Bipartisan
Corporate Crime Fighting by the States
By Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
A new
report from the Corporate Research Project of Good Jobs First
on lawsuits filed by state attorneys general shows that the current cases
against the drug companies and the tech sector are part of a long-standing
practice of bipartisan cooperation in fighting corporate misconduct.
The
report focuses on 644 cases in which AGs from multiple states took on companies
over issues ranging from mortgage abuses to illicit marketing of prescription
drugs and collected more than $100 billion in settlements over the past two
decades.
These
multistate cases are a subset of more than 7,000 state AG actions compiled for
the latest expansion of Violation
Tracker and now available for searching on the database.
In
at least 260 multistate cases, a majority of the states signed on as
plaintiffs. In 172 of the cases, 40 or more states participated. State AGs are
split almost evenly between Democrats and Republicans, meaning that the cases
with large numbers of state participants are necessarily bipartisan.
In Rhode Island, State General Treasurer Seth Magaziner (left) and Attorney General Peter Neronha (right) fight corporate crime through legal actions and shareholder initiatives. |
In
362 of the cases, the defendants were giant companies included in the Fortune
500 or the Fortune Global 500.
The parent company with the most cumulative multistate AG penalties is, by far, Bank of America, with more than $26 billion in settlements over issues such as mortgage abuses and the sale of toxic securities.
It is followed by the Swiss bank UBS ($11 billion), Citigroup ($8 billion), JPMorgan Chase ($6 billion) and BP ($4.9 billion).
The parent company with the most cumulative multistate AG penalties is, by far, Bank of America, with more than $26 billion in settlements over issues such as mortgage abuses and the sale of toxic securities.
It is followed by the Swiss bank UBS ($11 billion), Citigroup ($8 billion), JPMorgan Chase ($6 billion) and BP ($4.9 billion).
The
most frequent defendant has been CVS Health, which has paid out more than $215
million in 14 settlements, most of them involving the alleged submission of
false claims to state Medicaid programs and the payment of illicit kickbacks to
healthcare providers. Another 47 parent companies have been involved in
three or more multistate AG cases.
In 118 multistate AG cases, corporations have paid penalties of $100 million or more; in 19 of these the amount exceeded $1 billion. The biggest individual settlement was an agreement by UBS to repurchase $11 billion in investments known as auction-rate securities whose safety it allegedly misrepresented to investors.
The second largest was an $8.7 billion agreement by Bank of America to resolve claims relating to predatory home mortgage practices by its Countrywide Financial subsidiary. (The recently announced multistate settlement with Purdue Pharma is not included because it is still tentative.)
Banks
and other financial services companies account for far and away the largest
monetary share of penalties paid in multistate AG cases — $70 billion from 122
settlements involving 65 different parent companies. In second place is the
pharmaceutical industry with $10.4 billion in penalties from 137 settlements.
Consumer
protection and price-fixing cases are the most numerous kinds of multistate AG
lawsuits, but investor protection and mortgage abuse lawsuits against the big
banks have generated the greatest monetary penalties.
In
243 of the multistate cases, the U.S. Department of Justice or another federal
agency was also involved in the settlement and often led the negotiations.
These actions, which accounted for $31 billion of the $105 billion in total
penalties, include cases in which the federal entity, usually DOJ, initiated
the investigation and brought in the states — as well as ones in which federal
and state prosecutors were involved from the start.
Multistate
AG lawsuits originated in the 1980s, when state prosecutors grew concerned at
rollbacks in federal enforcement by the Reagan Administration and decided they
needed to fill the gap. They scored a big win with the master tobacco
settlement of the late 1990s and continued their actions through both
Republican and Democratic presidential administrations.
There
is every reason to believe that the number of multistate AG settlements will
continue to grow. The pending cases against opioid and generic drug producers,
as well as emerging antitrust investigations of the tech sector, could add
billions more to the penalty totals.