Two days ago we reported that
the saga of Rohit Bansal, Goldman's "leaker" at the Fed is coming to a
close with the announcement of a criminal case filed against Goldman's
deep throat who had previously spent 7 years at the NY Fed, and was
about to spend some time in prison, and who had been providing Goldman
with confidential information sourced from his contact at the NY Fed for
months, as a result of which Goldman would be charged a penalty.
Moments ago the NY DFS announced that the best connected hedge fund
in the world would pay $50 million to the New York State Department of
Financial Services and "accept a three-year voluntary abstention from
accepting new consulting engagements that require the Department to
authorize the disclosure of confidential information under New York
Banking Law"
Goldman Sachs would also admit that a Goldman employee engaged in the
criminal theft of Department confidential supervisory information;
Goldman Sachs management failed to effectively supervise its employee to
prevent this theft from occurring; and Goldman failed to implement and
maintain adequate policies and procedures relating to post-employment
restrictions for former government employees.
Below are the unbelievable, details of just how Goldman was getting material information from the NY Fed, from the FDS:
Violation of Post-employment Restrictions
On July 21, 2014, an individual began work at Goldman, Sachs &
Co. as an Associate in the Financial Institutions Group ("FIG") of the
Investment Banking Division ("IBD"). The Associate reported to a
Managing Director and a Partner at Goldman.
Prior to his employment at Goldman, from approximately August 2007 to
March 2014, the Associate was a bank examiner at the U.S. Federal
Reserve Bank of New York ("the New York Fed"). His most recent
position at the New York Fed was as the Central Point of Contact ("CPC")
– the primary supervisory contact for a particular financial
institution – for an entity regulated by the Department (the "Regulated
Entity").
In March 2014, the Associate was required to resign from his position
at the New York Fed for, among other reasons, taking his work
blackberry overseas without obtaining prior authorization to do so and
for attempting to falsify records to make it look like he had obtained
such authorization, and for engaging in unauthorized communications with
the Federal Reserve Board.
The Associate was hired in large part for the regulatory experience
and knowledge he had gained while working at the New York Fed. Prior to
hiring him, the Partner and other senior personnel interviewed and
called the Associate several times, and the Partner took him out to
lunch and dinner.
Prior to starting at Goldman, in May 2014, the Associate informed the
Partner of potential restrictions on his work, due to his previous
employment at the New York Fed, and specifically as the CPC for the
Regulated Entity. The Partner advised the Associate to consult the New
York Fed to obtain clarification regarding any applicable restrictions.
Accordingly, the Associate inquired with the New York Fed Ethics
Office and was given a "Notice of Post-Employment Restriction," which he
completed and signed with respect to his supervisory work for the
Regulated Entity. The Associate provided this form to Goldman.
This Notice of Post-Employment Restriction read that the Associate was
prohibited "from knowingly accepting compensation as an employee,
officer, director, or consultant from [the Regulated Entity]" until
February 1, 2015.
On May 14, 2014, the Associate forwarded this notice of restriction
to the Partner, the Managing Director, and an attorney in Goldman's
Legal Department. In his email, the Associate also included guidance
from the New York Fed, stating, in short, that a person falls under the
post-employment restriction if that person "directly works on matters
for, or on behalf of," the relevant financial institution.
Despite receiving
this notice and guidance, Goldman placed the Associate on Regulated
Entity matters from the outset of his employment. As
further detailed below, the Associate also schemed to steal confidential
regulatory and government documents related to that same Regulated
Entity in advising that client.
Unauthorized Possession and Dissemination of Confidential Information
During his
employment at Goldman, the Associate wrongfully obtained confidential
information, including approximately 35 documents, on approximately 20
occasions, from a former co-worker at the New York Fed (the
"New York Fed Employee"). These documents constituted confidential
regulatory or supervisory information – many marked as "internal,"
"restricted," or "confidential" – belonging to the Department, the New
York Fed or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the "FDIC"). The
Associate's main conduit for receiving information from the New York
Fed was his former coworker, the New York Fed Employee, who has since
been terminated for this conduct. While still employed at the
New York Fed, the New York Fed Employee would email documents to the
Associate's personal email address, and the Associate would subsequently
forward those emails to his own Goldman work email address.
On numerous occasions, the Associate provided this
confidential information to various senior personnel at Goldman,
including the Partner and the Managing Director, as well as a Vice
President and another associate who perform quantitative analysis for
Goldman. In several instances where the Associate forwarded
confidential information to other Goldman personnel, the Associate wrote
in the body of the email that the documents were highly confidential or
directed the recipients, "Please don't distribute." At least nine
documents that the Associate provided to Goldman constituted
confidential supervisory information under New York Banking Law §
36(10). Pursuant to the statute, such confidential supervisory
information shall not be disclosed unless authorized by the Department.
The documents included draft and final versions of memoranda regarding
and examinations of the Regulated Entity, as well as correspondence
related to those examinations.
At least 17 confidential documents that the Associate had
improperly received from the New York Fed – seven of which constituted
confidential supervisory information under New York Banking Law § 36(10)
– were found in hard copy on the desk of the Managing Director.
