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Intro: "When Goldman got huffy at a credit union honoring OWS and pulled its anniversary dinner funding, much more was at stake."

Author and journalist Greg Palast during a keynote speech at the 2008 Green Festival in San Francisco, 11/18/08. (photo: Luke Thomas/FogCityJournal.com
Author and journalist Greg Palast during a keynote speech at the 2008 Green Festival in San Francisco, 11/18/08. (photo: Luke Thomas/FogCityJournal.com



Goldman Sachs and Occupy Wall Street's Bank: The Real Story

By Greg Palast, Guardian UK

30 October 11

 

Occupy Wall Street: Take the Bull by the Horns

 

Greg Palast's Investigation for DemocracyNow!

 

When Goldman got huffy at a credit union honouring OWS and pulled its anniversary dinner funding, much more was at stake.

ega-bank Goldman Sachs (assets $933 billion), has declared war on one of the smallest banks in New York (assets $30 million), the customer-owned community bank that happens to also be the banker for Friends of Liberty Plaza, Inc, also known as Occupy Wall Street. And you thought Goldman didn't care.

The trouble began three weeks ago when the occupiers suddenly found their donation buckets filling with thousands of dollars, way more than needed for their pizza dinners. Suddenly, the anti-bank protesters needed a bank. Citibank and Chase certainly wouldn't fit. So OWS opened an account at the not-for-profit Lower East Side Peoples Federal Credit Union. Peoples has a unique federal charter - designated to open accounts for low-income folk from all over NewYork, available to those families earning less than $38,000 per year. (Disclosure: the CEO of the Peoples bank is my dearly beloved ex. But that's another story.)

Goldman Sachs had also joined up with the Peoples bank. Goldman partners reportedly earn a bit more than $38k per annum, yet Goldman's association so far was limited to giving the credit union $5,000 toward the little bank's 25th anniversary celebration dinner. Goldman's largesse was acknowledged on the dinner invites - along with the night's honoree: Occupy Wall Street.

When a Goldman exec saw its gilded name next to Occupy Wall Street, the financial giant expressed much displeasure. In fact, my sources say, Goldman threatened legal action unless the credit union gave up the $5,000 and reprinted the invite sans the Sachs moniker. Goldman Sachs did not respond to our requests for comment on the affair.

So far, it's a cute story: tiny bank uses Goldman's money to fete some tent-dwellers who are denouncing Sachs as the Giant Vampire Squid.

But there's a lot more at stake in this battle than a $5,000 donation gone wrong. Underneath, it's a battle royal for control of tens of billions of dollars in government mandated "community reinvestment" funds.

In 2008, the US Treasury handed Goldman Sachs a check for $10bn from the Troubled Asset Recovery Program (Tarp), the bailout funds given to desperate commercial banks. A few eyebrows were raised: Goldman was not desperate, and it certainly was not a commercial bank. Yet - abracadabra! - Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson transformed investment bank Goldman into a commercial bank overnight. (Paulson's prior post was chairman of Goldman Sachs. Just saying.)

But there was a catch: Goldman would have to return a chunk of the public's billions in the form of loans for low-income customers and members of its "community," as required by the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) of 1977. Problem: Goldman has, it seems, no low-income customers, nor a "community." Goldman was directed to find poor people and a community and hand over some cash.

So Goldman looked down from its riverfront tower in lower Manhattan and discovered Peoples. Over 80% of Peoples member-owners have low incomes. At least 65% are Latino.

For the big money-center banks, the CRA is good deal. They pay some blood money into community banks and offload their low-income customers. Indeed, bank branches catering to the carriage trade often hustle would-be customers from housing projects out the door with an admonition to take their undesirable business to Lower East Side Peoples.

Goldman's circuits blew when the credit union's management appeared in Zuccotti Park to endorse Occupy Wall Street's call to "Move Your Money" from commercial banks to community credit unions. Heeding Peoples' and Occupy's call, 23 protesters marched to their local Citibank branches to close their accounts - and were promptly arrested.

