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<h1>Enough Is Enough:<br />
They lie they cheat they steal and <br />
they've been getting away with it for too long.</h1>          
           <div id="byline">		  <!--#include virtual="/inserts/gizmos.htm" --> 
<p>Fortune March 18, 2002<br />
             By Clifton Leaf</p>
            <div class="clearboth"></div> 
          </div>	
		      <p>We at ReclaimDemocracy.org 
have been calling for &quot;getting tough&quot; on white-collar crime for 
years, so we're pleased to see such business stalwarts as Fortune 
Magazine catching up to us with this well-researched report, which 
slipped by our radar in March, but has lost none of its merit.</p><p>
Arthur Levitt, the tough-talking former chairman of the Securities 
and Exchange Commission, spoke of a &quot;multitude of villains.&quot; 
Red-faced Congressmen hurled insults, going so far as to compare 
the figures at the center of the Enron debacle unfavorably to carnival 
hucksters. The Treasury Secretary presided over a high-level working 
group aimed at punishing negligent CEOs and directors. Legislators 
from all but a handful of states threatened to sue the firm that 
bollixed up the auditing, Arthur Andersen. There was as much handwringing, 
proselytizing, and bloviating in front of the witness stand as there 
was shredding behind it. </p><p>
It took a late-night comedian, though, to zero in on the central 
mystery of this latest corporate shame. After a parade of executives 
from Enron and Arthur Andersen flashed on the television monitor, 
Jon Stewart, anchor of The Daily Show, turned to the camera and 
shouted, &quot;Why aren't all of you in jail? And not like white-guy 
jail--jail jail. With people by the weight room going, 'Mmmmm.' 
&quot; </p><p>
It was a pitch-perfect question. And, sadly, one that was sure to 
get a laugh. </p><p>
Not since the savings-and-loan scandal a decade ago have high crimes 
in the boardroom provided such rich television entertainment. But 
that's not for any lack of malfeasance. Before Enronitis inflamed 
the public, gigantic white-collar swindles were rolling through 
the business world and the legal system with their customary regularity. 
And though they displayed the full creative range of executive thievery, 
they had one thing in common: Hardly anyone ever went to prison. 
</p><p>
Regulators alleged that divisional managers at investment firm Credit 
Suisse First Boston participated in a &quot;pervasive&quot; scheme 
to siphon tens of millions of dollars of their customers' trading 
profits during the Internet boom of 1999 and early 2000 by demanding 
excessive trading fees. (For one 1999 quarter the backdoor bonuses 
amounted to as much as a fifth of the firm's total commissions.) 
Those were the facts, as outlined by the SEC and the National Association 
of Securities Dealers in a high-profile news conference earlier 
this year. But the January news conference wasn't to announce an 
indictment. It was to herald a settlement, in which CSFB neither 
admitted nor denied wrongdoing. Sure, the SEC concluded that the 
investment bank had failed to observe &quot;high standards of commercial 
honor,&quot; and the company paid $100 million in fines and &quot;disgorgement,&quot; 
and CSFB itself punished 19 of its employees with fines ranging 
from $250,000 to $500,000. But whatever may or may not have happened, 
no one was charged with a crime. The U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan 
dropped its investigation when the case was settled. Nobody, in 
other words, is headed for the hoosegow. </p><p>
A month earlier drugmaker ICN Pharmaceuticals actually pleaded guilty 
to one count of criminal fraud for intentionally misleading investors--over 
many years, it now seems--about the FDA approval status of its flagship 
drug, ribavirin. The result of a five-year grand jury investigation? 
A $5.6 million fine and the company's accession to a three-year 
&quot;probationary&quot; period. Prosecutors said that not only 
had the company deceived investors, but its chairman, Milan Panic, 
had also made more than a million dollars off the fraud as he hurriedly 
sold shares. He was never charged with insider trading or any other 
criminal act. The SEC is taking a firm stand, though, &quot;seeking 
to bar Mr. Panic from serving as a director or officer of any publicly 
traded company.&quot; Tough luck. </p><p>
And who can forget those other powerhouse scandals, Sunbeam and 
Waste Management? The notorious Al &quot;Chainsaw&quot; Dunlap, 
accused of zealously fabricating Sunbeam's financial statements 
when he was chief executive, is facing only civil, not criminal, 
charges. The SEC charged that Dunlap and his minions made use of 
every accounting fraud in the book, from &quot;channel stuffing&quot; 
to &quot;cookie jar reserves.&quot; The case is now in the discovery 
phase of trial and likely to be settled; he has denied wrongdoing. 
