much of the $500 million will be wasted money.

“Most definitely TransCanada got a sweetheart deal this time,” said Republican Sen. Bert Stedman, who voted against the TransCanada license. “Where else could you get a $500 million reimbursement when you don’t even have the financing to build the pipeline?”

___

Associated Press writer Brett J. Blackledge contributed to this report.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Editor’s Comment: Did oil companies put the cart before the horse when they built the transalaska oil pipeline? Oil was the high profit commodity they were interested in and gas was the expendable by product. Since drilling platforms went into production back in the 70’s, the arctic skies have been lit with the bright plumes of natural gas, flared to release pressure in the systems.

“According to the World Bank, about 100 billion cubic metres of natural gas are burned off or vented every year—the equivalent of all the annual gas consumption in England, France, and Germany combined. It is also an enormous waste of money. Gas flaring squanders about $31 billion in natural gas annually.”

“We should also not forget the human-health impacts of burning off unwanted and often unrefined gas in the atmosphere. Incomplete combustion from flaring can release many known carcinogens, such as benzene, toluene, xylene, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.”

The past few years Americans have been shocked with news of oil company profits, something that argumentatively might have gone towards reducing these unnecessary CO2 emissions, especially in light of the global warming crisis. For every light bulb you’ve replaced and every mile you’ve chosen not to drive, it is far from comforting to think of gas flares lighting the skies across the planet at cross purposes to reason. The oil industry is not subject to carbon emission tax systems.

This lack of foresight in the name of easy profit affects all of us who are left wondering what the energy future holds and what impact it may have.

On the web: http://www.straight.com/article-148407/gas-sector-has-carbon-emissions-burn








Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

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Market’s latest lurch down raises new uncertainty

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Posted on 24th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/24/2008 5:22 PM


By DAVE CARPENTER
AP Business Writer


CHICAGO (AP) _ The advice from financial experts has been painfully repetitive during weeks of decline in the markets: A bottom should be near. History says stocks always bounce back. Don’t sell now and miss the recovery.

But when panic selling washed over the markets again Friday, sending the Dow Jones industrial average down as much as 6 percent at one point, the pundits and money managers sounded less certain than ever about what comes next.

“There’s a debate right now, is the next major milestone in the Dow 5,000 or 10,000,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Jefferies & Co. “I think compelling arguments can be made on both sides.”

Many financial professionals, Hogan included, think the bad news is largely reflected in current stock prices: a global economic slowdown, a residential real estate recession, the credit market crunch and poor corporate earnings.

It already seemed that way when the Dow Jones industrial average plummeted 27 percent in the first eight trading days of this month to a 5½-year low of 7,882 during the session on Oct. 10.

But investor emotions remain a wild card in a shaky global economy. After climbing back near the 10,000 mark briefly last week, the Dow is sliding again and finished down 4 percent Friday at 8,379. As the market opened, the potential loss was feared to be much greater after some international markets were hammered by double-digit declines.

U.S. market analysts were at as much of a loss to estimate how much further the descent might go as they were to explain the latest drop.

“It just is something we haven’t seen in our lifetimes, so it’s hard to tell exactly where we are,” said Tom Forester, portfolio manager for the Forester Value Fund in Chicago.

“This seems more like panic selling than fundamentally based,” he said. But if the financial system remains troubled and every-day loans are tougher to get, he said, “then who knows? Maybe panic’s the right move.”

Investors’ fear is in evidence not just in the markets but in the faces of those who have lost tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in their retirement and other accounts this fall.

“Anxiety is running overtime,” according to Dr. Stephan Quentzel, chief of primary care psychiatry at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York.

The steady stock decline makes people feel more emotionally vulnerable and increasingly prone to bad market moves — usually ill-timed decisions to sell — to try to regain a sense of financial security, he said.

The tension shows in other forms, too.

Across from the New York Stock Exchange, artist Geoffrey Raymond set up a giant canvas Friday featuring the face of former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and invited passers-by to write their own messages on the painting.

One person wrote simply, “Greenspan is the devil.” Another wrote: “When things go too well, someone should get nervous.” Still another: “You’ve got to know when to fold.”

Steve Martin, a 55-year-old systems analyst standing nearby, said he has been too afraid to check his retirement savings balance during the crisis. He has his suspicions, though: “The 401(k)’s almost gone.”

That’s still not enough to make him consider shifting out of stocks, with his portfolio already down so heavily.

“I think I kind of missed that opportunity,” he said. “I figure at this point I’m just going to ride it out.”

Many experts continue to say holding on may be the best strategy left available.

When clients of Piedmont Investment Advisors have asked about shifting their funds from stocks to cash during the tumult, the Durham, N.C., managers at the firm have asked clients to remain calm, according to Dawn Alston Page, executive vice president and director of research.

“We’re pretty much of a mind that any broad-scale move to cash is much too late in the game,” she said. “You should definitely look forward to the future and look more for opportunities at this point.”

Morningstar Inc.’s director of personal finance, Christine Benz, also is among those advocating hanging in there, if not considering buying.

“I can’t say whether it’s the bottom or whether we’re even near the bottom,” she said. “But when it’s the bottom, there won’t be flashing lights and someone with a bullhorn saying it’s time to buy.”