Peoples' Chairwoman Deyarina Del Rio tells me that Peoples sees itself in agreement and alliance with the protesters' demands to radically shift the American finance system away from profit-first to people-first banking. But not with our money, seems to be Goldman's attitude. But of course, it's not Goldman's money but our money - effectively, the tax payer dollars that were supposed to come back in the form of loans in return for the Tarp bailout.

The billions of dollars in CRA funds (Citibank alone committed $115 billion over ten years) have given community banks tremendous political authority at the local level. Notably, Congresswoman Nydia Velasquez will be honored alongside Occupy Wall Street at the credit union's 3 November dinner. "We didn't mean to draw a line in the sand with Goldman," Peoples Chairman Del Rio told me, standing inside the bank's vault, the only place in the cramped back office with room to meet.

But Goldman did draw the line. And other bankers are stepping back across it, too. Capital One also pulled its name off the dinner invites.

Goldman has so far only passed out its legally-required CRA funds with an eye-dropper: the $5,000 for Peoples (now withdrawn), and a few other dabs here and there. The big cash investments from the Goldman fund are dangling, hoping to lure only those community banks and low-income funds that will dance to Goldman's tune. My sources told me that Goldman's "Urban Investment Group" representative had stated in a phone conversation that Occupy's credit union will never get another dime from any big bank, but, again, Goldman refused to speak with me to confirm or deny this.

Peoples' Del Rio dismisses such threats, but I don't. These Community Reinvestment funds ultimately come from public pockets, so why should the titans of Wall Street be allowed to bully community credit unions, which are answerable to their members, not Goldman's partners?

With additional reporting by Arun Gupta, founding editor of the Occupied Wall Street Journal.

 

Comments  

 
+135 # John Locke 2011-10-30 18:54
Poor baby, looks like Goldman Sacks is seeing red instead of green...this is a good sign, they are beginning to feel the pressure, now if a mass of the 99% pull their money from the too big to fail, hummm i wonder if they could actually fail?
 
 
+23 # jooberdoober 2011-10-31 07:51
Sad thing is, if everyone pulled their money out, all they have to do is ask for another bail out and they probably would get it. Another bail out with YOUR taxpayer money! Then the FED would forgive any outstanding debt, and the CEO's will get another huge bonus for doing such a great job for their shareholders!
 
 
+11 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:12
There's no money left for another bailout of the magnitude Bush and Paulson gave them in 2008, and it would be politically lethal to approve another one, anyway. I don't think another TARP is in the offing.
 
 
+3 # karenvista 2011-11-01 17:19
Quoting
There's no money left for another bailout of the magnitude Bush and Paulson gave them in 2008, and it would be politically lethal to approve another one, anyway. I don't think another TARP is in the offing.



Please research Merrill Lynch's impending transfer of $53 TRILLION in toxic derivatives to Bank of America where the Fed expects the FDIC to bail it out.

It's been in the business section of many newspapers. Everyone better educate themselves about how they are planning on continuing to screw us and complain to everyone you can think of!
 
 
+1 # Kev C 2011-11-02 12:53
Now this is the first I have seen of this. Another fraudulent action on the part of the banks. Get into debt, plead poverty then get a handout from the people with no strings attached that cannot be cut. Neat little earner.
 
 
+23 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:10
It can't be repeated enough: National Bank Transfer Day is Nov. 5 and everyone who agrees the big banks have too much influence should transfer their accounts to credit unions or other small local banks. If you have money in Bank of America, Citibank, Capital One, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo or one of the other big national banks, transfer it on or before Nov. 5th. It makes a statement the crooked 1 Percent will clearly understand.
 
 
+108 # Michael_K 2011-10-30 19:00
We need an amendment on those CRA funds... they have to be distributed as loans within X months of receiving them, or returned. We have to put these people on short fuses and deny them the time for double-dealing and manipulating, although really, they shouldn't be used at all for such purposes.

