Categories / Finance / 2008 Bailout

The 2008 Bailout Heist

Documented Historical
Year: 2008-2009
Cost: $16+ Trillion
Prosecutions: Zero executives

Overview

The 2008 financial crisis was the largest economic catastrophe since the Great Depression. Banks knowingly issued fraudulent loans, packaged them as "safe" securities, sold them to investors worldwide, and then bet against them. When the scheme collapsed, taxpayers bailed out the banks while millions of Americans lost their homes, jobs, and savings.

Despite clear evidence of massive fraud, not a single major Wall Street executive was criminally prosecuted. Instead, the government declared these institutions "too big to fail" and transferred trillions in public money to the same banks that caused the crisis. The banks emerged larger and more powerful than before.

A 2011 Government Accountability Office audit revealed that the Federal Reserve had secretly provided over $16 trillion in emergency loans to banks and corporations worldwide - an amount greater than the entire U.S. national debt at the time.

"The physical assault on the United States economy in 2008 was the greatest crime ever committed against the American people."

- William K. Black, Former Bank Regulator

Creating the Housing Bubble

The housing bubble was created through a combination of deliberate Federal Reserve policy and systematic fraud by lending institutions.

The Fed's Role

  • Low Interest Rates: After 2001, the Fed kept rates at historically low levels
  • Easy Money: Created conditions for speculative lending
  • Ignored Warnings: Fed officials dismissed housing bubble concerns
  • Deregulation: Supported removing banking safeguards

The Fraud Factory

Banks systematically issued loans they knew would fail:

  • NINJA Loans: No Income, No Job, No Assets - literally no verification
  • Stated Income Loans: Borrowers could claim any income without proof ("liar loans")
  • Adjustable Rate Mortgages: Low "teaser" rates that would reset to unaffordable levels
  • Negative Amortization: Loan balances that grew rather than shrunk
  • No-Documentation Loans: Literally no paperwork required

Internal Emails Revealed

Internal communications showed bank employees describing their own products as "toxic waste," "crap," and "sacks of shit." They knew these loans would fail - they just didn't care, because they could sell them off as securities.

The Securitization Scheme

The key to the fraud was securitization - packaging loans into securities that could be sold to investors worldwide.

How It Worked

  1. Issue Fraudulent Loans: Banks made loans to anyone regardless of ability to repay
  2. Bundle into Securities: Thousands of loans packaged into Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS)
  3. Get AAA Ratings: Rating agencies (paid by banks) rated junk as "investment grade"
  4. Sell Worldwide: Securities sold to pension funds, governments, investors globally
  5. Bet Against Own Products: Banks secretly shorted the securities they sold
  6. Collect Bonuses: Executives paid billions for "performance"

The Rating Agency Fraud

Credit rating agencies (Moody's, S&P, Fitch) rated toxic mortgage securities as AAA - the highest possible rating. Internal emails revealed:

  • Analysts knew securities were junk but rated them AAA anyway
  • One analyst wrote: "We rate every deal... it could be structured by cows and we would rate it"
  • Agencies competed for business by offering favorable ratings
  • Banks paid for their own ratings - obvious conflict of interest

Credit Default Swaps

Banks purchased "insurance" (Credit Default Swaps) on securities they knew would fail. This meant they would profit when their own toxic products collapsed. Goldman Sachs famously created securities specifically designed to fail, sold them to clients, then bet against them.

The Bailout

When the scheme collapsed, the government rescued the banks with taxpayer money while letting ordinary Americans suffer.

TARP - The Public Story

The Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) was the public face of the bailout:

  • Original Request: Treasury Secretary Paulson demanded $700 billion
  • Three-Page Bill: Initial proposal was three pages with no oversight
  • Passed Under Threat: Congress told economy would collapse without it
  • No Strings Attached: Banks could use money however they wanted
  • Bonuses Continued: Executives paid billions in bonuses with bailout money

The Fed's Secret Bailout

TARP was just the tip of the iceberg. A 2011 audit revealed the Federal Reserve had secretly lent $16.1 trillion to banks and corporations:

Citigroup

$2.5 trillion

Largest recipient of Fed emergency loans despite being insolvent.

