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So today's top chef class is in how to rob a bank,
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and it's clear that the general public needs guidance,
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because the average bank robbery nets
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only $7,500.
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Rank amateurs who know nothing
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about how to cook the books.
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The folks who know, of course,
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run our largest banks,
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and in the last go round,
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they cost us over 11 trillion dollars.
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That's what 11 trillion looks like.
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That's how many zeros?
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And cost us over 10 million jobs as well.
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So our task is to educate ourselves
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so that we can understand
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why we have these recurrent,
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intensifying financial crises,
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and how we can prevent them in the future.
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And the answer to that is
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that we have to stop epidemics of control fraud.
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Control fraud is what happens
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when the people who control,
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typically a CEO,
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a seemingly legitimate entity,
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use it as a weapon to defraud.
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And these are the weapons of mass destruction
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in the financial world.
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They also follow in finance a particular strategy,
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because the weapon of choice in finance
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is accounting,
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and there is a recipe for accounting,
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control fraud, and how it occurs.
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And we discovered this recipe
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in quite an odd way that I'll
come back to in a moment.
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First ingredient in the recipe: grow like crazy;
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second, by making or buying really crappy loans,
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but loans that are made at a very high interest rate
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or yield;
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three, while employing extreme leverage,
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— that just means a lot of debt
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compared to your equity;
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and four, while providing only trivial loss reserves
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against the inevitable losses.
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If you follow those four simple steps,
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and any bank can follow them,
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then you are mathematically guaranteed
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to have three things occur.
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The first thing is,
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you will report record bank profits,
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not just high, record.
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Two, the CEO will immediately
be made incredibly wealthy
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by modern executive compensation.
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And three, farther down the road,
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the bank will suffer catastrophic losses
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and will fail unless it is bailed out.
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And that's a hint as to how
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we discovered this recipe,
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because we discovered it
through an autopsy process.
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During the savings and loan debacle in 1984,
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we looked at every single failure,
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and we looked for common characteristics,
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and we discovered this recipe was common
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to each of these frauds.
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In other words, a coroner could find these things
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because this is a fatal recipe
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that will destroy the banks
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as well as the economy.
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And it also turns out to be precisely
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what could have stopped this crisis,
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the one that cost us 11 trillion dollars
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just in the household sector,
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that cost us 10 million jobs,
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was the easiest financial crisis by far
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to have avoided completely
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if we had simply learned the lessons
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of epidemics of control fraud,
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particularly using this recipe.
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So let's go to this crisis,
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and the two huge epidemics
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of loan origination fraud that drove the crisis:
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appraisal fraud and liar's loans,
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and what we're going to see
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in looking at both of these is
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we got warnings that were incredibly early
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about these frauds.
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We got warnings that we could
have taken advantage of easily,
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because back in the savings and loan debacle,
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we had figured out how to respond
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and prevent these crises.
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And three, the warnings were unambiguous.
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They were obvious that what was going on
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was an epidemic of accounting control fraud
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building up.
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Let's take a appraisal fraud first.
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This is simply where you inflate the value
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of the home that is being pledged
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as security for the loan.
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In 2000, the year 2000,
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that is over a year before Enron fails, by the way,
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the honest appraisers got together a formal petition
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begging the federal government to act,
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and the industry to act,
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to stop this epidemic of appraisal fraud.
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And the appraisers explained how it was occurring,
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that banks were demanding that appraisers
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inflate the appraisal,
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and that if the appraisers refused to do so,
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they, the banks, would blacklist
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honest appraisers
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and refuse to use them.
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Now, we've seen this before
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in the savings and loan debacle,
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and we know that this kind of fraud
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can only originate from the lenders,
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and that no honest lender would ever inflate
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the appraisal,
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because it's the great protection against loss.
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So this was an incredibly early warning, in 2000.
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It was something we'd seen before,
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and it was completely unambiguous.
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This was an epidemic of accounting control fraud
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led by the banks.
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What about liar's loans?
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Well, that warning actually comes earlier.
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The savings and loan debacle is basically
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the early 1980s through 1993,
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and in the midst of fighting that wave
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of accounting control fraud,
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in 1990, we found that a second front
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of fraud was being started.
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And like all good financial frauds in America,
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it began in Orange County, California.
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And we happened to be the regional regulators for it.
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And our examiners said,
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they are making loans without even checking
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what the borrower's income is.