As a sudden "deposit-taking institution", Goldman is so far out of compliance that you'd think they would be shut down and liquidated.
 
 
+84 # jon 2011-10-30 20:39
"Goldman is so far out of compliance that you'd think they would be shut down and liquidated."

And that is putting it VERY mildly. If you or I were guilty of similar crimes, they would have locked us up and thrown away the key!
 
 
+41 # in deo veritas 2011-10-31 06:09
Why don't we have a federal government that will put these crooks behind bars? Simple-the crooks own it! Holder should be given the gate. The Federal reserve should be abolished. Above all Glass-Steagall needs to be put back into effect-NOW. We are about out of time to save our country and the economy. Do you hear me, Mr.President? LOL.
 
 
+10 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:15
All true, in deo, and maybe it's coming in due time. The pressure on Washington to clean up Wall Street is enormous, and it's not just coming from OWS, as important as the protests are. Americans are sick of getting screwed and every GOP and Dem politician knows it.
 
 
+1 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 00:58
And a lot of small to medium sized businesses are tired of being screwed, too.
 
 
+1 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 00:56
Unfortunately, one of the things that has happened with deregulation, and "making government smaller", is that the enforcement arms of many Federal agencies have been reduced to the bare bones, so there's not a large enough staff to do the necessary investigations to take these over-blown corporations to court, and break them up under the anti-trust laws. The Sherman Anti-Trust Law is still on the books. It just isn't being enforced.
 
 
+77 # Barkingcarpet 2011-10-30 20:19
Hmm, Goldman Sachs and Glass Steagall, both G.S...

Time to reinstate Glass/Steagall.... AND remove every penny we have from the big banks. Support local and small folks. Goldaman is psychotic, removed and has nothing where it's heart would be, except greed, greed, more greed, with greed on top, and is not a part of any healthy system worth living in.
 
 
+2 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 01:00
I work hard to buy from small local companies whenever possible, even if it means spending a little more money ... which I don't really have. There's a Walmart near here, but I refuse to shop there.
 
 
+97 # salvatore 2011-10-30 20:19
The answer is simple: Pull the remainder "unused" portion of the Tarp $10bn from Goldman Sacks, whatever has not yet be distributed as intended. This is public money. They have proved themselves unworthy fiduciaries and they should be relieved of this duty.
 
 
+88 # Peach14 2011-10-30 20:25
All of us 99% should pull our money out of ALL the big financial institutions who go bail-out monies and never used them as they were supposed to. The Occupy Movement is great, but we need to hit them where it hurts and if enough of us did that we could make a real difference, Don't forget any stocks you may have- make sure you don't hold any of these bloodsuckers!
By the way why were those 23 arrested for closing their accounts? Last I heard that was a basic right of any person with an account at a bank.
 
 
+12 # readerz 2011-10-30 22:39
"By the way why were those 23 arrested for closing their accounts? Last I heard that was a basic right of any person with an account at a bank."
The bank manager was an idiot; and they also arrested a customer that had nothing to do with it. But I also want to know follow-up stories: when people who are arrested go to court, what fees do they have to pay, or do they win?
 
 
+25 # in deo veritas 2011-10-31 06:13
The ACLU should get off its dead end and file a class action suit on behalf of the 23. Better than that would be seeing 2300 or even 23000 removing their deposits. Let the banksters spent every lousy cent they have by paying their shysters to take their side in court. Bleed them dry.
 
 
+9 # KittatinyHawk 2011-10-31 07:20
Now perhaps they can or some other smart Attorney bet them to it! Then let us review ACLU
 
 
+9 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:18
Should be an interesting court case -- we kicked them out of the bank because they wanted to close their accounts. Perhaps the prosecution can empanel a jury of Wall Street bankers; short of that, they'll lose walking.
 
 
+1 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 01:03
The next day I read that the ACLU is on it.
 
