Won more than 40 cases for over $3 billion in fines and settlements
By contrast, Donald Trump IS a corporate criminal
By Philip Mattera, director of the Corporate Research Project in the Dirt Diggers DigestThe coming weeks are likely to see much discussion, pro and con, about Kamala Harris’ record prosecuting street crime during her time as District Attorney of San Francisco. Perhaps even more relevant to her as a presidential candidate was her tenure as the California Attorney General.
State attorneys general involve themselves in many
issues, but one of their key roles is to address business misconduct,
especially in the areas of consumer protection and antitrust. As the California
AG from 2011 through 2016, Harris was for the most part an aggressive corporate
crime fighter.
In Violation
Tracker we have more than 40 cases her office
successfully prosecuted, resulting in over $3 billion in fines and settlements.
About one-third of that total came from a 2016 judgment against the predatory
for-profit Corinthian Colleges, which by that time had ceased operations and
was in bankruptcy.
Here are some of the other more significant cases:
A $750 million settlement with the
Canadian company Powerex, which was accused of manipulating the market during
the 2000-2001 western energy crisis.
A $323 million settlement with SCAN
Health Plan to resolve allegations the company overcharged the state’s Medicaid
program, known as Medi-Cal.
A $298 million settlement with JPMorgan
Chase, which was accused of misleading state pension funds in the marketing of
residential mortgage-backed securities. This was part of a broader $13 billion
settlement the bank reached with state and federal agencies concerning the
toxic securities that helped bring about the financial crisis of the late
2000s.
A $241 million settlement with Quest
Diagnostics, which also involved Medi-Cal billing abuses.
A $168 million settlement with K12 Inc.,
a for-profit online charter school operator, and 14 affiliated non-profit
schools known as the California Virtual Academies it managed, over alleged
violations of California’s false claims, false advertising and unfair competition
laws.
An $86 million settlement with Volkswagen
concerning the installation of defeat devices to evade emissions testing in its
diesel vehicles. This was a supplement to the company’s $14 billion
federal-state settlement.
Among the other companies her office successfully pursued
were Walmart (for over-charging
customers), Toshiba (price-fixing), Wells Fargo (privacy violations)
and Chevron (improper hazardous waste
disposal).
Harris’ office was also involved in many cases brought by
groups of state AGs, often taking a leading role. The largest case was a $25 billion settlement reached by
federal and state agencies in 2012 with five of the largest mortgage servicing
companies over their foreclosure practices. Others included:
A $687 million settlement with Standard & Poor’s Financial Services, which had been accused of inflating ratings of residential mortgage-backed securities at the center of the financial crisis.
A $339 million settlement with Abbott
Laboratories (now AbbVie) to resolve allegations it promoted its drug Depakote
for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
A $151 million settlement with drug
wholesaler McKesson to resolve allegations the company inflated the price of
prescription drugs by as much as 25 percent, causing the states’ Medicaid
programs to overpay millions of dollars in pharmacy reimbursements.
A $90 million settlement with the Swiss
bank UBS on charges of anticompetitive and fraudulent conduct in the municipal
bond derivatives industry, which took the form of bid-rigging, submission of
non-competitive courtesy bids and submission to government agencies, among
others, of fraudulent certifications of compliance with U.S. Treasury
regulations.
Harris’s record as AG was not flawless. Most notably, she
was criticized for failing to prosecute
OneWest Bank for foreclosure violations. The bank was controlled by Steve
Mnuchin, who would go on to become Donald Trump’s Secretary of the Treasury.
If she were to become president, Harris would be in a
position to set the tone for the way her administration would address corporate
misconduct. That would begin with her choice for attorney general and extend to
the approach she encourages for all regulatory agencies.
This is an area in which she cannot simply promise to
continue the policies of the current administration. Biden’s Justice Department
initially signaled it would get tough on corporate miscreants after Trump’s lax
approach, but it has largely failed to deliver. Instead, the DOJ has stressed
leniency agreements, which have turned out to be a boon for recidivist
companies.
Harris would do well to signal that she intends to change
course and draw on her experience as state AG to be an aggressive corporate
crime fighter at the federal level.