Investors risk being caught off guard by a market rebound when they sit on cash investments. That’s because it takes time to reposition the money and get back in the market, and it’s easy to miss some of the market’s biggest days.

A lot of smart money is increasingly betting on a turnaround, and not just Warren Buffett, who has invested billions in the market in the past month.

“Some of the best (mutual fund) managers are saying they’re finding an awful lot to buy right now,” said Morningstar’s Benz.

The buying is being done by those with patience and a long-term view, since few have any confidence that the bottom has been reached as the world enters what many think will be a particularly painful recession.

“We’re not out saying this is the buy (market) of the century,” said Francis Kinniry, a principal in Vanguard Group’s investment strategy group. “But no matter what metric you use, even if we enter into a deep and long recession, the valuations still look much more favorable than they have certainly at any time in the last 12 to 18 months.”

Julie Murphy Casserly, a certified financial planner and president of JMC Wealth Management in Chicago, sees most of what’s going on in the market this month as fear-based, since stocks are trading for barely what their companies are worth in cash.

“We just have to let people’s fear shake out and let people start to get their footing underneath them,” said Casserly, author of The Emotion Behind Money. “I think we will have a little bit more of this volatile market because people are not there yet.”

___

Associated Press reporter Samantha Gross in New York contributed to this report.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

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HealthSouth, UBS settle lawsuit

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Posted on 24th October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/23/2008 9:56 PM

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) _ HealthSouth Corp. said Thursday it reached agreement with UBS AG settling litigation filed by shareholders who claimed the Swiss investment bank was aware of a $2.7 billion fraudulent accounting scheme involving more than a dozen HealthSouth executives.

Under the settlement, HealthSouth will receive $100 million in cash and be released of all claims by UBS, including a judgment in favor of UBS currently on appeal before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

HealthSouth shareholders and bondholders alleged in a civil lawsuit that former HealthSouth Chief Executive Richard Scrushy, UBS and accountant Ernst & Young aided the fraud at HealthSouth from 1996 through 2002.

HealthSouth said the settlement announced Thursday relates only to UBS and does not affect the claims against Scrushy, other defendants, or Ernst & Young.

UBS representatives attended several HealthSouth board meetings during the time of the accounting fraud and UBS managed stock and bond offerings for HealthSouth during that period.

UBS has denied any knowledge that fraudulent activity was taking place. Stockholders who initiated the lawsuits in 2003 and 2004 claimed UBS and accountant firm Ernst & Young knew the company’s income was being overstated.

The case was brought by HealthSouth and derivative stockholders, or shareholders suing on behalf of the company.

HealthSouth said in its statement Thursday that under the agreement it will pay reasonable fees of the derivative plaintiffs’ attorneys, to be approved by the court.

HealthSouth will also pay 25 percent of the net proceeds to plaintiffs in the federal securities litigation. The balance will be used by HealthSouth to reduce long-term debt.

“This settlement represents another milestone in HealthSouth’s recovery of damages sustained by the company under prior management,” said John Whittington, HealthSouth’s executive vice president, general counsel and corporate secretary.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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Sen. seeks info from SEC on Bear Stearns deal

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Posted on 23rd October 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 10/22/2008 11:39 PM

By MARCY GORDON
AP Business Writer


WASHINGTON (AP) _ A key senator is examining whether a top Securities and Exchange Commission official gave sensitive information to a former colleague working at JPMorgan Chase & Co. when the bank was considering whether to buy Bear Stearns.

Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, has asked the SEC for information concerning its investigations of investment bank Bear Stearns & Cos., which nearly collapsed into bankruptcy in March and was purchased by JPMorgan Chase with a $29 billion federal backstop.

Grassley, in a letter to SEC Chairman Christopher Cox dated Tuesday, also requested records of communications between SEC staff and representatives of JPMorgan Chase concerning the investigations.

Grassley’s interest was first reported by The Washington Post in Wednesday’s editions.

He said his inquiry was prompted by an anonymous tip alleging that SEC Enforcement Director Linda Thomsen provided information about the agency’s investigation of Bear Stearns around March to JPMorgan Chase’s general counsel, Stephen Cutler. Cutler was Thomsen’s predecessor as enforcement director, and the two worked together on the prosecution of a number of big companies embroiled in corporate scandals.

According to the anonymous complaint on Oct. 7, the information Cutler obtained from Thomsen could have enabled JPMorgan Chase to make a lower bid for Bear Stearns.

“Such conduct would reinforce the appearance that (SEC) enforcement decisions, and disclosures of information about them, are sometimes based not on the merits but rather on access to senior officials by influential representatives of power brokers on Wall Street,” Grassley said in his letter to Cox.

SEC spokesman Kevin Callahan declined to comment Wednesday.

Joseph Evangelisti, a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, said allegations that officials of the bank had any improper communications with the SEC “are wholly untrue.”

In March, the agency didn’t rule out legal action over potentially misleading comments about Bear Stearns’ financial health made days before JPMorgan Chase arranged to buy the investment bank.

The SEC enforcement division said its lawyers would “favorably” factor in the circumstances of the Bear Stearns takeover in deciding whether to act against its new owner. The division wrote a letter to JPMorgan Chase that discussed “investigations and potential future inquiries into conduct and statements by Bear Stearns” before the announcement of the takeover, the SEC said in March.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
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