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This is insane, it has to lead to massive losses,
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and it only makes sense for entities engaged
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in these accounting control frauds.
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And we said, yeah, you're absolutely right,
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and we drove those liar's loans
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out of the industry in 1990 and 1991,
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but we could only deal with industry
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we had jurisdiction over,
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which was savings and loans,
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and so the biggest and the baddest of the frauds,
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Long Beach Savings, voluntarily gave up
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its federal savings and loan charter,
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gave up federal deposit insurance,
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converted to become a mortgage bank
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for the sole purpose of escaping our jurisdiction,
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and changed its name to Ameriquest,
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and became the most notorious
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of the liars loans frauds early on,
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and to add to that,
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they deliberately predated upon minorities. Right?
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So we knew again about this crisis.
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We'd seen it before. We'd stopped it before.
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We had incredibly early warnings of it,
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and it was absolutely unambiguous
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that no honest lender would
make loans in this fashion.
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So let's take a look at the reaction
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of the industry and the regulators
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and the prosecutors to these clear
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early warnings that could have prevented the crisis.
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Start with the industry.
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The industry responded between 2003 and 2006
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by increasing liar's loans
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by over 500 percent.
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These were the loans
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that hyper-inflated the bubble
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and produced the economic crisis.
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By 2006, half of all the loans called subprime
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were also liars loans.
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They're not mutually exclusive, it's just that together,
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they're the most toxic combination
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you can possibly imagine.
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By 2006, 40 percent of all the loans
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made that year, all the home loans made that year,
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were liars loans,
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40 percent.
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And this is despite a warning
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from the industry's own anti-fraud experts
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that said that these loans were an open invitation
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to fraudsters,
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and that they had a fraud incidence
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of 90 percent,
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nine zero.
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In response to that, the industry
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first started calling these loans liar's loans,
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which lacks a certain subtlety,
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and second massively increased them,
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and no government regulator ever
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required or encouraged any lender
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to make a liar's loan
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or anyone to purchase a liar's loan,
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and that explicitly includes Fannie and Freddie.
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This came from the lenders
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because of the fraud recipe.
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Right? What happened to appraisal fraud?
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It expanded remarkably as well.
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By 2007, when a survey of appraisers was done,
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90 percent of appraisers reported
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that they had been subject to coercion
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from the lenders trying to get them
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to inflate an appraisal.
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In other words, both forms of fraud
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became absolutely endemic and normal,
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and this is what drove the bubble.
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What happened in the governmental sector?
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Well, the government, as I told you,
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when we were the savings and loan regulators,
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we could only deal with our industry,
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and if people gave up their
federal deposit insurance,
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we couldn't do anything to them.
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Congress, it may strike you as impossible,
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but actually did something intelligent in 1994,
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and passed the Homeownership
Equity Protection Act
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that gave the Fed and only the federal reserve
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the explicit, statutory authority to ban liar's loans
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by every lender,
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whether or not they had federal deposit insurance.
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So what did Ben Bernanke and Alan Greenspan,
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as chairs of the Fed, do
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when they got these warnings
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that these were massively fraudulent loans
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and that they were being sold
to the secondary market?
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Remember, there's no fraud exorcist.
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Once it starts out a fraudulent loan,
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it can only be sold to the secondary market
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through more frauds,
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lying about the reps and warrantees,
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and then those people are going to produce
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mortgage-backed securities
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and exotic derivatives
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which are also going to be supposedly backed
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by those fraudulent loans.
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So the fraud is going to progress
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through the entire system,
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hyper-inflate the bubble, produce a disaster.
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And remember, we had experience with this.
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We had seen significant losses,
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and we had experience of competent regulators
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in stopping it.
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Greenspan and Bernanke refused
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to use the authority under the statute
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to stop liar's loans.
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And this was a matter first of dogma.
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They're just horrifically opposed
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to anything regulatory.
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But it is also the international competition in laxity,
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the race to the bottom
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between the United States and the United Kingdom,
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the city of London, in particular,
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and the city of London won that race to the bottom,
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but it meant that all regulation in the West
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was completely degraded
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in this stupid competition to be
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who could have the weakest regulation.
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So that was the regulatory response.
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What about the response of the prosecutors
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after the crisis,
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after 11 trillion dollars in losses,
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after 10 million jobs lost,
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a crisis in which the losses and the frauds
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were more than 70 times larger
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than the savings and loan debacle?
