Trump Goes Easy on Major Corporate Offenders
By Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
It’s unclear to what extent the Obama Administration’s practice of extracting unprecedented monetary penalties on miscreant companies proved to be an effective deterrent, but at least the billion-dollar fines and settlements served to highlight the ongoing problem of corporate crime.
The Trump Administration seems to be
a lot less interested in cracking down on the most egregious corporate
offenders.
Although the enforcement arms of agencies such as OSHA and EPA are still operating along normal lines, there has been a sharp decline in the number of mega-penalty cases announced by the Justice Department.
Although the enforcement arms of agencies such as OSHA and EPA are still operating along normal lines, there has been a sharp decline in the number of mega-penalty cases announced by the Justice Department.
This conclusion emerges from an analysis of the data recently added to the Violation Tracker database covering cases through the end of the Trump Administration’s first year in office on January 19.
Since the largest penalties are
normally imposed on the largest corporations, I did an analysis focusing on the
Fortune 100 list of the very largest U.S. publicly traded companies. I found
that overall federal penalties imposed on these firms during Trump’s first 12
months totaled $1.1 billion, compared to an annual average of more than $17
billion during the Obama years.
The Obama totals, of course,
reflected extraordinary settlements with the largest banks to resolve
allegations relating to their role in bringing about the financial meltdown of
a decade ago. These included, for example, the $16 billion settlement with Bank of
America in 2014 and the $13 billion settlement with JPMorgan
Chase the year before.
Those financial services sector
settlements peaked during the middle years of the Obama era. Yet Trump’s $1.1
billion first-year total is still far below the annual average of more than $9
billion for the Fortune 100 during Obama’s final two years in office. It also
trails behind the $3 billion total during Obama’s first year.
Looking at all corporate offenders,
there were 44 cases with penalties of $1 billion or more during the Obama era
yet only two during Trump’s first year, and he doesn’t really deserve credit
for those.
One is the $5.5 billion settlement reached by the Federal Housing Finance Agency with the Royal Bank of Scotland relating to the sale of toxic securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. That case had been filed in 2008, and the settlement had been negotiated under Obama.
The other is the a $1.4 billion penalty against Volkswagen for its emissions cheating that appears in EPA records with a date of May 17, 2017 but was actually part of a larger $4.3 billion settlement announced by the Justice Department during the last days of the Obama Administration.
One is the $5.5 billion settlement reached by the Federal Housing Finance Agency with the Royal Bank of Scotland relating to the sale of toxic securities to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. That case had been filed in 2008, and the settlement had been negotiated under Obama.
The other is the a $1.4 billion penalty against Volkswagen for its emissions cheating that appears in EPA records with a date of May 17, 2017 but was actually part of a larger $4.3 billion settlement announced by the Justice Department during the last days of the Obama Administration.
There is also an interesting pattern
among Trump Administration penalties in the next tier down—those of $100
million or more. The parent companies involved in about two-thirds of these
cases are foreign, especially those with the largest penalty totals.
They include the Chinese telecom company ZTE, which was penalized for export control violations, and the Swedish telecom Telia, which was punished under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
They include the Chinese telecom company ZTE, which was penalized for export control violations, and the Swedish telecom Telia, which was punished under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
It appears that the Trump
Administration is more likely to get tough with a corporate violator if the
company is not based in the United States, while domestic companies get treated
more leniently. I guess the slogan is: Make Domestic Corporate Criminals Great
Again.
Note: you can do analyses of your
own on Violation Tracker using our new
feature allowing search results to be filtered by presidential administration.