(Earlier Chainsaw rid himself of a class-action shareholder suit 
for $15 million, without admitting culpability.) Whatever the current 
trial's outcome, Dunlap will still come out well ahead. Sunbeam, 
now under bankruptcy protection, gave him $12.7 million in stock 
and salary during 1998 alone. And if worse comes to worst, he can 
always tap the stash he got from the sale of the disemboweled Scott 
Paper to Kimberly-Clark, which by Dunlap's own estimate netted him 
a $100 million bonanza. </p><p>
Sunbeam investors, naturally, didn't fare as well. When the fraud 
was discovered internally, the company was forced to restate its 
earnings, slashing half the reported profits from fiscal 1997. After 
that embarrassment, Sunbeam shares fell from $52 to $7 in just six 
months--a loss of $3.8 billion in market cap. Sound familiar? </p><p>
The auditor in that case, you'll recall, was Arthur Andersen, which 
paid $110 million to settle a civil action. According to an SEC 
release in May, an Andersen partner authorized unqualified audit 
opinions even though &quot;he was aware of many of the company's 
accounting improprieties and disclosure failures.&quot; The opinions 
were false and misleading. But nobody is going to jail. </p><p>
At Waste Management, yet another Andersen client, income reported 
over six years was overstated by $1.4 billion. Andersen coughed 
up $220 million to shareholders to wipe its hands clean. The auditor, 
agreeing to the SEC's first antifraud injunction against a major 
firm in more than 20 years, also paid a $7 million fine to close 
the complaint. Three partners were assessed fines, ranging from 
$30,000 to $50,000, as well. (You guessed it. Not even home detention.) 
Concedes one former regulator familiar with the case: &quot;Senior 
people at Andersen got off when we felt we had the goods.&quot; 
Andersen did not respond to a request for comment. </p><p>
The list goes on--from phony bookkeeping at the former Bankers Trust 
(now part of Deutsche Bank) to allegations of insider trading by 
a former Citigroup vice president. One employee of California tech 
firm nVidia admitted that he cleared nearly half a million dollars 
in a single day in March 2000 from an illegal insider tip. He pleaded 
guilty to criminal charges, paid fines, and got a 12-month grounding 
at home. </p><p>
While none of those misbehaviors may rise to Enronian proportions, 
at least in terms of salacious detail, taken en masse they say something 
far more distressing. The double standard in criminal justice in 
this country is starker and more embedded than many realize. Bob 
Dylan was right: Steal a little, and they put you in jail. Steal 
a lot, and you're likely to walk away with a lecture and a court-ordered 
promise not to do it again. </p><p>
Far beyond the pure social inequity--and that would be bad enough, 
we admit--is a very real dollar-and-cents cost, a doozy of a recurring 
charge that ripples through the financial markets. As the Enron 
case makes abundantly clear, white-collar fraud is not a victimless 
crime. In this age of the 401(k), when the retirement dreams of 
middle-class America are tied to the integrity of the stock market, 
crooks in the corner office are everybody's problem. And the problem 
will not go away until white-collar thieves face a consequence they're 
actually scared of: time in jail. </p><p>
The U.S. regulatory and judiciary systems, however, do little if 
anything to deter the most damaging Wall Street crimes. Interviews 
with some six dozen current and former federal prosecutors, regulatory 
officials, defense lawyers, criminologists, and high-ranking corporate 
executives paint a disturbing picture. The already stretched &quot;white-collar&quot; 
task forces of the FBI focus on wide-ranging schemes like Internet, 
insurance, and Medicare fraud, abandoning traditional securities 
and accounting offenses to the SEC. Federal securities regulators, 
while determined and well trained, are so understaffed that they 
often have to let good cases slip away. Prosecutors leave scores 
of would-be criminal cases referred by the SEC in the dustbin, declining 
to prosecute more than half of what comes their way. State regulators, 
with a few notable exceptions, shy away from the complicated stuff. 
