Insider Trading and Federal Conflict of Interest Violations Swept Under the Rug

When Federal Officials Help Their Own Financial Interests

Here’s a free link to the Wall Street Journal article When Federal Officials Help Companies—and Their Own Financial Interests

Last year, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. deliberated over whether to tap Microsoft Corp. as its primary cloud provider. Three key officials involved in the discussions, or their family members, owned shares in Microsoft, including the deputy chief information officer who pushed to pick the company.

By early this year, Microsoft had become the agency’s primary cloud platform.

The Wall Street Journal this fall documented a sweeping pattern of executive-branch officials owning and trading stock in companies affected broadly by the work of their agencies, sometimes in violation of a federal conflict-of-interest law.

The examples identified by the Journal are “very brazen conflicts of interest,” said Craig Holman, a government-ethics expert at the nonpartisan advocacy group Public Citizen.

U.S. law prohibits federal officials from working “personally and substantially” on any matters in which they have a significant financial stake. The rules are aimed at preventing officials from using their influence over policy for personal gain.

At the U.S. Export-Import Bank, an official used her government position to help her husband’s lobbying organization, which was seeking to block or delay a policy change proposed by the Trump administration.

On Feb. 19, 2019, Mike McGarry, the Cruise Lines International Association Inc.’s senior vice president of global government affairs, sent an email about the matter to his wife, Natalie McGarry, who was a top adviser at the Ex-Im Bank. The bank, which helps companies finance sales, doesn’t have any authority over cruise lines, but Mrs. McGarry had something important: a contact in the White House.

In 2021, agencies referred 55 ethics matters to the Justice Department. Prosecutors declined to take up all but seven.

The Journal cited conflicts at the FCC, the Export-Import bank, the Commerce Department, Patent and Trademark Office, and the FDIC. 

Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and cruise lines were some of the big recipients. 

An FCC spokeswoman said Google isn’t considered primarily regulated by the agency and therefore employees are permitted to invest in the company.

“Not only is that categorically absurd, but it is flatly inaccurate and false,” said Joel Thayer, a telecommunications lawyer who clerked at the FCC and now lobbies the agency. Mr. Thayer said the fact that Google lobbies the FCC for policy changes shows the company is regulated by the agency.

The person involved with the Google conflict of interest owns shares and her son is a Google software engineer. 

She continues to work on policy matters affecting Google, including proceedings that could expand the wireless spectrum to Wi-Fi connections in the U.S. and overseas.

She was even promoted. Fancy that.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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33 Comments
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Counter
Counter
2 years ago
I have to sign legal documents about insider trading, it’s extensive. Remember the Flash Crash Trader, who was some kid trading from his bedroom at his parents house? They busted him for exactly what I am seeing every day in the market.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
2 years ago
It’s only criminal if you can’t have the law changed for you, or a new superseding law created.
Corvinus
Corvinus
2 years ago
Plutocracy, plain and simple. America has become just as corrupt as any banana republic, the only difference is the price of entry.
spa sidechats
spa sidechats
2 years ago
In Russia the relationship with the oligarchs is they are allowed a certain amount of corruption, but not too much. Get too greedy or start running your mouth well…
Really no different in the US. Always going to be corruption but now, it’s way out of control because the Government is not enforing the rule of law. Almost no boundaries or accountability anywhere despite having very clear ethics laws to include annual training for all Federal employees down to how much one can accept in value of a gift which is less than $30.
I recall during Hillary’s email investigation no Federal employee close to the situation took that annual training or training on government email. This was because there was no OIG at the State Dept which so happened to be the longest period any agency was allowed to run without one so the corruption was allowed to go hog wild and it has only gotten worse. Nobody seems to have a cell of altruism or integrity in any agency these days and what we see now is what that looks and feels like.
Doug78
Doug78
2 years ago
Reply to  spa sidechats
Considering the state of the Russian armed forces the oligarchs didn’t stop at a “certain amount” of corruption but went in hands full. Oligarchs are really bad at running just about everything. If you give Putin loyalty you can steal all you want.
spa sidechats
spa sidechats
2 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Russian oligarchs are no different than our oligarchs. All our “private” IT companies are built on the backbone of Government open source software. In 1992 I was using a military base chat group online. We were using social media before anyone knew what social media was. Wishing happy birthdays, congrats on promotions, making political comments…meh. The foundation of these companies were built by the US Government (taxpayers). They are not private. They are built with government stuff and the government will ultimately decide on how it will be used. It is very difficult for Americans to understand this reality. Our oligarchs are no better than their oligarchs other than putting LED lights in the gov blueprint hoola hoop..meh. We made better hoola hoops.
Doug78
Doug78
2 years ago
Reply to  spa sidechats
In 1992 in my business we were using chat also for exchanging info so don’t feel that only you were in the loop. Private enterprise took what the government started and turned it into an incredible industry. It happened in the West because the system encouraged new entrepreneurs. That didn’t happen in Russia because their system is based on exploiting what is already built and not on building new things. You may claim that Russian oligarchs are like what we have in the US but looking at the living standards and the difference in innovation between the two countries there is a world of difference. Russia is far behind in everything.
spa sidechats
spa sidechats
2 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
The government had internet before anyone else was my point, even before the military but yes, our open source system basically gives the blueprints back to the people unlike the USSR meaning more freedom and more progress but that is now changing fast. We are now a welfare state and sinking deeper into a democracy (we are not a democracy). After democracy it turns into communism. I hope we can get our constitutional republic back but it does not look good right now. Covid emergency laws ushered in more destruction of the constitution. We have un-elected 3 letter agencies, some being global telling US citizens the our constitution is garbage.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
2 years ago
Reply to  spa sidechats
Gee, when was I using a dial-up for “social media?”
Around 1983.
How many of you folks have used ftp?
Just call me anonymous.
Rbm
Rbm
2 years ago
Reply to  spa sidechats

people wanting small government. So government cant function and they can get away with things. Think the republicans and the irs. I want efficient government size is relative. .

