News Focus
News Focus
Followers 68
Posts 2027
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 09/27/2011

Re: Stikeyoda post# 20328

Thursday, 12/21/2017 8:09:19 PM

Thursday, December 21, 2017 8:09:19 PM

Post# of 21728
SEC Saddled With Chilling History Of "Slipshod" Regulatory-Policy .....

The author of this historical information admittedly wants to portray a positive image with respect to SEC personnel and the regulatory agency ..... though he feels compelled to admit to significant SEC lapses of regulatory awareness and failure to take action in time to avoid catastrophic consequences ..... And this applies to major "players" instrumental in the economic "meltdown" of 2008 ..... It´s nice to have the luxury of such a generous outlook .....

This information continues for many more pages which I hope to find sufficient time to more comprehensively digest ..... though I still wonder about unanswered allegations relative to the SEC having destroyed 15,000 of their own "Matters Under Investigation" files .... and their refusal to provide information to Senator Grassley after repeated requests during the Madoff-era .....

If the SEC has finally become virtuous and responsible ..... then what prompted the change and when ? ..... I find no reason to trust "blind faith" in an opaque regulatory culture seemingly lacking oversight and accountability ..... alleging nothing more than tightly sequestered "concerns" as adequate grounds for a "Trading Suspension" .....

Should one logically assume ..... based upon past allegd SEC behavior ..... the "MUI" files will continue to be destroyed before judicial satisfaction can be resolved ?..... Is there an updated perspective ? ..... Congress appears to be "asleep at the wheel" and distracted ..... as usual .....

From the .....

Yale Law School

Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository

Faculty Scholarship Series Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship 1-1-2010


The Distorting Incentives Facing the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission


Jonathan R. Macey



  
.... Nonetheless, the SEC is virtually untouched by scandal. This
fact is in keeping with the argument, advanced in this Article, that
the SEC as an institution, and its staff as individuals, are both pro-
fessionally ambitious and ethically honest. Because corruption
weakens the future mobility of SEC personnel, it is highly costly
and studiously avoided. In this narrow context, at least, the SEC’s
response to incentives has produced positive social results.

At the same time, there have been significant, ongoing, and
valid criticisms of the SEC’s performance over the past decade.
These criticisms became very loud when the SEC failed to rec-
ognize the fraud and attendant abuses at Enron in 2001, shortly
followed by similar problems at Adelphia, WorldCom, Global Crossings, Tyco, and a host of other companies. Only months later, Eliot Spitzer issued scathing attacks on the SEC’s dismal performance in regulating mutual fund abuses.3 This was followed by the SEC’s failure to respond to, or even to comprehend, the excessive risk-taking at Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and other broker-dealer firms. The parade of shortcomings ended most recently with the SEC’s failure to respond to glaring warnings about the massive fraud of Bernie Madoff.



http://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2342&context=fss_papers

Best Wishes
Volume:
Day Range:
Bid:
Ask:
Last Trade Time:
Total Trades:
  • 1D
  • 1M
  • 3M
  • 6M
  • 1Y
  • 5Y