 
+11 # KittatinyHawk 2011-10-31 07:19
Nov 5 is a couple days away
 
 
+2 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 01:02
Shutting down the docks in Oakland hit them where it hurts, but one day isn't enough.
 
 
+14 # jwb110 2011-10-30 21:18
Even a mouse can roar.
 
 
+23 # soularddave 2011-10-30 21:37
And we thought the big banks weren't paying attention to #Occupy. I love these examples, but what, pray tell, were these protesters arrested for when they went to withdraw their own money? Demonstrating, in a bank, how to do what we all need to do?
 
 
+34 # Peace Anonymous 2011-10-30 23:50
Deoesn't pulling back the $5000 provide us with yet another example of how our democracy has come to function? How doing the "right thing" is only acceptable when it means subjecting yourself to the corporate giant's need to control. The further one steps back to look at the big picture the uglier it gets. Do we really want to have to do business with Goldman in the future? Maybe we should help them fail so we can move on? Freeze their assets, buy them a tent and let them spend the winter in Zuccotti Park!
 
 
+20 # in deo veritas 2011-10-31 06:15
A nice cold jail cell for them would be great. Put them in the general population and walk away. The folks in there with them would make them feel VERY welcome. No worries!
 
 
+16 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:22
Yes, a legal system that spends a small fortune prosecuting people who sell medical marijuana legally while they can't find the time to prosecute the crooks who have stolen billions and illegally kicked people out of their homes. What is wrong with this picture?
 
 
+32 # mwd870 2011-10-31 00:30
One of the most disturbing things in the video is the scene where the Goldman customer is manhandled for attempting to enter the building to withdraw her money. This scene has been shown before, but put in the context of the backstory so clearly explained by Greg Palast, Goldman Sachs is clearly breaking the law and must be held accountable for their malfeasance. The TARP money they received and their status as a commercial bank must be rescinded. Power to the small local banks.
 
 
+25 # Larz 2011-10-31 03:47
That is a great plan for everyone to pull their cash out of the big banks - put it in the mattress or into a credit union. BUT - you may be surprised that you cannot get your cash, if you should be so fortunate to have some. The banks are so leveraged thanks to Robert Rubin and others "liberating" the restrictions that banks went from 10:1 lending ratio to 40+ - if everyone wants their money - it won't be there - GET IT OUT WHILE YOU CAN! That will also help get rid of the Giant Vampire Squids! - put your $$ where your heart and sympathies are.
 
 
+6 # joyce 2011-10-31 05:08
As much as I disdain these big "banks" I do believe they have paid back the TARP money so that they would not have to answer to the government.
Now let's figure what else we can do to affect their bottom line. I am currently looking for a place to put my meager checking and savings.
 
 
+20 # fredboy 2011-10-31 05:13
Goldman's action shows a lack of wisdom, a crack in their strategic understanding of the situation. Wise, unemotional GS leaders would see the situation as an opportunity to show both compassion and understanding. If I were heading GS I'd throw in a SECOND $5,000 and attend the dinner. Their withdrawal shows immaturity and a tragic, limited understanding of the big picture.
 
 
+6 # AMLLLLL 2011-10-31 12:49
Given that it's five thousand of bailout funds, that's the least they should do, but that's just GS being GS...
 
 
+12 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:34
The 'Masters of the Universe' who run Goldman Sachs and the other investment banks are a bunch of think-headed clots living in their own little world. If they had any brains they would have changed the way they did business after the crash in 2008, but they are so beset with the disease of avarice that they couldn't give up their various scams, even in the interest of self-preservation. They are Bush People -- so greedy that in Iraq they turned the Iraqis against us rather than spend a few billion to get the power and water on, and make sure the basic necessities of life were provided, which ended up costing much more, in blood and money, than an initial investment in public works. This is the kind of rank stupidity that is going to bring down these 'too big to fail' behemoths, too; the OWS movement is just helping to push them to the edge of the cliff more quickly.
 
