A great tool to ID repeat corporate offenders
By Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
EDITOR’S NOTE: If Charlestown ever smartens up and
adopts purchase and permitting standards that penalize law-breaking businesses,
here is one of many user-friendly tools that provide a corporate rap sheet. –
Will Collette
When a new corporate scandal arises, there is a tendency on the
part of many observers to treat it as a complete surprise — as something that
could not have been anticipated.
The truth is that large companies are rarely first time offenders.
If you look into their background, you are likely to see evidence of past
behavior that presaged the recent misconduct.
It is now easier than ever to research that track record thanks to
a major expansion of Violation Tracker my
colleagues and I just rolled out.
We posted an additional ten years of data, extending coverage back
to 2000 and in the process nearly doubling the size of the database to 300,000
entries. Together, these account for $394 billion in fines and settlements — 95
percent of which was assessed against 2,800 large parent companies and their
subsidiaries.
Take the example of Equifax, which is at the center of a growing
scandal over its apparent negligence in protecting personal information and its
delay in reporting a major hack.
Violation Tracker shows that
early this year the company was fined $2.5 million by the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau for using deceptive means to lure people into purchasing
costly credit-protection services.
The company was also ordered to provide $3.8 million in restitution
to affected customers. Over the previous two decades, Equifax was fined three
times by the Federal Trade Commission.
The announcement by the CFPB last year that it was fining Wells Fargo $100 million for creating bogus customer accounts — a scandal that has subsequently mushroomed — was far from the first time the bank had gotten into trouble for questionable practices.
Violation Tracker documents prior
penalties totaling some $11 billion going back to 2000 for offense such as
mortgage abuses, toxic securities abuses, and discriminatory practices.
Sometimes the prior offense is indistinguishable from the current
one. In 2005, a decade before it was revealed to be engaged in a massive scheme
to deceive regulators about emissions levels, Volkswagen was compelled to
pay a fine of $1.1 million and spend $26 million on a recall to settle
allegations that it failed to correct a defective pollution-control sensor.
Of the 2,800 companies in the Violation Tracker universe, more than
80 were penalized for something or other by federal agencies or the Justice
Department every year from 2000 through 2016.
The company that has the dubious distinction of leading by this measure is oil giant BP, which has paid out an average of some $1.6 billion in fines and settlements each year during the 17-year period.
No other company comes close.
In second place is Verizon Communications, whose average annual penalty was $72 million, followed by FirstEnergy ($71 million), Valero Energy ($58 million), Marathon Petroleum ($54 million), Alcoa ($43 million), Exxon Mobil ($42 million), Koch Industries ($39 million) and Chevron ($34 million).
In second place is Verizon Communications, whose average annual penalty was $72 million, followed by FirstEnergy ($71 million), Valero Energy ($58 million), Marathon Petroleum ($54 million), Alcoa ($43 million), Exxon Mobil ($42 million), Koch Industries ($39 million) and Chevron ($34 million).
While they may not have gotten penalized every single year, there
are hundreds of other parent companies that have been penalized in multiple
years, and in many cases multiple times in a given year. In other words, just
about every large company is a recidivist.
Who knows: maybe regulators and prosecutors will start consulting
Violation Tracker to identify prior bad acts and take them into account when
deciding how to penalize companies for their current sins.