"Our Children and Grandchildren are not merely statistics towards which we can be indifferent" JFK

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Judge approves $550 million Goldman settlement...OF COURSE, FRAUD is more than a 4 letter word, put the screws to people and simply pay a fine...welcome to America

NEW YORK (AP) -- A federal judge on Tuesday approved the deal calling for Goldman Sachs & Co. to pay $550 million to settle civil fraud charges that the Wall Street giant misled buyers of mortgage-related investments.

The agreement approved by U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones in Manhattan contained the largest penalty against a Wall Street firm in the history of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Announced last week, it calls for Goldman to pay a $535 million fine and $15 million in restitution of fees it collected. It also requires $300 million to be paid to the government and $250 million to be set aside to compensate two European banks that lost money on their investments.

Karen Patton Seymour, a lawyer for Goldman Sachs, declined to comment on the approval.

"We are pleased with the court's approval of this settlement," said Robert Khuzami, director of the SEC Division of Enforcement.

In the judge's order, Jones wrote that she was not ordering Goldman Sachs to pay a civil penalty beyond the $535 million, but was continuing to preside over the case to ensure the terms of the agreement were carried out.

She noted that Goldman Sachs, which did not admit liability, nevertheless agreed to cooperate fully with the government by producing documents and other materials and by making its employees available for interviews. The company also promised to require its employees to testify at trial and other judicial proceedings that may occur.

Final approval of the settlement came on the same day that Goldman Sachs announced an 83 percent drop in second-quarter net income.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. blamed its earnings fall on a rough spring for the financial markets, and it included in the quarter the $550 million charge for the settlement with the SEC.

The SEC filed a civil case against Goldman in April as it flexed its muscles against Wall Street following a series of embarrassments, including the agency's failure over two decades to detect that financier Bernard Madoff was stealing billions of dollars from his clients while portraying himself as among America's financial elite. Madoff is serving a 150-year prison sentence after last year admitting the fraud.

The SEC had accused Goldman of selling mortgage securities without telling buyers that they had been created with input from a client that was betting on them to fail. The securities cost investors close to $1 billion while helping the Goldman client capitalize on the housing collapse, the SEC charged.

In its settlement, Goldman acknowledged that its marketing materials for the deal at the center of the SEC charges omitted important information for buyers.

The SEC has said its case continues against Fabrice Tourre, a Goldman vice president accused of shepherding the deal.

Tourre filed documents Monday with the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York asking the court to throw out the case. He denies he made any materially misleading statements or omissions, or behaved wrongly in connection to complex mortgage-linked securities called collateralized debt obligations.

U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones presided over the Bernie Ebbers Worldcom trail and apparently, she did not see the same potential in Bernie as she does in Lord Blankfein. Bernie was sentenced to 25 years in prison while the "Lord" received a thumbs up on a fine a mere fraction of the $16 BILLION set aside for bonuses. Grandpa is so relieved to know that our judicial system is blind and takes fraud charges seriously!

Our grandchildren will truly appreciate you representing
"true Goldman Sachs justice" given your "tough" reputation...NOT!

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