Dave Patch didn't know that today was going to be different than all other days, when he woke up, started the coffee, and went out to get his mail.
No, it was just another summer day.
Except it wasn't.
Today was the day that his mailman brought him the information that would prove conclusively that our securities regulator, the SEC, actively allowed investors to be defrauded by Wall Street after some brokers there made the mistake of a lifetime.
Read his stunning expose here.
Check out the actual FOIA data here.
That doesn't happen every day - where FOIA data shows up for a company that was used as the poster boy for naked short selling by a Senator on the Senate Banking Committee, who directly tells the head of the SEC that he wants a full and complete accounting on what the hell happened with that company - and the data shows that Wall Street was trading up to 10 times the total authorized shares at the time of the controversy. That's quite a dilutive multiplier, huh?
Dilutive in failed trades, that is. Post netting - remember that the CNS system nets the vast majority of trades, removing them from ever having to settle - so that's 10 million shares after the netting effect.
Unkown multiples of the total outstanding shares of the company, being traded, with the SEC knowing about it, and doing nothing. Not a single thing. Note, in my comments, I walk everyone through the math - the company did issue an additional 3 million shares in March, while the FTDs reported in April in the FOIA data were accumulating - but those presumably went into the market during that period, and reduced the total FTDs to "only" 10 million, presumably down from 13 million.
During this period, the SEC has been assuring us how Reg SHO has "worked," and has solved much of the naked short selling problem - at the same time that it knew that in Global Links, Wall Street had printed whole cloth multiples of the authorized shares as naked shorts, and then proceeded to cover it up, further victimizing investors in that company.
Now, how bad does it have to get, and how obvious? I suppose that it is possible that the SEC ignored Bennett's instruction to Donaldson to look into Global Links and figure out what was going on. We could just pretend that it wasn't being discussed for many months after that Senate Banking Committee hearing, and that staffers within the SEC weren't assigned to figure out what the deal was. That is possible, in the way that it is possible that there are millions of you and me walking around in alternative universes. Anything is possible.
But it isn't remotely likely.
No, what is likely is that the SEC knew and understood what had been done, but rather than protecting investors and halting trading, it engaged in a cover-up.
There's that word again.
Cover-up.
Aguirre accused the SEC of doing it. Senator Specter hints at it in a recent article. And now FOIA data shows a concrete example where the ONLY plausible explanation is a cover-up by the nation's securities regulator. A cover-up that directly benefited only the participants who naked short sold all that stock, and directly harmed the company and the company's investors.
So it would certainly appear that our SEC is engaging in cover-ups to benefit powerful Wall Street interests at the direct cost of the investing public's savings.
So, what else has to happen now for a special prosecutor to be named?
How many MORE examples of blatant criminal negligence, obstruction of justice, collusion, breach of ethics, etc. etc. have to occur before we get rid of the cretinous bumbling of "don't fix it if it ain't broke" good old boys, and get a serious prosecutor to peel the onion on this?
Guess what? It's broke. When multiples of the authorized issuance can trade for many months, while investors are bilked out of their investment by Wall Street, as the SEC runs cover for them, it's about as broke as it can get.
Write Specter. Send him this stunning piece by Dave Patch. Demand a special prosecutor, now.
Enough is enough.
The evidence is clear on this one, and presidents have seen impeachment headlines over far less. If the SEC is violating its mandate to act in the public interest and protect investors to this degree, it deserves to be dismantled, and the Justice Department brought in to put the cuffs on those responsible. This is highway robbery, with no plausible excuse other than the obvious, aided and abetted by the SEC, even as they were claiming that Reg SHO was a success, and the only ones whining were malcontents pissy over their stocks going down.
Guess what? They were going down because Wall Street was printing their shares in multiples of the outstanding authorized issuances, while the SEC lied about there being a problem, and LET THEM GET AWAY WITH IT.
Just as they gave Wall Street a get-out-of-jail-free card with all the older fails for a year and a half, via the grandfathering clause. Including all ten million of these fails. How very convenient. Makes you wonder how many "trading errors" like these were made in NFI and OSTK when they dropped off the SHO list and then came back on, with all fails that brought them back on also grandfathered. Seems like a neat way to counterfeit a whole bunch of stock, take a lot of investor money for it, and never have to be accountable, huh?
But wait. That would never happen, right? I mean, the SEC would stop it, right? Wrong. They didn't, and they've been caught red-handed.
Figure it out, people. The obvious answer is the correct one here. The SEC has become an agency that protects lawbreakers if they have enough connections and money, and it views itself as invulnerable, so it does whatever it wants.
Who's going to stop it?
A special prosecutor.
It's time. Senator Specter, enough. Please. What more do you need to see? Really? What else?
I wonder if any of the media will report this? You know, a company that was literally buried in bogus shares even as a Senator in the Senate Banking Committee was demanding action and explanations, and the SEC was pretending everything was hunky dory?
Probably not. Why would a captured, co-opted media mostly owned by Wall Street want to report on the meltdown of the regulator chartered with policing the markets?
Every day, just as I think I can't get any more disgusted, I surprise myself.
Senator Specter? Appoint a prosecutor. Get the Justice Department on this. Now. Before the SEC allows tens of thousands of other investors to be fleeced while it covers it up - which is likely already happening every day, come to think of it.
Either we are a nation under the rule of law, or we aren't. This is the last straw.
Bring on the special prosecutor now. Please.