Leahy-Authored Anti-Fraud Legislation
Clears Final Hurdle,
Headed To President’s Desk For Signature
WASHINGTON (Tuesday, May 19, 2009) – Legislation
authored by Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy (D) to strengthen tools and
increase resources available to federal prosecutors to combat fraud
cleared a final hurdle in Congress Monday when the House of
Representatives approved the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act.
On May 14, the Senate unanimously passed the amended bipartisan
legislation. The bill will now head to the President’s desk to be signed
into law. The
Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act (FERA) will help both to protect
Americans from fraud and recover taxpayers’ money lost to fraud.
“The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act is a major
step toward holding accountable those who have caused so much damage to
our economy,” Leahy said. “It will also help protect our economic
recovery efforts from the scourge of fraud. This is and has been
bipartisan legislation. No one should want to see taxpayer money
intended to fund economic recovery efforts diverted by fraud. No
one should want to see those who engaged in mortgage fraud escape
accountability. I look forward to the President signing this bill
into law.”
Leahy is the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and shepherded
the legislation through the Senate. He introduced the legislation
on
February 5, and the Judiciary Committee
reported the measure on
March 5.
Reports of mortgage and corporate fraud are at an
all-time high, and law enforcement expects a significant increase in
fraud in connection with the economic recovery efforts. The Fraud
Enforcement and Recovery Act will rebuild the nation’s capacity to
investigate and prosecute the mortgage and corporate frauds that have
undermined the economy and hurt working people.
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FERA provides resources for the Department of Justice, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the
U.S. Secret Service, and the Inspector General for the Department of
Housing and Urban Development to hire additional fraud agents,
analysts, investigators, prosecutors, and support staff to combat
fraud.
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FERA makes important improvements to fraud and money laundering
statutes to strengthen prosecutors’ ability to combat the growing
wave of fraud.
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FERA strengthens the False Claims Act, one of the best civil tools
available to root out fraud in government. From 2000-2008, the
Justice Department recovered more than $15 billion in fraud for the
government using the False Claims Act.
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FERA establishes a Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission to examine
the domestic and global causes of the financial and economic crisis.
The bipartisan Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act was
cosponsored by nearly 30 senators, and has received the support of the
Obama administration, the Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, the U.S. Secret Service, the U.S Postal Inspection
Service, and the Inspector General of the Department of the Housing and
Urban Development. The bill has also been endorsed by the
Fraternal Order of Police, the Federal Law Enforcement Officers
Association, the National Association of Assistant U.S. Attorneys, and
Taxpayers Against Fraud.
Leahy’s statement on the Senate’s passage of the
legislation on May 14 follows.
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Statement Of Senator
Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.),
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
On Final Passage of S. 386, The Fraud Enforcement And Recovery Act Of
2009
May 14, 2009
Today, the Senate has passed the bipartisan Fraud
Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009, S.386. The House passed this
bill overwhelming just last week. This bill is a major step toward
holding accountable those who have caused so much damage to our economy.
It will also help protect our economic recovery efforts from the scourge
of fraud.
Our bill will strengthen the Federal Government’s
capacity to investigate and prosecute the kinds of financial frauds that
have so severely undermined our economy and hurt so many hard-working
people in this country. These frauds have robbed people of their
savings, their retirement accounts, their college funds for their
children, and their equity and have cost too many people their homes.
The bill will help provide the resources and legal tools needed to
police and deter fraud and to protect taxpayer-funded economic recovery
efforts now being implemented.
I want to once again commend Senator Grassley, our
lead cosponsor, for his leadership at every stage in this process.
He helped to write this legislation and to manage it on the Senate
floor, where it ultimately passed 92 to 4. He also worked
tirelessly to make important and difficult compromises with Senate and
House leaders, which was crucial to crafting a consensus a bill that
could pass both Houses. He has once again proven his dedication to
protecting taxpayer funds by deterring, investigating, and prosecuting
fraud.
I thank Majority Leader Hoyer and the House
leadership, as well as Chairman Conyers, Ranking Member Smith and
Congressmen Berman and Scott on the House Judiciary Committee, for
working with us to promptly pass this bill in the House with minimal
changes and a number of helpful additions. The new ranking member
of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Sessions, was also very
important and supportive in those negotiations.
I thank our many cosponsors for their steadfast
support for this effort. Senators Kaufman and Klobuchar have
worked particularly hard to ensure that this important fraud enforcement
bill becomes law, and I thank them for their efforts. Senator
Kaufman has spoken and written about the need for fraud enforcement all
year. We have been joined by a growing bipartisan group of
cosponsors that now stands at 28. And I thank our Majority Leader
and our underappreciated cloakroom and floor staff for all that they
have done on this bill.
Mortgage fraud has reached near epidemic levels in
this country. Reports of mortgage fraud are up 682 percent over
the past five years, and more than 2800 percent in the past decade.
And massive, new corporate frauds, like the $65 billion Ponzi scheme
perpetrated by Bernard Madoff, are being uncovered as the economy has
turned worse, exposing many investors to massive losses. We can now
finally take action to better protect the victims of these frauds.
