
No More Madoffs: Schumer, Shelby Want Beefed Up Efforts to Combat Financial Fraud
The wages of Madoff continue to grow...
A new bill being introduced by Senators Chuck Schumer and Richard Shelby would aim to crack down on financial fraud by adding hundreds of new prosecutors and investigators to the Department of Justice -- including the FBI -- and the Securities and Exchange Commission, at a cost of $110 million.
A press release explains:
In recent months, amid the financial crisis that has roiled the U.S. economy, a rising number of securities and accounting fraud cases have surfaced, accounting for billions of dollars in losses for investors. But the agencies on the front lines of policing the Wall Street's top financial institutions and investment managers have been hamstrung by a lack of resources.
And it quotes Schumer:
Our white collar crime divisions are under-staffed, under-funded, and overwhelmed," Schumer said. "When a wave of violent crime sweeps through a city, the immediate response is to beef up the police forces, putting more cops on the beat, extending overtime, and making sure the city returns to safety. Our reaction to the financial crisis and the massive and complex financial fraud investigations that loom should be no different.
In recent weeks, there has been talk of re-structuring the financial regulatory system, of which the SEC is a major pillar, in response to the current financial crisis. So we'll see how this new effort fits in.













