SEC Probe Shouldn't Stop With Goldman Sachs

You might think the breaking scandal swirling around Goldman Sachs gives Democrats one more talking point in their push for regulatory reform. However, if we look just below the surface of the scandal there are explosive revelations that implicate some of the central players who support the legislation being pushed by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd – who is retiring in disgrace over his connection to the earlier Countrywide scandal.

It looks like hedgefund billionaire John Paulson may have helped engineer the housing collapse that made him a fortune. Paulson, along with other notorious subprime kingpins Herb and Marion Sandler, funded a North Carolina-based outfit called the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) to the tune of $15 million, to shake down and harass banks into making bad loans to unqualified borrowers. CRL then turned around and lobbied for legislation to undermine the burgeoning subprime market they had helped create.

Meanwhile, Paulson paid Goldman Sachs another $15 million to design collateralized-debt obligations comprised of specific subprime mortgages that he selected. This bucket of investments may have included loans that he knew were unsound and were made only because banks were strong-armed by the CRL. It also may have included loans that he knew would be undermined by the CRL’s extensive lobbying activities. Until there is a full investigation, we won’t know for sure, but it appears Paulson’s $30 million – split between the CRL and Goldman Sachs – financed a scheme that netted his fund a cool $1 billion dollars.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether Goldman acted improperly, but what about the other players in the scheme? What about the Center for Responsible Lending, which facilitated both the creation of subprime assets and their collapse, while its principal supporter made a fortune? What about the politicians who for years pumped up the subprime markets as a political pander to lower income and minority communities?

Not only is the Center for Responsible Lending escaping the spotlight of investigation, but under the Dodd legislation the CRL is poised to accomplish most of its longtime goals and achieve sweeping new powers.

Treasury official Eric Stein, who helped design the Dodd bill, worked for the Center for Responsible Lending for years. If the bill passes, he is widely expected to be installed as the head of the so-called Consumer Financial Protection Agency. The powers of that new agency are so great and its budget is so large that it could, in the name of consumer protection, interfere with routine commercial transactions throughout the economy. It would have sweeping powers to reward CRL donors and supporters while punishing competitors who aren't in on the scheme.
Main Street America is sick of insider Wall Street interests manipulating the system with the help of their friends in Washington, only to enrich themselves at the expense of taxpayers and the American people. Yet as the breaking Paulson scandal shows, the Dodd bill not only fails to stop such corruption, it institutionalizes it.

In light of the breaking scandal, Congress needs to take a time out until a full investigation into John Paulson, Goldman Sachs, the Center for Responsible Lending and its lobbying activities has been conducted. Their roles in the history of the housing crisis must be fully understood before partisan lawmakers try to harness public outrage to pass a poorly designed bill. That includes the role of self-styled consumer advocates like the CRL in both inflating and popping the bubble. If we rush to regulate before a thorough investigation is done, we’re more likely to encourage corrupt schemes than to end them.

Phil Kerpen is vice president for policy at Americans for Prosperity. He can be reached on Twitter, Facebook, and through www.philkerpen.com.

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