So-called self-regulatory organizations like the National Association 
of Securities Dealers are relatively toothless; trade groups like 
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants stubbornly 
protect their own. And perhaps worst of all, corporate chiefs often 
wink at (or nod off to) overly aggressive tactics that speed along 
the margins of the law. </p><p>
Let's start with the numbers. Wall Street, after all, is about numbers, 
about playing the percentages. And that may be the very heart of 
the problem. Though securities officials like to brag about their 
enforcement records, few in America's top-floor suites and corporate 
boardrooms fear the local sheriff. They know the odds of getting 
caught. </p><p>
The U.S. Attorneys' Annual Statistical Report is the official reckoning 
of the Department of Justice. For the year 2000, the most recent 
statistics available, federal prosecutors say they charged 8,766 
defendants with what they term white-collar crimes, convicting 6,876, 
or an impressive 78% of the cases brought. Not bad. Of that number, 
about 4,000 were sentenced to prison--nearly all of them for less 
than three years. (The average time served, experts say, is closer 
to 16 months.) </p><p>
But that 4,000 number isn't what you probably think it is. The Justice 
Department uses the white-collar appellation for virtually every 
kind of fraud, says Henry Pontell, a leading criminologist at the 
University of California at Irvine, and co-author of Big-Money Crime: 
Fraud and Politics in the Savings and Loan Crisis. &quot;I've seen 
welfare frauds labeled as white-collar crimes,&quot; he says. Digging 
deeper into the Justice Department's 2000 statistics, we find that 
only 226 of the cases involved securities or commodities fraud. 
</p><p>
And guess what: Even those are rarely the highfliers, says Kip Schlegel, 
chairman of the department of criminal justice at Indiana University, 
who wrote a study on Wall Street lawbreaking for the Justice Department's 
research wing. Many of the government's largest sting operations 
come from busting up cross-state Ponzi schemes, &quot;affinity&quot; 
investment scams (which prey on the elderly or on particular ethnic 
or religious groups), and penny-stock boiler rooms, like the infamous 
Stratton Oakmont and Sterling Foster. They are bad seeds, certainly. 
But let's not kid ourselves: They are not corporate-officer types 
or high-level Wall Street traders and bankers--what we might call 
starched-collar criminals. &quot;The criminal sanction is generally 
reserved for the losers,&quot; says Schlegel, &quot;the scamsters, 
the low-rent crimes.&quot; </p><p>
Statistics from the Federal Bureau of Prisons, up to date as of 
October 2001, make it even clearer how few white-collar criminals 
are behind bars. Of a total federal inmate population of 156,238, 
prison authorities say only 1,021 fit the description--which includes 
everyone from insurance schemers to bankruptcy fraudsters, counterfeiters 
to election-law tamperers to postal thieves. Out of those 1,000 
or so, well more than half are held at minimum-security levels--often 
privately managed &quot;Club Feds&quot; that are about two steps 
down the comfort ladder from Motel 6. </p><p>
And how many of them are the starched-collar crooks who commit securities 
fraud? The Bureau of Prisons can't say precisely. The Department 
of Justice won't say either--but the answer lies in its database. 
</p><p>
Susan Long, a professor of quantitative methods at the school of 
management at Syracuse University, co-founded a Web data clearinghouse 
called TRAC, which has been tracking prosecutor referrals from virtually 
every federal agency for more than a decade. Using a barrage of 
Freedom of Information Act lawsuits, TRAC has been able to gather 
data buried in the Justice Department's own computer files (minus 
the individual case numbers that might be used to identify defendants). 
And the data, which follow each matter from referral to the prison 
steps, tell a story the Justice Department doesn't want you to know. 
</p><p>
In the full ten years from 1992 to 2001, according to TRAC data, 
SEC enforcement attorneys referred 609 cases to the Justice Department 
for possible criminal charges. Of that number, U.S. Attorneys decided 
what to do on about 525 of the cases--declining to prosecute just 
over 64% of them. Of those they did press forward, the feds obtained 
guilty verdicts in a respectable 76%. But even then, some 40% of 
the convicted starched-collars didn't spend a day in jail. In case 
you're wondering, here's the magic number that did: 87. </p><p>
Five-point type is small print, so tiny that almost everyone who 
remembers the Bay of Pigs or the fall of Saigon will need bifocals 
to read it. For those who love pulp fiction or the crime blotters 
in their town weeklies, however, there is no better place to look 
than in the small print of the Wall Street Journal's B section. 
Once a month, buried in the thick folds of newsprint, are bullet 
reports of the NASD's disciplinary actions. February's disclosures 
about alleged misbehavior, for example, range from the unseemly 
to the lurid--from an Ohio bond firm accused of systematically overcharging 
customers and fraudulently marking up trades to a California broker 
who deposited a client's $143,000 check in his own account. Two 
senior VPs of a Pittsburgh firm, say NASD officials, cashed out 
of stock, thanks to timely inside information they received about 
an upcoming loss; a Dallas broker reportedly converted someone's 
401(k) rollover check to his personal use.</p><p>
In all, the group's regulatory arm received 23,753 customer complaints 
against its registered reps between the years 1997 and 2000. After 
often extensive investigations, the NASD barred &quot;for life&quot; 
during this period 1,662 members and suspended another 1,000 or 
so for violations of its rules or of laws on the federal books. 
