June 29, 2010 at 11:00 am
The death of U.S. Senator Robert Byrd (r.) is threatening to delay passage of the sweeping Wall Street regulatory reform legislation until mid-July after it had been on track for House and Senate votes this week. Law Professor Cornelius Hurley, a former counsel to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and now director of the Morin […]
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Tagged Barney Frank, Boston University School of Law, BU LAW, Christopher Dodd, Congress, Cornelius Hurley, Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Board of Governors, financial regulatory reform, House of Representatives, Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law, Robert Byrd, Senate, Senator Byrd, To Big To Fail, US Senate, Wall Street
The Supreme Court restricted a favorite tool for pursuing corrupt politicians and self-dealing corporate chiefs, ruling that the law that makes it a crime to deprive the public or one’s employer of the “intangible right of honest services” can only be used where they could prove defendants accepted bribes or kickbacks. It means, for instance, that […]
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Tagged Boston University School of Law, BU LAW, BU Law School, CEO Jeff Skilling, Conrad Black, Elizabeth Nowicki, Enron, honest services law, intangible right of honest services, Jeffrey Skilling, Justice Sonia Sotomayor, SEC, Supreme Court, Wall Street
June 15, 2010 at 11:16 am
It’s all BP all the time in Washington this week. After President Obama addresses the nation Wednesday on the BP oil spill situation, company executives on Thursday face a Congressional hearing on the matter. Visiting law Professor Elizabeth Nowicki, both a former SEC and Wall Street attorney, says BP CEO Tony Hayward would be well-served to remember […]
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Tagged Boston University, BP, BP CEO, BP oil spill, BU Law School, Business and Politics, CEO, Congress, Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Elizabeth Nowicki, Graham Wilson, Political Science, President Obama, SEC, Tony Hayward, Wall Street
Dell is in settlement talks with the Securities and Exchange Commission to resolve allegations that its founder/CEO Michael Dell engaged in financial irregularities related to Dell’s dealings with chip-maker Intel — with no admission of guilt or bar of Dell from service as an officer or a public company. Visiting law Professor Elizabeth Nowicki, a […]
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Tagged Attorney General, BU Law School, CEO, Dell, Elizabeth Nowicki, Intel, Michael Dell, New York, New York's attorney general, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission, Wall Street
The Congressionally sponsored bipartisan Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission now has cast its eyes on the credit-rating agencies and the impact they may have had on the Great Crash of 2008. Law Professor Elizabeth Nowicki, a veteran attorney from both Wall Street and the Securities and Exchange Commission, says the agencies are both hopelessly plagued by […]
Bank of America and Citigroup brushed off reports that they incorrectly hid from investors billions in debt — similar to what Lehman Brothers did — to obscure its true level of risk. Company documents filed with regulators show the two Wall Street banks classified some short-term repurchase agreements (“repos”) as sales, which they should have […]
In an effort to avoid a repeat of the May 6th “flash crash” when computerized trading markets tumbled out of control, the Securities and Exchange Commission has voted unanimously to require audit trails to cover all trading orders from start to finish. Visiting Law Professor Elizabeth Nowicki, a former SEC and Wall Street attorney, says the […]
Wall Street investment bank Morgan Stanley reportedly is being investigated by federal authorities to see if it misled investors about mortage-derivatives deals it helped design and sometimes bet against. This is on the heels of the Securities and Exchange Commission charging Goldman Sachs with securities fraud involving similar collateralized debt obligations or CDOs. Law Professor […]
The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, which is looking into the causes for the 2008 economic crash, today questioned former executives from the investment bank Bear Stearns (sold to J.P. Morgan in a firesale after a run on the bank) and explored the open-secret of how Wall Street banks legally fudged their quarterly books to dress up […]
April 22, 2010 at 4:47 pm
President Obama returned to Manhattan to lay out his vision for Wall Street reform now inching its way through Congress. Former deputy Comptroller of the Currency Robert Bench, now a senior fellow at the BU Law School’s Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law, says the proposed reforms don’t go far enough at reining in […]