MORE SERIAL LIAR THAN INVESTMENT BANKER

(By Jack Bigelow and Joe Koletar) A Wall Street Journal article by Maria Armental describes “The Curious Case of an ‘Oxford’ Man,” in which Steven Wessel is described by a U.S. Attorney as “…much less an investment banker than a serial liar.” According to the article, Wessel conducted a classic Ponzi operation. Investors were persuaded […]



CAN A GOOD CROP BE REVIVED?

(By Jack Bigelow) I was scanning my emailed Washington Post Headlines when an article by Drew Harwell grabbed my attention. It was titled, “Tarnished by the Enron scandal, can this brand be saved?” Whoa! Having been a part of Andersen for more than 27 years, I knew that this was Big News. And it was: […]



THE THIN LINE: WHERE IS IT?

(By Jack Bigelow) Colleagues Daven Morrison and Joe Koletar have kicked off a discussion of lessons learned from the Richard Nixon resignation of 40 years ago (see their posts below).  Daven describes the behavior of deception (behavior exercised in spades throughout the sordid Watergate coverup leading to the President’s resignation as impeachment and trial were […]



Make Up

(By Joe Koletar) My friend and colleague, Daven Morrison, recently posted a piece on deception (see below) and why it is quite common human behavior, to one degree or another. We see deception in many areas of our lives. A child may “make up” an imaginary friend they can talk to and play with. Little […]



NIXON: LESSONS FROM 40 YEARS AGO

(Repeat of a LinkedIn Posting of August 14: Nixon Resignation @ 40: Lessons for the Risk Officer on Deception, Caveat Emptor and Politics)  https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20140814204036-5071179-linkedin-and-nixon-deception-caveat-emptor-and-politics (By Daven Morrison, MD)Richard Nixon resigned as President 40 years ago. His presidency, his personality and his actions mark a low point in Americans’ trust of leadership. Only a few years […]

  

Mortgage Fraud and the FBI: Another View

(By Vic Hartman) After a 25-year career with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) I have only recently returned to the private sector. As a private citizen with considerable public sector experience, I have read the previous posts on mortgage fraud with great interest, and accordingly, want to advance the discussion with some observations. As […]

 

Mortgage Fraud: Now on the FBI’s Less-Wanted List: Posting III

(By Joe Koletar and Jack Bigelow) (See previous two postings for additional information) Thus far in exploring the factors we believe to be behind the FBI’s downgrading of its mortgage fraud investigations, we’ve considered two factors: • Concurrence with the priority-lowering decision by other affected government agencies; • The dramatic emergence of counterterrorism as a […]