But despite its impressive 117-page Sanction Guidelines, the NASD 
can't do much of anything to its miscreant broker-dealers other 
than throw them out of the club. It has no statutory right to file 
civil actions against rule breakers, it has no subpoena power, and 
from the looks of things it can't even get the bums to return phone 
calls. Too often the disciplinary write-ups conclude with a boilerplate 
&quot;failed to respond to NASD requests for information.&quot; 
</p><p>
&quot;That's a good thing when they default,&quot; says Barry Goldsmith, 
executive vice president for enforcement at NASD Regulation. &quot;It 
gives us the ability to get the wrongdoers out quickly to prevent 
them from doing more harm.&quot; </p><p>
Goldsmith won't say how many cases the NASD passes on to the SEC 
or to criminal prosecutors for further investigation. But he does 
acknowledge that the securities group refers a couple of hundred 
suspected insider-trading cases to its higher-ups in the regulatory 
chain. </p><p>
Thus fails the first line of defense against white-collar crime: 
self-policing. The situation is worse, if anything, among accountants 
than it is among securities dealers, says John C. Coffee Jr., a 
Columbia Law School professor and a leading authority on securities 
enforcement issues. At the American Institute of Certified Public 
Accountants, he says, &quot;no real effort is made to enforce the 
rules.&quot; Except one, apparently. &quot;They have a rule that 
they do not take action against auditors until all civil litigation 
has been resolved,&quot; Coffee says, &quot;because they don't want 
their actions to be used against their members in a civil suit.&quot; 
Lynn E. Turner, who until last summer was the SEC's chief accountant 
and is now a professor at Colorado State University, agrees. &quot;The 
AICPA,&quot; he says, &quot;often failed to discipline members in 
a timely fashion, if at all. And when it did, its most severe remedy 
was just to expel the member from the organization.&quot; </p><p>
Al Anderson, senior VP of AICPA, says the criticism is unfounded. 
&quot;We have been and always will be committed to enforcing the 
rules,&quot; he says. </p><p>
The next line of defense after the professional associations is 
the SEC. The central role of this independent regulatory agency 
is to protect investors in the financial markets by making sure 
that publicly traded companies play by the rules. With jurisdiction 
over every constituent in the securities trade, from brokers to 
mutual funds to accountants to corporate filers, it would seem to 
be the voice of Oz. But the SEC's power, like that of the Wizard, 
lies more in persuasion than in punishment. The commission can force 
companies to comply with securities rules, it can fine them when 
they don't, it can even charge them in civil court with violating 
the law. But it can't drag anybody off to prison. To that end, the 
SEC's enforcement division must work with federal and state prosecutors--a 
game that often turns into weak cop/bad cop. </p><p>
Nevertheless, the last commission chairman, Arthur Levitt, did manage 
to shake the ground with the power he had. For the 1997-2000 period, 
for instance, attorneys at the agency's enforcement division brought 
civil actions against 2,989 respondents. That figure includes 487 
individual cases of alleged insider trading, 365 for stock manipulation, 
343 for violations of laws and rules related to financial disclosure, 
196 for contempt of the regulatory agency, and another 94 for fraud 
against customers. In other words, enough bad stuff to go around. 
What would make them civil crimes, vs. actual handcuff-and-fingerprint 
ones? Evidence, says one SEC regional director. &quot;In a civil 
case you need only a preponderance of evidence that there was an 
intent to defraud,&quot; she says. &quot;In a criminal case you 
have to prove that intent beyond a reasonable doubt.&quot; </p><p>
When the SEC does find a case that smacks of criminal intent, the 
commission refers it to a U.S. Attorney. And that is where the second 
line of defense often breaks down. The SEC has the expertise to 
sniff out such wrongdoing but not the big stick of prison to wave 
in front of its targets. The U.S. Attorney's office has the power 
to order in the SWAT teams but often lacks the expertise--and, quite 
frankly, the inclination--to deconstruct a complex financial crime. 