 
+2 # Progressive Patriot 2011-11-03 01:12
Unfortunately, they don't care about making friends among the riff-raff, or the small banks ... which they could gobble up without a thought.
 
 
+28 # in deo veritas 2011-10-31 06:05
THis treachery by Paulson, who should be in jail, is why we MUST reinstate the Glass-Steagall Act to prohibit this double-dealing by clearly separating commercial banks from investment banks! Goldman-Sucks has NEVER been a commercial bank!Pressure your "reps" and snators to push through HR1489 (Glass-Steagall) and put a stop to this travesty. I have closed my account with Capital One and am ridding myself of credit cards rather than pay these vultures another penny. Find small banks and credit unions for what money they haven't stolen already-you'll be glad you did!
 
 
+7 # KittatinyHawk 2011-10-31 07:34
I believe that Goldman/Sachs should be put in jail for not upholding agreements but knowing the lawyers there were loopholes for loopholes, would like to see Goldman, Sachs,& others have to be deported to Family's place of origin, not allowed to do any business in US in their name, family or associate. If you do not like America, leave go back to your ForeFather's Country, get out of mine.

I believe it time we rid the USA of these trouble makers. These people who talk about their heritage, their suffering, in the same breath, with that same mouth steal from us, treat poor like dung.

I Hope Palestine Becomes State, I hope that Middle East does unto all what has been done to them. Let us see what your Money and Assets mean then. What Goes around hopefully Comes Around You Hypocrites. I have no wonder why you are hated, now we too because to siding with you. They will destroy us, they are already taking our Jobs, Homes, Food.

OWS Stand Tall. Credit Unions, We are coming..take nothing from these scum or we will start our own banks. NOV 5, may it go down in History. Move your accounts. If you do not feel safe here look into Canada, others.

OBama better be coming to NY as Collector to get our Money back. Banks have renigged on their Contractual Agreements, they owe Big Fines/Interest.
 
 
+4 # Martintfre 2011-10-31 09:29
I think the politicians who wrote the checks that were given to their low friends in high places are the ones who belong in Jail.
 
 
+12 # lcarrier 2011-10-31 11:37
You don't get it. The corporations pay for the politicians who write the checks. Get at the root of the problem: the corporate behemoth.
 
 
+1 # Capn Canard 2011-11-03 07:36
wow, politicians who wrote the checks did so at the behest of their corporate overlords. What part of that don't you understand? The corporate monsters control the politicans regardless of what party they are from. If Libertarians are put in power, I'll give you one guess as to who would be signing the checks! The answer, just for you, is LIBERTARIAN POLITICIANS! The check signer is just a patsy and getting rid of the patsy only gives the corporate monsters power to find NEW PATSIES.
 
 
+18 # Holyone 2011-10-31 07:48
This is a cameo of what we can expect if the Republicans get in and give Banks and Wall Street more power by further deregulation.

The corporations, Banks and Wall Street are using OUR money against US. Just like they are using the police AGAINST US. Just like they are using the fillibuster and the republican majority in the House AGAINST US.

Republicans have been and still are waging war against US.Why can we not see this? Does one need to eat a whole cow to know that they have had beef??

Blaming Obama for all this mess boarders on stupidity. The 995ows get it. Thank God that they are unveiling where the real and foundational roots of the decline of America is centered.... follow the money.
 
 
+14 # reiverpacific 2011-10-31 09:06
The sorely missed Glass-Steagal was repealed in November, 1999, by the GRAM-LEACH-BLILEY ACT, named after its co-sponsors Phil Gramm (R, Texas), Rep. Jim Leach (R, Iowa), and Rep. Thomas J. Bliley, Jr. (R, Virginia) is what needs to be repealed in it's entirety. I mean, look at it's sponsors: and the really SAD part is that it was credited to DEMOCRATIC President Billy-Bob Clinton, who can be seen grinning at it's signing and who has since admitted that he was mistaken in supporting it. -That's a bit like a judge admitting that the wrong person was executed after the act, fait-accompli, innit?!
 