Morgan Stanley

$2.04 trillion

Investment bank that helped cause the crisis.

Bank of America

$1.34 trillion

Acquired failing institutions with government help.

Goldman Sachs

$814 billion

Bet against own clients, then received bailout.

Foreign Banks

$3+ trillion

European banks like UBS, Barclays, RBS received trillions from U.S. taxpayers.

AIG

$182 billion

Insurance giant that wrote credit default swaps. Money went straight to Goldman Sachs.

The AIG Backdoor

AIG was bailed out with $182 billion. Most of that money went directly to Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, and other banks at 100 cents on the dollar - no negotiation. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (former NY Fed president) insisted on full payment. Many called it a backdoor bailout for Goldman.

Zero Prosecutions

Despite evidence of massive, systematic fraud, no senior Wall Street executive was criminally prosecuted. This stands in stark contrast to the Savings & Loan crisis of the 1980s, when over 1,000 bankers went to prison.

The Evidence

  • Senate Investigations: Carl Levin's committee found clear evidence of fraud at Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, and others
  • FBI Warnings: FBI warned in 2004 of "epidemic" of mortgage fraud - ignored
  • Internal Documents: Emails showed executives knew securities were "crap"
  • Whistleblowers: Multiple insiders came forward with evidence
  • Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission: Documented fraud across the system

Why No Prosecutions?

  • Regulatory Capture: Regulators came from and returned to Wall Street
  • Political Donations: Banks are largest political donors
  • "Too Big to Jail": DOJ worried prosecution would destabilize system
  • Holder Doctrine: AG Eric Holder had represented banks as lawyer
  • Revolving Door: Prosecutors who don't prosecute get Wall Street jobs

"I am concerned that the size of some of these institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to prosecute them when we are hit with indications that if you do prosecute, if you do bring a criminal charge, it will have a negative impact on the national economy."

- Attorney General Eric Holder, 2013

The Aftermath

The consequences fell almost entirely on ordinary people, while banks emerged stronger than ever.

What Americans Lost

  • 10 million homes: Foreclosed, most going to investor-owned rental companies
  • 8.7 million jobs: Lost in the recession
  • $13 trillion: Household wealth destroyed
  • Retirement savings: Pension funds devastated by toxic securities
  • Life savings: Millions wiped out

What Banks Got

  • $16+ trillion: In emergency loans and bailouts
  • Bigger than ever: "Too big to fail" banks grew even larger
  • Record bonuses: Executives paid billions within year of bailout
  • No accountability: Zero criminal prosecutions
  • Foreclosed homes: Banks bought foreclosed properties at discount

The Wealth Transfer

The 2008 crisis was the largest transfer of wealth in American history - from the working and middle classes to the financial elite. Homeowners lost equity, workers lost jobs, taxpayers funded bailouts, and banks bought assets at fire-sale prices. The rich got richer while everyone else got poorer.

Timeline

2000-2006

The Bubble Inflates

Housing prices double. Banks issue increasingly fraudulent loans. Securitization machine runs at full speed.

February 2007

First Cracks

HSBC reports huge losses on subprime mortgages. New Century Financial files for bankruptcy.

August 2007

Credit Markets Freeze

BNP Paribas halts redemptions on three funds. Interbank lending freezes.

March 2008

Bear Stearns Collapses

Fed engineers JPMorgan takeover of Bear Stearns, providing $30 billion guarantee.

September 7, 2008

Fannie & Freddie Seized

Government takes over mortgage giants with $200 billion commitment.

September 15, 2008

Lehman Brothers Fails

158-year-old bank collapses. Global financial panic begins.

September 16, 2008

AIG Bailout

Fed provides $85 billion to AIG (eventually $182 billion). Money flows to Goldman Sachs.

October 3, 2008

TARP Passed

Congress passes $700 billion bailout after initial rejection and market crash.

2009

Record Bonuses

Wall Street pays record bonuses while millions lose jobs and homes.

July 2011

GAO Audit Released

Audit reveals $16.1 trillion in secret Fed loans to banks worldwide.

Connected Topics

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