Department of Justice funding liberal allies

The US constitution gives Congress control over Federal spending. This was one aspect of of the Iran Contra affair that liberals were bitter about – the Reagan administration got access to money Congress had no control over, and spent it in ways that Congress would never have approved. The same thing is happening now with fines paid by banks to settle Department of Justice lawsuits.

There have been some big settlements recently between banks and the DOJ:

  • JP Morgan for $13 billion on 11/19/13
  • Citigroup for $7 billion on 7/14/14
  • Bank of America for $16 billion on 8/21/14

At first glance this all looks good from a taxpayer’s point of view. You probably expect that all these billions were safely deposited in the Treasury: used to buy pencils for the Education Department, calculators for the IRS, and gasoline for the Army, all as authorized by Congress in the federal budget.

However, the fact is that a lot of the money in these settlements went straight to left wing community groups, without ever touching a US Treasury bank account. Went to who, exactly? DOJ said it was distributed to a mystery list of ‘qualified organizations’. One version of the list surfaced in an editorial on the web site Investor’s Business Daily:

According to the list provided by Justice, those groups include some of the most radical bank shakedown organizations in the country, including:
• La Raza, which pressures banks to expand their credit box to qualify more low-income Latino immigrants for home loans;
• National Community Reinvestment Coalition, Washington’s most aggressive lobbyist for the disastrous Community Reinvestment Act;
• Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, whose director calls himself a “bank terrorist;”
• Operation Hope, a South Central Los Angeles group that’s pressuring banks to make “dignity mortgages” for deadbeats.

Worse, one group eligible for BofA slush funds is a spin-off of Acorn Housing’s branch in New York.

DOJ claimed it used a list of ‘qualified organizations’, but a FOIA request by Judicial Watch found that actually there is no list, and also that DOJ provides no oversight of how the money is used.

Notice that DOJ forced the banks to fund the same groups that are attacking them. These groups may have discovered a perpetual motion funding machine: point out a bank, and DOJ files a baseless lawsuit. The bank agrees to settle, with the settlement including hefty donations to community activists, donations used as seed money to fund a new round of accusations.

How is it possible that DOJ is handing out money? The relevant law in this case is the Miscellaneous Receipts Act, which requires that ‘an official or agent of the Government receiving money for the Government from any source shall deposit the money in the Treasury’.

In other words, the bank settlements should be deposited at the Treasury; and once in the hands of the Treasury the money is only spent as authorized by Congress. How do you get around that?

As explained in a series of articles on The FCPA Blog, the key word is ‘receiving’. If the guilty bank sends money directly to La Raza or some other group, the federal government never received the funds, so the Miscellaneous Receipts Act does not apply. This is an obvious end-run around the law, recognized in the past and explicitly forbidden. However, the Obama administration apparently crafted a new set of guidelines allowing exceptions. At first the exceptions were for environmental settlements, but use has now broadened to financial cases.

The DOJ bank settlements may violate even the new, looser guidelines, particularly when DOJ uses settlement money to restore funds cut by Congress. For example, Congress cut funding for La Raza from $88 million to $45 million; but then DOJ used settlement funds to provide an extra $30 million to La Raza, restoring 70% of the cut. As Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) said in a Congressional hearing on the matter: “DOJ’s settlements appear to restore most of the funding that Congress specifically cut. For DOJ to funnel money to third-parties through settlements this way may violate the law and is undoubtedly bad policy.”

Here are some issues raised by the end-run around MRA:

  • The Justice Department lacks authority to hand over government funds to parties of its own choosing.
  • Third party contribution requirements bypass the constitutional process for appropriating taxpayer dollars.
  • This practice denies the public the opportunity to know how public funds are spent and to hold elected officials accountable for their choices.
  • Third-party contribution requirements are rife with opportunities for political cronyism because they allow the Justice Department to pick-and-choose which private organizations will receive federal funds, without guidance or oversight.

As stated in Cong. Goodlatte’s hearing: “When the Justice Department negotiates settlements that send money to third parties instead of to the United States Treasury…without legislative authority, they violate separation of powers by effectively using executive-branch enforcement authority to create legislative spending power. The spending may evade laws and regulations limiting or controlling federal spending, or create or fund programs that Congress never would have agreed to spend.”