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Well, in the savings and loan debacle,
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our agency that regulated savings and loans, OTS,
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made over 30,000 criminal referrals,
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produced over a thousand felony convictions
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just in cases designated as major,
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and that understates the degree of prioritization,
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because we worked with the FBI
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to create the list of the top 100 fraud schemes,
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the absolute worst of the worst, nationwide.
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Roughly 300 savings and loans involved
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roughly 600 senior officials.
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Virtually all of them were prosecuted.
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We had a 90 percent conviction rate.
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It's the greatest success against
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elite white collar criminals ever,
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and it was because of this understanding
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of control fraud
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and the accounting control fraud mechanism.
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Flash forward to the current crisis.
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The same agency, Office of Thrift Supervision,
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which was supposed to regulate
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many of the largest makers of liar's loans
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in the country,
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has made, even today, it no longer exists,
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but as of a year ago,
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it had made zero criminal referrals.
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The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
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which is supposed to regulate
the largest national banks,
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has made zero criminal referrals.
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The Fed appears to have made
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zero criminal referrals.
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
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is smart enough to refuse to answer the question.
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Without any guidance from the regulators,
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there's no expertise in the FBI
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to investigate complex frauds.
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It isn't simply that they've had
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to reinvent the wheel
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of how to do these prosecutions.
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They've forgotten that the wheel exists,
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and therefore, we have zero prosecutions,
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and of course, zero convictions
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of any of the elite bank frauds,
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the Wall Street types,
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that drove this crisis.
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With no expertise coming from the regulators,
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the FBI formed what it calls a partnership
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with the Mortgage Bankers Association, in 2007.
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The Mortgage Bankers Association
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is the trade association of the perps.
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And the Mortgage Bankers Association
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set out, it had the audacity and the success
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to con the FBI.
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It had created a supposed definition
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of mortgage fraud, in which, guess what,
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its members are always the victim
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and never the perpetrators.
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And the FBI has bought this hook, like, sinker,
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rod, reel, and the boat they rode out in.
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And so the FBI,
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under the leadership of an Attorney General
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who is African-American
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and a President of the United
States who is African-American,
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have adopted the Tea Party definition of the crisis,
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in which it is the first virgin crisis in history,
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conceived without sin in the executive ranks.
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And it's those oh-so-clever hairdressers
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who were able to defraud the poor, pitiful banks,
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who lack any financial sophistication.
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It is the silliest story you can conceive of,
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and so they go and the prosecute the hairdressers,
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and they leave the banksters alone entirely.
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And so, while lions are roaming the campsite,
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the FBI is chasing mice.
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What do we need to do?
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What can we do in all of this?
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We need to change the perverse incentive structures
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that produce these recurrent epidemics
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of accounting control fraud
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that are driving our crisis.
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So we have to first get rid
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of the systemically dangerous institutions.
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These are the so-called too-big-to-fail institutions.
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We need to shrink them to the point,
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within the next five years,
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that they no longer pose a systemic risk.
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Right now, they are ticking time bombs
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that will cause a global crisis
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as soon as the next one fails,
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not if, when.
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Second thing we need to do is completely reform
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modern executive and professional compensation,
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which is what they use to suborn the appraisers.
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Remember, they were pressuring the appraisers
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through the compensation system,
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trying to produce what we call a Gresham's dynamic,
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in which bad ethics drives good ethics
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out of the marketplace.
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And they largely succeeded,
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which is how the fraud became endemic.
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And the third thing that we need to do
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is deal with what we call the three D's:
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deregulation, desupervision,
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and the de facto decriminalization.
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Because we can make
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all three of these changes, and if we do so,
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we can dramatically reduce
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how often we have a crisis
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and how severe those crises are.
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That is not simply critical to our economy.
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You can see what these crises do to inequality
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and what they do to our democracy.
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They have produced crony capitalism,
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American-style,
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in which the largest financial institutions
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are the leading financial donors of both parties,
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and that's the reason why,
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even after this crisis,
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70 times larger than the savings and loan crisis,
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we have no meaningful reforms
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in any of the three areas that I've talked about,
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other than banning liar's loans,
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which is good,
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but that's just one form of ammunition
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for this fraud weapon.
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There are many forms of ammunition they can use.
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That's why we need to learn
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what the bankers have learned:
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the recipe for the best way to rob a bank,
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so that we can stop that recipe,
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because our legislators,
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who are dependent on political contributions,
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will not do it on their own.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)