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The announcement that President Barack Obama would create a task force devoted to cracking down on financial fraud comes comes just three years after he announced a different fraud task force, leaving many in the enforcement community scratching their heads.

In his State of the Union address on Tuesday night Obama announced the formation of the Financial Crimes Unit, which will include a “special unit of federal prosecutors and leading state attorneys general to expand our investigations into the abusive lending and packaging of risky mortgages that led to the housing crisis,” he said. “This new unit will hold accountable those who broke the law, speed assistance to homeowners and help turn the page on an era of recklessness that hurt so many Americans.”

The language was reminiscent of a speech Obama gave in November 2009 when he announced the creation of the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, a sprawling investigative unit established to “hold accountable those who helped bring about the last financial crisis as well as those who would attempt to take advantage of the efforts at economic recovery.”

With representatives from more than 20 federal agencies and 94 U.S. attorneys offices, that task force, created in 2009, has disappointed critics who argue that it has chosen to pursue relatively small fraudsters while leaving alone the major offenders, including the CEOs of banks that wrongfully foreclosed on struggling homeowners.

“Look at happened with WorldCom, with Global Crossings,” said a prominent securities lawyer who wished to remain anonymous. “Those guys were committing fraud at their own companies and still they went to jail for what they did.” Said the lawyer: “But these financial shenanigans had an impact way beyond any one company, and these guys are still walking around free. There’s just not been much effort to hold Wall Street or any of these other guys accountable.”

So what will make this new investigative group any better?

One difference is that the new unit will pool state and federal resources to leverage impact, said an official with the Department of Justice. “Given that there are federal, state, civil, and criminal components to these investigations, marshaling our efforts will be more effective.”

Another key difference is the new unit’s narrow focus, enabling the investigators to delve deeply into the issues instead of having to spread themselves across a variety of different types of fraud, said the DOJ official. Specifically, whereas the older task force is charged with investigating the financial fraud that lead to the economic crisis in the broadest sense — corporate fraud, insider trading, Ponzi schemes — this working group is very narrowly targeted on fraud related to the origination and securitization of mortgage loans.

For some consumer advocates, the new unit sounds promising. “I think it is a good sign that the administration has made this commitment to pursuing origination fraud,” said Diane Thompson, counsel for the National Consumer Law Center, one of the nation’s premier consumer organizations. “There has been a dearth of accountability for the fraud that landed us in the global economic catastrophe we are living through.”

Others remain less convinced. “I am agnostic about this,” said Dean Baker, an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Eric Schneiderman, the New York attorney general, is one of the new unit’s five co-chairs. Schneiderman gained prominence last year with his resistance to the deal currently being negotiated between the Obama administration, the Department of Justice, and the majority of the state attorneys general with five of the nation’s largest banks after their being charged with falsifying mortgage documents and inappropriately denying loan modifications to needy homeowners, among other wrongdoings. Schneiderman has resisted participating in any deal that doesn’t allow states to pursue their own cases against the mortgage companies. The new group is a subunit of the larger task force.

“I have respect for Schneiderman, but he is basically joining an existing task force on mortgage fraud that has done nothing for two years,” Baker said. “Perhaps he will be able to turn things around, but if that was the intention it would seem to make more sense to simply let him set up his own task force.”

Three of the new unit’s co-chairs have also served on the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which raises concerns for David Dayen, a progressive blogger who’s written extensively on the housing crisis.

“Three of the five co-chairs of this panel have a history of dragging their feet on enforcement against the banks in precisely the same areas that this panel will allegedly investigate,” wrote Dayen in a post. Dayen is referring to Tony West, assistant attorney general for the civil division, Robert Khuzami, director of enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Division, and Lanny Breuer, assistant attorney general for the criminal division. In addition to Schneiderman, the final co-chair is John Walsh, U.S. attorney general for district of Colorado.

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As you may or may not recall, in 2008, the insane, overleveraged derivatives casino that Wall Street had built for itself came crashing down, taking the part of the economy many of us enjoyed — the part that allowed us to have “jobs” — down with it. And the reaction was swift: “Here, banks, take several trillion dollars and live, my friends! Pay yourself bonuses and hire lobbyists and feel free to mark your assets to whatever fantasy value you would like.” And no one was held responsible for any of this, except for unemployed people, who wanted “unemployment benefits” to pay for things like “some food.”

Against this backdrop, there were a few naive, inexperienced and unserious people who thought, “Hey, maybe we should actually do something to prevent this from happening again? Like maybe some sort of regulation? Transparency in the derivatives market? Could we do something about predatory lending? Could we even just make a credit card agreement legible?” But those people were and are, of course, socialist monsters. Here’s Jamie Dimon, still pillorying the idea of such a regulation yesterday:

Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, launched a broadside against financial regulation on Wednesday, warning that new capital rules could be “the nail in our coffin for big American banks.”

…Restrictions on debit card fees charged to retailers are also coming under attack in Congress….”It basically penalises us for having debit cards,” he said. “I think it was very unfairly done in the middle of the night with no facts and analysis whatsoever. This is not the way legislation should be done.”

So, Dimon sees “restrictions on debit card fees” as the final “nail in the coffin for big American banks.” Which sounds worrying until you realize that this “nail” doesn’t become dangerous until you gather some wood, plane it, sand it, assemble it into coffin shape, add hinges, upholster the interior, and put varnish and stain on the exterior, and then say, “Okay, now I better get those last few nails.” And, as Kevin Drum points out, we’re not there yet:

It’s only been two years since the Great Collapse, and finance industry profits have already rebounded to their bubble-era levels. That’s a strong sign that finance industry leverage is also returning to its bubble-era levels, which in turn means the industry is about as dangerous as it’s ever been. And Dodd-Frank is a notably weak piece of regulation, about as weak as any bill could be and still be called regulatory reform in the first place. Wall Street got off easy, and Dimon knows it.

The Financial Times surmises that opposition to financial regulatory reform is really starting to ramp up now that we’re years from the crisis and “anger at the financial industry” is on the wane. Drum and Matt Yglesias disagree on this. Yglesias says: “I see absolutely no reason to believe that anger at the financial industry has subsided,” and Drum insists: “the fact is that the public was never really all that angry at the financial industry in the first place.”

I’d split the difference on that score. Anger at the bailouts was definitely incoherent and inconsistent — witness the fact that Russ Feingold, who voted against TARP, lost his seat in the U.S. Senate to bailout-baby Ron Johnson — but it did animate people and it was lasting. At the moment, there’s a movement afoot to satiate the populist hunger for a pound of flesh by serving up teachers and public sector employees as the real “vampire squids.”

Meanwhile, it’s worth reminding everyone that — at a time when Jamie Dimon is asking us to imagine a coffin — the financial services industry is well on the rebound:

Three years later, the financial sector, despite coming under scrutiny for its role in the financial crisis, has returned to prominence, accounting for 29 percent — $57.7 billion — of U.S. profits during a record-breaking fourth quarter last year, notes the Wall Street Journal. That might be the highest percentage of the post-recession period, per the Commerce Department’s figures, but it’s still no where close to a historic 2001 quarter when the finance sector recorded a record-setting 46 percent of all domestic corporate profits.

Before the 1990s, financial institutions rarely accounted for more than 20 percent of total corporate profits.

That the financial sector is again America’s most dominant sector is even more amazing when, the WSJ notes, “the sector accounts for less than 10% of the value added in the economy.”

All I can say is if this is the coffin-like environment that Dodd-Frank created, I deeply regret the fact that nobody attached the “Kill Jason Linkins Immediately Amendment” to the bill.

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