Bottom Line
This is the flip side of the Obama administration’s abuse of IRS authority: with one hand the IRS is used to attack and intimidate political enemies, and on the other hand DOJ is used to subvert separation-of-powers and provide off-budget funding to political allies.
Imagine in an alternate universe that the Black Panther Party is sued for voter intimidation, settles with DOJ for several million dollars, and part of the settlement requires the Black Panthers to ‘donate’ money to the NRA. Liberal heads would explode with outrage.
If liberals were upset at the diversion of funds in the Iran-Contra affair, they should be just as upset by DOJ running its own slush fund. To be upset in one case and not the other is hypocrisy.

Equality, or fairness?

There’s lots of talk these days about equality. It’s a topic in the 2016 campaign. According to CNN: “Reducing income inequality is at the center of both Democratic presidential frontrunners’ campaigns.”

Equality is not a natural state. Nature abhors equality, just like it abhors a vacuum. Equality is a useful concept for whipping up passions, but not useful when setting public policy or thinking for the long term.

Most people are probably more interested in ‘fairness’; but compared to equality, fairness is elusive and slippery. You can use numbers to identify equality, but what is ‘fair’? You tell me. If someone tries to sell you equality, run. You don’t want equality.

Equality before the law is a fundamental value in a decent society. But equality of treatment in no way guarantees equality of outcomes. On the contrary, equality of treatment makes equality of outcomes unlikely, since virtually nobody is equal to somebody else in the whole range of skills and capabilities required in real life.

Thomas Sowell

Equality? Not Here, Thank You
Here’s a short list of absurdities that make the point we don’t REALLY want equality.

Racial equality? Do we really want racial equality? Then why are there no complaints about the fact that every place kicker and punter in pro football is white; or that most NBA players are black? If racial prejudice causes black poverty in the US, then why is Haiti not a paradise? Haiti is black and self-governing since 1804, and also the poorest and most corrupt country in the western hemisphere.

Earnings equality? Unions and the left like to complain about highly-paid CEOs, but the concern seems to extend only to the finance and manufacturing industries. For example, you don’t hear complaints about salaries in the entertainment industry; and I’m referring here to athletes, musicians, executives, actors and so on. High salaries at Boeing and GE are bad, but not so much in the NBA or at Disney.

Equality of the sexes? The male incarceration rate in the US is 14 times the female rate. Is this the result of sexism? Further, is anyone suggesting we end prison segregation by sex? But, allowing women into combat roles in the military is a good thing? Maybe yes, maybe no; but please don’t tell me it’s for ‘equality’.

Equal economic mobility? Equal opportunity should be a goal, and education is the key; yet poor kids are almost always enrolled in bad schools, and rich kids are almost always in good schools. How do we fix it? US public schools spend more per student than almost anyone else, while results are worse than almost everywhere else. So what do teachers’ unions and their supporters propose to fix the public school system? They want more money, while at the same time resisting accountability for results.

The Bottom Line

Freedom and equality are sworn and everlasting enemies, and when one prevails the other dies. Leave men free, and their natural inequalities will multiply almost geometrically…

Will and Ariel Durant; The Lessons of History

When the left waves the flag of equality, it’s simply a club used in the course of political argumentation. Equality is unnatural, and only achieved through force. However if it’s really ‘fairness’ we want, that’s something entirely different. Equality might be a component of justice or fairness, but it doesn’t stand on its own.

Drug prices and corporate profits

Recently at a reunion of college friends we fell into a discussion about drug prices. One of us voiced the common complaint that drug prices are too high, and unfair. I countered with the standard free market argument that the high prices are needed to cover development costs; that if pharmaceutical company profits are out of line, the market will respond.
What is the free market response to high profits? The pharmaceutical companies’ products are protected from competition by patent laws. Competitors can’t simply copy a product and produce it at a lower cost.
The proof of the argument might lie in the numbers. Are pharmaceutical companies more profitable than other US companies? The numbers tell you they are. I compared gross profit margins for the S&P 500 versus gross profit margins for the top ten US pharmaceutical companies, for the quarter ending June 30, 2015.

S&P 500 39.36%
Top 10 US pharmaceuticals 72.04%

Taking S&P 500 financial results as a stand-in for an average US corporation, the gross profit margin of the top ten US pharmaceutical companies is 83% higher than the average. The following table lists the top ten US pharmaceutical companies with their gross profit margins for the quarter ending 6/30/15.

Pharmaceutical profits

Bottom line
Do patent laws need to be loosened to allow more competition? Right now pharmaceutical products are protected, and producers have the freedom to charge high prices. The result is that industry profits are nearly double the norm.