by Greg Palast
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
www.gregpalast.com
October 25, 2011
GregPalastOffice on Oct 25, 2011
A controversy in the banking community has arisen around the Occupy Wall Street movement. Greg Palast investigates the story behind Goldman Sachs’ recent decision to pull out of a fundraiser for the Lower East Side People’s Federal Credit Union in New York City after it learned the event was honoring the protesters at Occupy Wall Street. The investment bank withdrew its name from the fundraiser and also canceled a $5,000 pledge. Was the $5,000 a Goldman Sachs donation or actually American taxpayer bailout money Goldman set aside for community banks?
Goldman Sachs v. Occupy Wall Street: A Greg Palast Investigation
Read the Transcript.
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Updated
Sachs Fiend: Goldman Attacks Occupy Wall Street’s Non-Profit Bank
When Goldman got huffy at a credit union honouring OWS and pulled its anniversary dinner funding, much more was at stake
by Greg Palast
Featured Writer
Dandelion Salad
www.gregpalast.com
October 27, 2011
Exclusive for The Guardian
by Greg Palast, the author of Vultures’ Picnic: In Pursuit of Petroleum Pigs, Power Pirates, and High-Finance Carnivores. Out November 14.
With Arun Gupta, founding editor of The Occupied Wall Street Journal.
[see above video]
[Zuccotti Park, Wall Street, New York.]
Mega-bank Goldman Sachs (assets $933bn), has declared war on one of the smallest banks in New York (assets $30m), 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 $115bn 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?
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Greg Palast’s new book, Vultures’ Picnic, will be released by Penguin on November 14. Available now at VulturesPicnic.org. Media requests, contact: interviews (at) gregpalast.com.
see
For a Kantian public role: Go Project and OWS by Konstantin Kaminskiy
Capitalism: what a load of rubbish! By William Bowles
Occupy Wall Street Visited by Joel S. Hirschhorn
The toppling of the corporate state by Chris Hedges
Noam Chomsky Addresses Occupy Boston Protesters
Occupy Wall Street on Dandelion Salad
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These parasites of society seem to overlook one minor detail: were it not for the “99%”ers as customers, Goldman Sachs et al would be absolutely nowhere – send them there. GS would have to invent another way of screwing average John Doe.
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a not for profit bacnk…flippin communists! LOL