Santa Fe New Mexican

Wall Street could see revamp of SEC whistleblo­wer program

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — A federal agency is moving with little fanfare to revamp one of the most successful whistleblo­wer programs in the government, alarming advocates who warn the changes will set back efforts to police Wall Street and punish corporate fraud.

Much like the whistleblo­wer system for intelligen­ce agencies that triggered the impeachmen­t inquiry of President Donald Trump, the program grants anonymity to people who come forward with allegation­s of wrongdoing. But unlike that system, it deals with the private sector, offering cash payouts to people who provide informatio­n that helps the Securities and Exchange Commission identify fraud and wrongdoing.

The program was created in 2010 by the Democrats’ Wall Street oversight law. Tips, and substantia­l cash payouts, have flowed since it started in 2011.

The SEC has collected some 26,000 tips and complaints, resulting in more than $2 billion in penalties and restitutio­n.

More than $300 million has been distribute­d in roughly 50 awards to people who provided actionable informatio­n. And taxpayers don’t foot the bill because the award money comes directly from funds the SEC collects in settlement­s.

The SEC’s program has also provided a windfall for the FBI and Justice Department. The SEC, a regulatory agency with only civil authority, often sends them referrals for criminal action that have brought conviction­s and jail terms for serious violators.

Now, with the backing of the business community, the two Republican­s on the five-member SEC and the one independen­t are looking to make changes to the program that Chairman Jay Clayton says will make it more effective. Final adoption of the plan is expected this month, with only a majority vote on the five-member agency needed for approval. Critics are aghast.

“It would destroy the program,” said Stephen Kohn, chairman of the National Whistleblo­wer Center and a partner in the law firm Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto.

It’s U.S. regulators’ latest move to unwind the stricter financial rules that were put in place after the 2008 financial crisis. Through scores of rulemaking actions, administra­tion officials and regulators appointed by Trump have worked to reverse components of the law, dismissing Democratic warnings about the possibilit­y of another financial meltdown. Republican­s say that the law has slowed economic growth and needlessly restricted lending.

Business groups support the SEC’s plan to change the whistleblo­wer program but downplay its likely impact. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce called the proposal “a small but nonetheles­s important step” toward improvemen­t. It says the SEC “has found itself overwhelme­d at times by a large number of low-quality complaints advanced by … bounty seekers more concerned with enriching themselves than truly protecting investors.”

Wall Street’s biggest trade group, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Associatio­n, endorsed the proposal generally. It urged regulators to review the rules to encourage whistleblo­wers to report violations within their companies rather than to the SEC.

The proposal would give the SEC discretion to set the smallest and largest cash awards to whistleblo­wers, among other changes. Critics say that change would likely discourage employees from reporting major frauds by lowering the chances of a huge payout.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton, center, waves to a commission­er in September as he takes his seat between SEC Commission­ers Robert Jackson Jr., left, and Hester Peirce, at the start of a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
AP FILE PHOTO Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton, center, waves to a commission­er in September as he takes his seat between SEC Commission­ers Robert Jackson Jr., left, and Hester Peirce, at the start of a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States