Getting
Tough with El Corpo
By Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
One of the titles on my list is Russell Mokhiber’s Corporate
Crime and Violence, which profiled three dozen of the most egregious cases
of environmental, workplace hazard and defective product abuses that had
occurred in the years leading up to the publication of the book in 1988. Among
the culprits were Dow Chemical (Agent Orange), Occidental Petroleum (Love
Canal), Johns Manville (asbestos), General Electric (PCBs) and Ford Motor
(exploding Pintos).
What strikes me is how little has changed in the past 27 years.
Now, as then, we are faced with a seemingly endless series of incidents in
which large corporations have caused serious harm to communities, the
environment, workers and consumers.
BP has had to pay around $20 billion to
settle the many charges and claims brought against it in connection with the
Deepwater Horizon catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico. An ignition switch defect
that General Motors failed to correct has been linked to more than 100 deaths.
Safety lapses by coal miner Massey Energy (now part of Alpha Natural Resources)
allegedly led to a methane explosion that killed 29 workers.
One difference is that we now also have an epidemic of serious
financial crimes by major banks. Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and
Wells Fargo have each had to pay billions to settle allegations relating to the
sale of toxic securities in the period leading up to the financial, foreclosure
abuses and other issues.
European banks such as Credit Suisse, HSBC and UBS
have paid billions more to U.S. and European regulators to settle issues such
as tax evasion, violations of economic sanctions and manipulation of the LIBOR
interest rate index.
As in 1988, there is little consensus these days on what to do
about corporate miscreants. Mokhiber focused on the debate between two camps.
On the one side were those who wanted to exempt corporations from criminal
charges (because these non-human persons supposedly could not exhibit criminal
intent or have a criminal state of mind) and instead use exclusively civil
cases to extract more burdensome financial penalties.
On the other side were those, including Mokhiber, who called for
applying criminal law more aggressively, arguing, among other things, that the
stigma of a criminal conviction would serve as a powerful deterrent against
corporate misconduct.
While the debate was never resolved, a quarter of a century
later the remedies proposed by both camps have come to pass. Civil penalties
have risen to unprecedented levels. Billion-dollar settlements are now
commonplace in cases involving large corporations, and in a few cases such as
BP, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase, the payouts have reached eleven
figures.
At the same time, settlements in which major corporations plead
guilty to criminal charges are becoming more common. Responding to public
pressure, the Justice Department first extracted such pleas from subsidiaries
of foreign banks UBS and Credit Suisse; this year it got Citigroup and JPMorgan
Chase to do the same in a case involving manipulation of foreign exchange
markets.
The sad reality is that the application of penalties that seemed
so bold in the 1980s seem to be doing little to chasten big business.
Corporations have adjusted to the big penalties, which in some
cases are not as large as they seem because they may be tax deductible. The
payments are seen as a cost of doing business, and even at their unprecedented
levels, the costs are usually well below the financial benefits the culprit
companies enjoyed from the illicit activity.
Being convicted felons has not changed things much for banks
such as Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase. There is no sign that this stigma has
cost them many customers, and their ability to continue to operate in regulated
areas has been assisted by special waivers given to them by agencies such as
the SEC.
Like the escaped Mexican drug lord called El Chapo, large
corporations – El Corpo, so to speak – have an extraordinary and frustrating
ability to neutralize measures designed to punish them for their misdeeds. If
we are ever going to get corporate crime under control, we’ll have to get a lot
more creative. Let’s hope it doesn’t take another 27 years to figure it out.