Earlier this month, it was reported that less than two weeks before the economic collapse of 2008,
several members of Congress took their money out of the stock market.
Many high-ranking government employees were given a heads-up about the
impending market crash in secret meetings with the Federal Reserve and
the Treasury Department. Then they used that information to engage in
insider trading.
It was revealed that Senator Shelley
Capito and her husband sold $350,000 worth of Citigroup stock at $83 per
share, just one day before the stock dropped to $64 per share. Another
shady trader was Congressman Jim Moran, who had his biggest trading day
of the year days after the secret meeting, sellings stock in nearly 100
different companies.
These actions would be illegal for any
American in any other circumstance, but members of Congress and
high-ranking government officials are actually exempt from insider
trading laws.
Years later, a 60 Minutes investigation
aired on television which highlighted the government’s deep history of
insider trading. The investigation sparked outrage, prompting Congress
to pass “the STOCK Act” which was said to hold members of the government
to the same standards as any American when it came to insider trading.
However, Congress watered down the bill
and changed key elements that would hold them accountable, allowing them
to return to business as usual, and escape any consequences for their
prior crimes.
In an interview during the 60 Minutes investigation, Peter Schweizer of the Hoover Institute told
Steve Kroft that “It’s really the way the rules have been defined. And
the people who make the rules are the political class in Washington and
they’ve conveniently written them in such a way that they don’t apply to
themselves.”
“These
meetings were so sensitive– that they would actually confiscate cell
phones and Blackberries going into those meetings. What we know is that
those meetings were held one day and literally the next day Congressman
Bachus would engage in buying stock options based on apocalyptic
briefings he had the day before from the Fed chairman and treasury
secretary. I mean, talk about a stock tip,” he added.
Since it was passed, the STOCK Act has
been more or less worthless. Whenever a politician is accused of
anything, they are defended by other politicians and the investigation
is immediately stonewalled. For example, a former staffer for the House
Ways and Means Committee, Brian Stutter was guilty of insider trading.
However, he avoided charges because House Speaker John Boehner refused
to hand over the evidence, and claimed that Sutter had legal immunity.
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