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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Sun Jan 6, 2013, 02:04 PM Jan 2013

Corporations and execs need penalties that hurt

By Michael Hiltzik
January 5, 2013, 10:18 a.m.


If you're concerned about corporate crime, 2012 looked like a pretty successful year for the good guys.

The Thousand Oaks biotech giant Amgen paid $762 million in fines and penalties and pleaded guilty to a federal charge related to illegal marketing of its anemia drug Aranesp. Britain's GlaxoSmithKline and Illinois-based Abbott Laboratories paid $3 billion and $1.5 billion in government penalties, respectively, in connection with their off-label promotions of blockbuster drugs. Glaxo's was the biggest drug company settlement in history.

The global bank HSBC paid a record $1.92 billion to settle federal accusations that it operated a huge money-laundering scheme for Mexican drug dealers and Middle Eastern terrorists. BP agreed to pay $4.5 billion and plead guilty to 11 felony counts in connection with the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It was the biggest federal criminal penalty ever.

To the companies, however, these big numbers are just chump change. Typically they don't even represent repayment of ill-gotten gains — more often merely the cost of doing business. And to the public, they're insults piled atop the injuries caused by the firms' wrongdoing.

"These fines are a carny act to keep the rubes happy," according to William K. Black, who was a thrift regulator during the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s. "It's cynical — the art is to make the amount sound large but make sure that it has no material effect."

What might really get the attention of the CEOs and other top executives of lawbreaking companies would be some time in the hoosegow. Does that sound quaint? If so, it's because not a single high-ranking executive of any of the companies mentioned above faced indictment or was even forced to step down.

more

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hiltzik-20130106,0,835662.column

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Corporations and execs need penalties that hurt (Original Post) n2doc Jan 2013 OP
This is what I want to see Angry Dragon Jan 2013 #1
will. never. happen. datasuspect Jan 2013 #2

Angry Dragon

(36,693 posts)
1. This is what I want to see
Sun Jan 6, 2013, 02:07 PM
Jan 2013
'What might really get the attention of the CEOs and other top executives of lawbreaking companies would be some time in the hoosegow. Does that sound quaint? If so, it's because not a single high-ranking executive of any of the companies mentioned above faced indictment or was even forced to step down.'
 

datasuspect

(26,591 posts)
2. will. never. happen.
Sun Jan 6, 2013, 02:09 PM
Jan 2013

we've crossed the Rubicon on this.

the fraudsters, CEO gangsters, and assorted 1%ers know they have free license to whatever they will.

they bought the best government money can buy.

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