 
+14 # Capn Canard 2011-10-31 09:08
Greg Palast usually doesn't do these reports in America so it is a little bit unusual to see him on Democracy Now! We need a few more reporters covering resistance to a OWS movement... Good work by Greg Palast.
 
 
+7 # reiverpacific 2011-10-31 16:40
Quoting
Greg Palast usually doesn't do these reports in America so it is a little bit unusual to see him on Democracy Now! We need a few more reporters covering resistance to a OWS movement... Good work by Greg Palast.

That's 'cause he actually works for the BBC, which gives him a certain amount of impunity and protection from US persecution but I'm sometimes amazed that he even gets into the country (Remember "No-fly"?)-must have strong journalistic credentials apart from his book "The Best Democracy Money Can Buy". Wonder if he has dual citizenship?
 
 
-7 # Martintfre 2011-10-31 09:25
//In 2008, the US Treasury handed Goldman Sachs a check ...//

Now the real question: are you going to BLAME those who cashed the checks or THOSE WHO WROTE THE CHECKS?
 
 
+6 # reiverpacific 2011-10-31 16:45
Quoting
//In 2008, the US Treasury handed Goldman Sachs a check ...//

Now the real question: are you going to BLAME those who cashed the checks or THOSE WHO WROTE THE CHECKS?

You have certainly a very torturous way of thinking but to what end?
The two entities you mention are so hand-in-glove, they should be legally married as "Corporate persons" and Corporate Politicians. THAT's the problem -they are glued together with green paper and abstract derivatives.
How's THAT for a bit of twisted -but not unjustified- thinkin'?
 
 
-8 # Martintfre 2011-10-31 09:44
//so why should the titans of Wall Street be allowed to bully community credit unions, //

So the illogic is IF Goldman does not give them money that makes them bullies?

How about stop going after the symptoms (the corporatist who gladly cash any tax payer check put in front of them)
and go after the problem - the politicians who write those checks with our money.
 
 
+4 # RSJ 2011-10-31 14:41
We are going after both problems -- the banks who used taxpayers funds to continue their illegal paper schemes, and the politicians who allowed it. It's not one or the other -- it's both. That said, if we had not bailed out Wall Street in 2008 (continued by Obama in 2009), then the economy would have crashed, all the banks would have closed, and there would have been no way to cash a check, nor get a paycheck. It would have been a hundred times worse than the Great Depression and it could have taken years to build up the economy again -- in the meantime, you'd be in rags and eating grass, as they did in North Korea. Obama made the mistake of not attaching more penalties and conditions to the TARP money.
 
 
+8 # mjc 2011-10-31 09:58
We should all be "banking" at a Credit Union. The only hesitation is the damn difficulty the traditional bank makes with such a shut down
 
 
+10 # lcarrier 2011-10-31 11:35
Goldman is scum, like all the other blood-sucking corporate scum that have drained us dry. It's time to go after the corporations, those "minions of midas" that Jack London exposed a century ago---nd that means kicking from political office all those who feed like parasites on the corporate monster.
 
 
+8 # Tippitc 2011-10-31 17:22
I moved my accounts out of a "big bank" about two years ago - it can be done. Yes, it is a pain in the butt, but quit whining and just do it. Stop making excuses and JUST DO IT!!!!!!!!!!
 
 
+4 # visca Catalunya 2011-10-31 20:08
I have my free checking, savings accounts and CD's with a credit union. the only time I deal with banks is when I use any one of my credit cards, BUT I haven't paid them a dime in interest in years. By budgeting and spending carefully, they don't make any money on me because I don't carry a balance. Thus I get free use of their money for 30-60 days. They constantly increase my credit limit and tantalize me to spend more, but I'm not caving in. And no, I'm not a rich person, since I'm a retired social worker. Wished everyone could/would do the same when dealing with those crooks.
 
 
0 # freeinnapa 2011-11-12 14:56
I too am in a credit union! Local First Power!
 

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