After all, it is busy pursuing drug kingpins and terrorists. </p><p>
And there is also the key issue of institutional kinship, say an 
overwhelming number of government authorities. U.S. Attorneys, for 
example, have kissing-cousin relationships with the agencies they 
work with most, the FBI and DEA. Prosecutors and investigators often 
work together from the start and know the elements required on each 
side to make a case stick. That is hardly true with the SEC and 
all but a handful of U.S. Attorneys around the country. In candid 
conversations, current and former regulators cited the lack of warm 
cooperation between the law-enforcement groups, saying one had no 
clue about how the other worked. </p><p>
Thirteen blocks from Wall Street is a different kind of ground zero. 
Here, in the shadow of the imposing Federalist-style courthouses 
of lower Manhattan, is a nine-story stone fortress of indeterminate 
color, somewhere in the unhappy genus of waiting-room beige. As 
with every federal building these days, there are reminders of the 
threat of terrorism, but this particular outpost has taken those 
reminders to the status of a four-bell alarm. To get to the U.S. 
Attorney's office, a visitor must wind his way through a phalanx 
of blue police barricades, stop by a kiosk manned by a U.S. marshal, 
enter a giant white tent with police and metal detectors, and proceed 
to a bulletproof visitors desk, replete with armed guards. Even 
if you make it to the third floor, home of the Securities and Commodities 
Fraud Task Force, Southern District of New York, you'll need an 
electronic passkey to get in. </p><p>
This, the office which Rudy Giuliani led to national prominence 
with his late-1980s busts of junk-bond king Michael Milken, Ivan 
Boesky, and the Drexel Burnham insider-trading ring, is one of the 
few outfits in the country that even know how to prosecute complex 
securities crimes. Or at least one of the few willing to take them 
on. Over the years it has become the favorite (and at times lone) 
repository for the SEC's enforcement hit list.</p><p>
And how many attorneys are in this office to fight the nation's 
book cookers, insider traders, and other Wall Street thieves? Twenty-five--including 
three on loan from the SEC. The unit has a fraction of the paralegal 
and administrative help of even a small private law firm. Assistant 
U.S. Attorneys do their own copying, and in one recent sting it 
was Sandy--one of the unit's two secretaries--who did the records 
analysis that broke the case wide open.</p><p>
Even this office declines to prosecute more than half the cases 
referred to it by the SEC. Richard Owens, the newly minted chief 
of the securities task force and a six-year veteran of the unit, 
insists that it is not for lack of resources. There are plenty of 
legitimate reasons, he says, why a prosecutor would choose not to 
pursue a case--starting with the possibility that there may not 
have been true criminal intent. </p><p>
But many federal regulators scoff at such bravado. &quot;We've got 
too many crooks and not enough cops,&quot; says one. &quot;We could 
fill Riker's Island if we had the resources.&quot; </p><p>
And Owens' office is as good as it gets in this country. In other 
cities, federal and state prosecutors shun securities cases for 
all kinds of understandable reasons. They're harder to pull off 
than almost any other type of case--and the payoff is rarely worth 
it from the standpoint of local political impact. &quot;The typical 
state prosecution is for a standard common-law crime,&quot; explains 
Philip A. Feigin, an attorney with Rothgerber Johnson &amp; Lyons 
in Denver and a former commissioner of the Colorado Securities Division. 
&quot;An ordinary trial will probably last for five days, it'll 
have 12 witnesses, involve an act that occurred in one day, and 
was done by one person.&quot; Now hear the pitch coming from a securities 
regulator thousands of miles away. &quot;Hi. We've never met, but 
I've got this case I'd like you to take on. The law that was broken 
is just 158 pages long. It involves only three years of conduct--and 
the trial should last no more than three months. What do you say?&quot; 
The prosecutor has eight burglaries or drug cases he could bring 
in the time it takes to prosecute a single white-collar crime. &quot;It's 
a completely easy choice,&quot; says Feigin. </p><p>
That easy choice, sadly, has left a glaring logical--and moral--fallacy 
in the nation's justice system: Suite thugs don't go to jail because 
street thugs have to. And there's one more thing on which many crime 
experts are adamant. The double standard makes no sense whatsoever 
when you consider the damage done by the offense. Sociologist Pontell 
and his colleagues Kitty Calavita, at U.C. Irvine, and Robert Tillman, 
at New York's St. John's University, have demonstrated this in a 
number of compelling academic studies. In one the researchers compared 
the sentences received by major players (that is, those who stole 
$100,000 or more) in the savings-and-loan scandal a decade ago with 
the sentences handed to other types of nonviolent federal offenders. 
