The 2014 Corporate Rap Sheet
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
The bull market in corporate crime surged in 2014 as large corporations continued to pay hefty fines and settlements that seem to do little to deter misbehavior in the suites.
Payouts in excess of $1 billion have
become commonplace and some even reach into eleven figures, as seen in the $16.65 billion settlement Bank of America
reached with the Justice Department to resolve federal and state claims
relating to the practices of its Merrill Lynch and Countrywide units in the run-up
to the financial meltdown.
This came in the same year in which BofA reached a $9.3 billion settlement with the Federal Housing
Finance Agency concerning the sale of deficient mortgage-backed securities to
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and in which the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau ordered the bank to pay $727 million to
compensate consumers harmed by deceptive marketing of credit card add-on
products.
The BofA cases helped boost the total penalties paid by U.S. and
European banks during the year to nearly $65 billion, a 40 percent increase
over the previous year, according to a tally by the Boston Consulting Group reported by the Wall Street
Journal.
Among the other big banking cases were the following:
France’s BNP Paribas pleaded guilty to criminal charges and paid an $8.9 billion penalty to U.S. authorities in connection with charges that it violated financial sanctions against countries such as Sudan and Iran.
Citigroup paid $7 billion to settle federal charges
relating to the packaging and sale of toxic mortgage-backed securities.
U.S. and European regulators fined five banks — JP Morgan Chase,
Citigroup, HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland and UBS — a total of more than $4
billion after accusing them of conspiring to manipulate the foreign currency
market.
Credit Suisse pleaded guilty to one criminal count of
conspiring to aid tax evasion by U.S. customers and paid a penalty of $2.6
billion.
JPMorgan Chase paid $1.7 billion to victims of the Ponzi
scheme perpetuated by Bernard Madoff to settle civil and criminal charges that
it failed to alert authorities about large numbers of suspicious transactions
made by Madoff while it was his banker.
Banks were not the only large corporations that found themselves
in legal trouble during the year. The auto industry faced a never-ending storm
of controversy over its safety practices.
Toyota was hit with a $1.2 billion criminal penalty
by U.S. authorities for concealing defects from customers and regulators.
The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration fined General Motors $35 million (the
maximum allowable) for failing to promptly report an ignition switch defect
that has been linked to numerous deaths.
Hyundai and its subsidiary Kia paid $300 million to settle allegations
that they misstated the greenhouse gas emissions of their vehicles.
Toxic dumping. Anadarko Petroleum paid $5.1 billion to resolve federal
charges that had been brought in connection with the clean-up of thousands of
toxic waste sites around the country resulting from decades of questionable
practices by Kerr-McGee, now a subsidiary of Anadarko.
Pipeline safety. The California Public
Utilities Commission proposedthat $1.4 billion in penalties and
fined be imposed on Pacific Gas & Electric in connection with allegations that
the company violated federal and state pipeline safety rules before a 2010
natural gas explosion that killed eight people.
Contractor fraud. Supreme Group BV had to pay $288 million in criminal fines
and a $146 million civil settlement in connection with allegations that it
grossly overcharged the federal government while supplying food and bottled
water to U.S. personnel in Afghanistan.
Bribery. The French industrial group Alstom consented to pay $772 million to settle
U.S. government charges that it bribed officials in Indonesia and other
countries to win power contracts. Earlier in the year,
Alcoa paid $384 million to resolve federal
charges that it used a middleman to bribe members of Bahrain’s royal family and
other officials to win lucrative contracts from the Bahraini government.
Price-fixing. Japan’s Bridgestone Corporation pleaded guilty to charges that it
conspired to fix prices of anti-vibration rubber auto parts and had to pay a
criminal fine of $425 million.
Defrauding consumers. AT&T Mobility had to pay $105 million to settle allegations by
the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission that it
unlawfully billed customers for services without their prior knowledge or
consent.
The list goes on. Whether the economy is strong or weak, many
corporative executives cannot resist the temptation to break the law in the
pursuit of profit.
Note: For fuller dossiers on some of the companies listed here,
see my Corporate Rap Sheets.