Additional hard copy documents were found on the desks of the Vice
President and the other associate, including at least one document
constituting confidential supervisory information under New York Banking
Law § 36(10).
On August 18, 2014, the Associate shared three documents pertaining
to enterprise risk management with the Managing Director, writing,
"Below is the ERM request list, work program and assessment framework we
used for ERM targets. Again this is highly confidential as its not
public and has not been issued a[s] guidance yet. Not sure where it is
at anymore due to internal politics. I worked on this framework and
guidance within the context of a system working group with the Fed
system. We ran several pilots to test it was well. Please don't
distribute." The Managing Director replied, "I won't. Will review on
plane tomorrow to DC." The documents were marked as "Internal-FR" or
"Restricted-FR."
Part of Goldman's work for the Regulated Entity included advisory
services with respect to a potential transaction. A certain component of
the Regulated Entity's examination rating was relevant to the
transaction. The Regulated Entity's examinations were conducted jointly
by the FDIC, DFS and the New York Fed. As described below, the Associate
used confidential information regarding the Regulated Entity's
examination rating – obtained both from his prior employment at the New
York Fed and from his contacts there – and conveyed this information to
the Managing Director, who then conveyed the information to the
Regulated Entity on September 23, 2014, in advance of it being conveyed
by the regulators.
On August 16, 2014, the Associate emailed the Managing Director
regarding the regulators' perspective on the Regulated Entity's
forthcoming examination rating, writing "You need to speak to [the CEO
of the Regulated Entity] about scheduling a meeting with all 3 agencies
ASAP. He needs to meet with them and display and discuss all the
improvements and corrections they have made during the last examination
cycle."
On September 23, 2014, the Associate attended the birthday
dinner of the New York Fed Employee at Peter Luger Steakhouse, along
with several other New York Fed employees. Immediately after the dinner,
the Associate emailed the Managing Director, divulging confidential
information concerning the Regulated Entity, specifically, the relevant
component of the upcoming examination rating. The Associate wrote, "…the
exit meeting is tomorrow and looks like no [change] to the [relevant]
rating. I heard there won't be any split rating… [The Regulated Entity]
should have listened to you with the advice…hopefully [the CEO] will now
know you didn't have phony info."
In this email, the Associate also provided advice to relay to the
Regulated Entity's management, stating that they should "keep their
cool, not get defensive and not say too much unless the regulators have a
blatant fact wrong" as it "will go off better for them in the long run.
Believe it or not the regulator's [sic] look for reaction and level of
mgmt respectiveness [sic] during these exit meetings." The Managing
Director replied "Let's discuss . . . I'm seeing [the CEO of the Regulated Entity] tmw afternoon alone."
Later that night, the Associate followed up with another email to the
Managing Director, writing, "I feel awful not being there to wrap up
2013. I would have been able to pull all this through. I was a real
advocate for all the work they have done." He also offered to join a
meeting with the CEO of the Regulated Entity if the Managing Director
wanted.
On September 26, 2014, Goldman had an internal call regarding the
calculation of certain asset ratios, during which there was disagreement
over the appropriate method. During the call, the Associate
circulated an internal New York Fed document – which the Associate had
recently obtained from the New York Fed Employee – relating to the
calculation, to the call participants, writing, "Pls keep confidential?"
Following the group call, the Partner called the Associate to
discuss the document, including where he had obtained it, and the
Associate told him that he had obtained it from the New York Fed. The
Partner then called the Global Head of IBD Compliance to report the
matter and forwarded the document.
Compliance Failures, Failure to Supervise and Violation of Internal Policies
After receiving notice of the Associate's prohibition on
working on matters for the Regulated Entity, Goldman, including the
Partner and the Legal Department, failed to take any steps to screen the
Associate from such prohibited work. Instead, Goldman
affirmatively placed the Associate on matters for the Regulated Entity
beginning on his first day, and added the Associate to the official
Goldman database as a member of the Regulated Entity "Team" – a team led
by the Partner.
Goldman failed to provide training to personnel regarding what
constituted confidential supervisory information and how it should be
safeguarded. While Goldman policies provided that confidential
information received from clients should only be shared on a "need to
know" basis, Goldman did not distinguish between this broader category
of confidential information and the type of confidential supervisory
information belonging to a regulator or other government agency, which
is protected by law, such as confidential supervisory information under
New York Banking Law § 36(10). Indeed, Goldman policies failed to
adequately address Department confidential supervisory information.
As noted above, the Associate also violated Goldman's internal policy
on "Use of Materials from Previous Employers," which states that work
that personnel have done for previous employers, and confidential
information gained while working there, should not be brought into
Goldman or used or disclosed to others at Goldman without the express
permission of the previous employer.
* * *
The Managing Director is safe, as are all other Goldman employees:
nobody aside for Bansal who was merely trying to impress his superiors,
has anything to worry about.
Anyone else found to have obtained at least "35 confidential
documents" from the Fed on at least "20 occassions" would be sent
straight to jail with a prison sentence anywhere between several decades
and life.
Goldman's punishment? 0.6% of its 2014 Net Income.
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