Zardoz
Zardoz
2 years ago
Reply to  spa sidechats
The ever present threat of political defenestration keeps them more or less in line.
RonJ
RonJ
2 years ago
After he left office, Ben Bernanke pretended to lament that he never referred anyone.
Zardoz
Zardoz
2 years ago
Off topic, but I wonder what you guys think about this:
No big moves in the rouble recently… what do you think Pooty-poot is up to?
8dots
8dots
2 years ago
The law enforcement student is a criminal who was caught.
8dots
8dots
2 years ago
This PhD criminology student indicate that the worse criminals might be members of law enforcement. He must be punished to the fullest because he exposed them, to show how clean they are.
Corvinus
Corvinus
2 years ago
Reply to  8dots
Interestingly, many criminals and killers turn out to having a fascination with law enforcement.
GruesomeHarvest
GruesomeHarvest
2 years ago
You’re confused Mish, you thought they said justice, what they really meant was just us! Clarification from Gerald Celente.
Doug78
Doug78
2 years ago
You shouldn’t forbid Congresspersons from buying and selling stocks but what we can do is make sure that everyone knows who bought or sold what stock before important votes. The only way to do that is to publish that data in realtime. Make it a law that they (or their broker) have to report it immediately. To keep accusations of frontrunning at bay we can define a reasonable holding period. Owning stocks is a good way to accumulate wealth and there is no reason why they shouldn’t be able to do what everyone else can do. Just make it completely transparent.
Rbm
Rbm
2 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Look at those congress people who had knowledge of covid and the shut downs. They sold rebought and made bank. Nothing ever happened to them. When congress regulates themselves nothing will happen.
Cocoa
Cocoa
2 years ago
Every once and awhile somebody like Martha Stewart gets tossed in the clink-so the SEC can fake that they are working. Otherwise, it’s all a scam. The difference between the Republicans that do it and Democrats is the Republicans know it’s illegal. The Democrats think they deserve it because they are better than the people they serve. This country is absolute toast. A goner
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
2 years ago
Reply to  Cocoa
if you think your betters and ruling class whether D or R after their names think differently, you really have some growing up to do young fella.
Jackula
Jackula
2 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
No doubt! Our Cali Repub hack that wants to be speaker of the house is offering to shut down the house ethics office to become speaker, a new low. The Democrats here in Cali are even worse
hmk
hmk
2 years ago
Reply to  Cocoa
We have the best government money can buy. Until that changes we will continue to circle the drain. In the meantime they keep their victims well fed and entertained while they accumulate wealth and power. The recipe for eventual revolution once their hapless victims wake up.
desertsteve
desertsteve
2 years ago
If any of this is news to you, you have been sleeping under a rock. While I appreciate you Mish and others like Tucker Carlson and Alex Berenson for pointing out the hypocrisy and outright crimes. It is past annoying that it is blatantly obvious it is happening and no one does anything. Why should any of us follow the law anymore? For that matter why should the less than half of us who pay income taxes keep doing so?
Since our politicians no longer represent us and only themselves. Isn’t that taxation without representation? Is this really a democratic republic anymore? I think not and the more they get away with the more they will do, so there is no end but the end of us all and a once great country.
On a positive note it will be people like you Mish that will stand out when the history of it all is told. Stay true.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
2 years ago
Reply to  desertsteve
i figured out this empire was a kleptocracy unworthy of allegiance when i was a teenager in the 1970s. seemed pretty obvious. never did understand the naive poppycock most of my peers and school daze pals believed. seems like it’s so over the top obvious now, even the boy scouts get it.
hmk
hmk
2 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Good for you, it took me until the war criminal Bush jr. years. I was naive then and trusted the government. He made me realize how malevolent and evil they are after the WMD lie. I still like Reagan and George Bush sr, I thought they were sincere patriots and altruistic. Even Clinton as bad and corrupt as he was ran a fiscally conservative government, and cut welfare.
JackWebb
JackWebb
2 years ago
By the way, as a general matter, the law of insider trading is a complete mess, chock full of loopholes created by the courts.
JackWebb
JackWebb
2 years ago
Mish, you don’t do guest posts. Which is too bad, because I could write a great one on the Econ 101 of “legal” marijuana. Alternatively, you could post something about that business and then I could give the numbers. Spoiler: A price crash is coming.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
2 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
trading weed stocks since 2015 in canada and us………..has been legendary and muy profitable. just cannot buy and hold, or invest in the private weed stocks. too many sheisters and liars and druggies. i’ve been a life long advocate for decriminalizing weed and other drugs since 1978. been an investor in weed for 20 years. private deals in norcal med market. all legal and stuff. no gangsters for me, thanks. i grew up sicilian in a gangster hood.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
2 years ago
pax dumbphuckistan long ago became a banana republik style kleptocracy. on top of her wicked imperial world wide pursuits for decades, for profits for scum like the saudi kingdom and bush and clinton crime families………….my favorite law was the NDAA under obama crime family, whcich codified extra judicial execution
Zardoz
Zardoz
2 years ago
It’s a club, and you ain’t in it. Loyalty is for fools.
tedr
tedr
2 years ago
Freaking wonderful post Mish.

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