The starched-collar S&amp;L crooks got an average of 36.4 months 
in the slammer. Those who committed burglary--generally swiping 
$300 or less--got 55.6 months; car thieves, 38 months; and first-time 
drug offenders, 64.9 months. Now compare the costs of the two kinds 
of crime: The losses from all bank robberies in the U.S. in 1992 
totaled $35 million, according to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports. 
That's about 1% of the estimated cost of Charles Keating's fraud 
at Lincoln Savings &amp; Loan. </p><p>
&quot;Of all the factors that lead to corporate crime, none comes 
close in importance to the role top management plays in tolerating, 
even shaping, a culture that allows for it,&quot; says William Laufer, 
the director of the Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research 
at the Wharton School. Laufer calls it &quot;winking.&quot; And 
with each wink, nod, and nudge-nudge, instructions of a sort are 
passed down the management chain. Accounting fraud, for example, 
often starts in this way. &quot;Nobody writes an e-mail that says, 
'Gee, I think I'll screw the public today,' &quot; says former regulator 
Feigin. &quot;There's never been a fraud of passion. These things 
take years.&quot; They breed slowly over time. </p><p>
So does the impetus to fight them. Enron, of course, has stirred 
an embarrassed Administration and Congress to action. But it isn't 
merely Enron that worries legislators and the public--it's another 
Enron. Every day brings news of one more accounting gas leak that 
for too long lay undetected. Wariness about Lucent, Rite Aid, Raytheon, 
Tyco, and a host of other big names has left investors not only 
rattled but also questioning the very integrity of the financial 
reporting system. </p><p>
And with good reason. Two statistics in particular suggest that 
no small degree of executive misconduct has been brewing in the 
corporate petri dish. In 1999 and 2000 the SEC demanded 96 restatements 
of earnings or other financial statements--a figure that was more 
than in the previous nine years combined. Then, in January, the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced more disturbing news. 
The number of publicly traded companies declaring bankruptcy shot 
up to a record 257, a stunning 46% over the prior year's total, 
which itself had been a record. These companies shunted $259 billion 
in assets into protective custody--that is, away from shareholders. 
And a record 45 of these losers were biggies, companies with assets 
greater than $1 billion. That might all seem normal in a time of 
burst bubbles and economic recession. But the number of nonpublic 
bankruptcies has barely risen. Regulators and plaintiffs lawyers 
say both restatements and sudden public bankruptcies often signal 
the presence of fraud. </p><p>
The ultimate cost could be monumental. &quot;Integrity of the markets, 
and the willingness of people to invest, are critical to us,&quot; 
says Harvey J. Goldschmid, a professor of law at Columbia since 
1970 and soon to be an SEC commissioner. &quot;Widespread false 
disclosure would be incredibly dangerous. People could lose trust 
in corporate filings altogether.&quot; </p><p>
So will all this be enough to spark meaningful changes in the system? 
Professor Coffee thinks the Enron matter might move Congress to 
take action. &quot;I call it the phenomenon of crash-then-law,&quot; 
he says. &quot;You need three things to get a wave of legislation 
and litigation: a recession, a stock market crash, and a true villain.&quot; 
For instance, Albert Wiggin, head of Chase National Bank, cleaned 
up during the crash of 1929 by short-selling his own company stock. 
&quot;From that came a new securities law, Section 16(b), that prohibits 
short sales by executives,&quot; Coffee says. </p><p>
But the real issue isn't more laws on the books--it's enforcing 
the ones that are already there. And that, says criminologist Kip 
Schlegel, is where the government's action falls far short of the 
rhetoric. In his 1994 study on securities lawbreaking for the Justice 
Department, Schlegel found that while officials were talking tough 
about locking up insider traders, there was little evidence to suggest 
that the punishments imposed--either the incarceration rates or 
the sentences themselves--were more severe. &quot;In fact,&quot; 
he says, &quot;the data suggest the opposite trend. The government 
lacks the will to bring these people to justice.&quot; </p><p>
Denny Crawford says there's an all-too-simple reason for this. The 
longtime commissioner of the Texas Securities Board, who has probably 
put away more bad guys than any other state commissioner, says most 
prosecutors make the crimes too complicated. &quot;You've got to 
boil it down to lying, cheating, and stealing,&quot; she says, in 
a warbly voice that sounds like pink lemonade. &quot;That's all 
it is--the best way to end securities fraud is to put every one 
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