These victims include homeowners who have been fleeced by unscrupulous
mortgage brokers who promise to help them, only to leave them unable to
keep their homes and in even further debt than before. They
include retirees who have lost their life savings in stock scams and
Ponzi schemes, which have come to light as the markets have fallen and
corporations have collapsed. They also include American taxpayers
who have invested billions of dollars to restore our economy, and who
expect us to protect that investment and make sure those funds are not
exploited by fraud.
This legislation will immediately give Federal law
enforcement agencies the tools and resources they need to combat fraud
effectively. In the last three years, the number of criminal
mortgage fraud investigations opened by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) has more than doubled, and the FBI anticipates that
number may double yet again. Despite this increase, the FBI
currently has fewer than 250 special agents nationwide assigned to
financial fraud cases, which is only a quarter of the number the Bureau
had more than a decade ago at the time of the Savings and Loan crisis.
At the current levels, the FBI cannot even begin to investigate the more
than 5000 mortgage fraud allegations referred by the Treasury Department
each month.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Congress responded
to the collapse of the federally insured savings and loan industry by
passing legislation similar to the bill we consider today, to hire
prosecutors and agents. While the current financial crisis dwarfs
in scale to the Savings and Loan collapse, we are poised to once again
take decisive action.
At its core, the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act
authorizes the resources necessary for the Justice Department, the FBI,
and other investigative agencies to respond to this crisis. In
total, the bill authorizes $245 million a year over the next two years
to hire more than 300 Federal agents, more than 200 prosecutors, and
another 200 forensic analysts and support staff to rebuild our nation’s
“white collar” fraud enforcement efforts. While the number
of fraud cases is now skyrocketing, we need to remember that resources
were shifted away from fraud investigations after 9/11. Today, the
ranks of fraud investigators and prosecutors are drastically
understocked, and thousands of fraud allegations are going unexamined
each month. We need to restore our capacity to fight fraud in
these hard economic times, and this bill will do that.
Fraud enforcement is an excellent investment for the
American taxpayer. According to recent data provided by the
Justice Department, the government recovers more than $20 for every
dollar spent on criminal fraud litigation. Strengthening criminal
and civil fraud enforcement is a sound investment, and this legislation
will not only pay for itself, but will bring in money for the Federal
Government.
In addition, the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act
makes a number of straightforward, important improvements to fraud and
money laundering statutes to strengthen prosecutors’ ability to combat
this growing wave of fraud. It also strengthens one of the most
potent civil tools we have for rooting out fraud in government – the
False Claims Act. The Federal Government has recovered more than
$22 billion using the False Claims Act since it was modernized through
the work of Senator Grassley in 1986, but this bill will make the
statute still more effective. In fact, the amendments the House
made to the bill, after extensive input from Senator Grassley and
Congressman Berman, strengthen the False Claims Act further still.
The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act has broad
bipartisan support, as well as the strong backing of the Justice
Department and the Obama administration. As explained in the
Statement of Administration policy: “The Administration strongly
supports enactment of S. 386. Its provisions would provide Federal
investigators and prosecutors with significant new criminal and civil
tools and resources that would assist in holding accountable those who
have committed financial fraud.”
Strengthening fraud enforcement is a key priority for President Obama.
During the campaign, President Obama promised to “crack down on mortgage
fraud professionals found guilty of fraud by increasing enforcement and
creating new criminal penalties.” And the President made good on
this promise in his budget to Congress by calling for additional FBI
agents “to investigate mortgage fraud and white collar crime,” as well
as hiring more Federal prosecutors and civil attorneys “to protect
investors, the market, and the Federal Government’s investment of
resources in the financial crisis, and the American public.” The
initial Senate-passed recovery package included additional money for the
FBI for this purpose, but it was cut during the negotiations that led to
its passage. This bill, the bipartisan Fraud Enforcement and
Recovery Act, is our chance to authorize the necessary additional
resources to detect, fight and deter fraud that robs the American people
and American taxpayers of their funds. Strong support from the
President and the Justice Department has been integral to making
progress on this important bill.
This is and has been bipartisan legislation. Our cosponsors and our
supporters in both Houses of Congress come from across the political
spectrum – Democrats, Republicans, and Independents. What we share
is a commitment to fight fraud and the horrible costs it is imposing on
hard-working Americans. I believe that our efforts are
supported by most Americans. No one should want to see taxpayer
money intended to fund economic recovery efforts diverted by fraud.
No one should want to see those who engaged in mortgage fraud escape
accountability. Law enforcement agencies desperately need
the resources and tools in this legislation.
During these first months of the year, the Judiciary
Committee has concentrated on what we can do legislatively to assist in
the economic recovery. Already we have considered and reported
this fraud enforcement bill, the patent reform bill, and worked to
ensure that law enforcement assistance was included in the economic
recovery legislation.
The recovery efforts are generating signs of economic
progress. That is good. That is necessary. But that is not enough.
We need to make sure that we are spending our public resources wisely
and that they are not being dissipated by fraud. We need to ensure
that those responsible for the downturn through fraudulent acts in
financial markets and the housing market are held to account. That
is why the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act is so needed.
The bill has also received the support of the
Fraternal Order of Police, the Federal Law Enforcement Officers
Association, the National Association of Assistant United States
Attorneys, the Association of Certified Tax Examiners, and Taxpayers
Against Fraud. It was strongly endorsed by an editorial in The
New York Times on April 18, 2009.
I thank Senators for joining with us to take decisive
action to protect American families and our economy from fraud.
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