Comment from a victim of Irish corruption

I think this comment from below deserves publication.

I can honestly say that until I started following press articles and blogs after I lost over £80k in Anglo Irish shares as a result of nationalisation, I had no prejudice against any race. However, I must confess that now my eyes have been opened, I will avoid any dealings with the Irish in future.

I thought my son-in-law was talking rubbish when he said the Irish were crooked and that I should sell my Anglo shares. I will never doubt his word again. It is clear that corruption is widespread.

Lorna Lancaster

The exposure of a corrupt state

Even if Fitzpatrick deigned to appear before the Economic and Regulatory Affairs Committee it would make no difference whatsoever, the committee has no power. It was set up after the 1997 general election for the same reason that all Dail committees are set up – jobs for the boys.

None of the 30 or so Dail committees have any power. They are nothing more than cash machines granted to politicians to keep them on side with their parties. They also serve the useful purpose (at least until the present global crisis) of giving the impression that the State is serious about bringing white collar criminals to account.

Politicians are most proud of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC); they waffle on endlessly about the great work done in bringing banks to account over the DIRT scandal. It is, of course, just that – waffle.

The banks only paid back a fraction of the countless millions they robbed from the State in that particular mafia scam and, in keeping with that great Irish tradition, not a single bank or official was investigated by the police never mind actually charged with a crime.

Here are some other so called regulatory agencies that, in theory, are charged with protecting the State and its citizens.

Financial Regulator: This organisation has never taken any serious or effective action against the widespread criminality within the Irish financial sector. The Financial Regulator by its actions and particularly by its inactions, in effect, acts to as a protector of wrongdoers. The Financial Regulator is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act and operates under strict secrecy laws.

Tribunals: Tribunals are useful in uncovering the vast amount of sleaze and corruption that infects Irish public and business life but they have no power whatsoever to prosecute, this is not an accident.

For example, politicians, quite deliberately, introduced a law that prevents any evidence given to a tribunal from being used by the police in any subsequent criminal investigation.

If such an investigation were to take place, (highly improbable) the police would have to start off from scratch ignoring the vast amount of evidence gathered, under oath, by the tribunal. This law didn’t just fall out of the sky.

Comptroller and Auditor General: The C & AG reports once a year invariably highlighting very serious incompetence, waste and often corruption within government departments. He has no power whatsoever to take matters any further, his only ‘power’ is to make recommendations.

Irish citizens are then subjected to the farce of seeing powerless Dail committee members rant and rave about the action they’re going to take to put a stop to all this incompetence, waste and corruption before collecting their expenses and settling down until the next C & AGs report where the whole farce is repeated.

In common with Dail committees and tribunals the C & AG is also useful for giving the impression that the State is actually serious about dealing with the disease of corruption.

From time to time, usually when media pressure is making politicians sweat over some scandal, the C & AG is called in to conduct a ‘special’ investigation. Again, the C & AG has no power to act on his findings; he just publishes his report and makes recommendations.

Recently, the C & AG carried out one such special investigation into the Irish Greyhound Board – Bord na gCon.

Despite uncovering irrefutable evidence of very serious corruption the C & AG concluded:

“In my annual audits of Bord na gCon I have satisfied myself that the broad framework of financial administration and internal control was appropriate.”

“In general the funds of Bord na gCon were properly applied.”

These conclusions came as a great relief to the board of Bord na gCon and, I’m sure, to politicians who could now claim that all was well and no action was required. Incidently, nobody thought it the least bit odd that the C & AG is also the auditor for Bord na gCon.

Office of Corporate Enforcement: In reality, the ODCE is a toothless tiger with a fancy title and, in the main, deals with minor wrong doing by company directors.

The office is seriously understaffed, under funded and possess only weak law enforcement powers. Apart from fines, the most common punishment meted out is a ban on practicing as a company director for a number of years.

But like tribunals, Dail committees and the C & AG office, the ODCE acts as a very useful mechanism whereby allegations against very powerful people can be channeled away from public attention and, more importantly, away from the (remote) possibility of criminal proceedings.

For example, the ODCE, ‘processed’ the people responsible for the very serious fraud at National Irish Bank. These people received nothing more than a slap on the wrist.

Two of the biggest tax cheats in the history of the State, the Bailey brothers, are also being ‘processed’ by the ODCE. The very best we can hope for is that these two gentlemen will be banned from acting as company directors for a couple of years. In other words, another slap on the wrist.

The ODCE has also taken the infamous Jim Flavin of DCC under its gentle wing. The highest court in the land, in a civil case, found that Flavin had committed fraud on the stock exchange to the tune of €83 million. But (lucky) Jim will be treated kindly by the ODCE with perhaps, yes, a gentle slap on the wrist before being sent on his happy and very rich way.

And let’s remember, it is the ODCE that will be ‘processing’ the Anglo Irish/Irish Life and Permanent fraud. Politicians are falling over themselves to assure the Irish people that this is the organisation that will bring these people to account.

Let me say right now, unless there is an actual revolution in the way white collar crime is dealt with in Ireland these people, Sean Fitzpatrick and all the rest will never, ever be brought to account.

The structure and operation of all so called regulatory agencies in Ireland are, effectively, designed to avoid bringing the corrupt to account. Whether it’s by strict secrecy laws, a lack of power, a lack of resources or a deliberate policy of protecting the rich and powerful the consequences are always the same for Ireland and its people – disastrous.

There is, however, some hope. The political, business and bureaucratic reaction to the Anglo Irish Bank/Irish Life and Permanent scandal is nothing more than a desperate scramble to prevent the international community from finding out just how rotten the Irish system really is.

They are unlikely to succeed as the global crisis continues to expose Ireland as the most corrupt country in the Western world.

In the long run that can only be a good thing for Ireland and its people.

Copy to:
All relevant Dail committees
Fianna Fail
Government Press Secetary
Financial Regulator
ODCE
C & AG

No comment required

Texan billionaire Sir Allen Stanford has been charged over an $8bn investment fraud.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (The American equivalent to our Financial Regulator) said the financier had orchestrated “a fraudulent, multi-billion dollar investment scheme”. The charges against Sir Allen followed a raid by US marshalls on the Houston, Texas, offices of Stanford Financial Group.

David Mills has been sentenced to four and a half years in jail after an Italian court found the British tax lawyer guilty of accepting a bribe of about £400,000 from Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Note: Police, charges, courts, and jail.

Meanwhile, Irish authorities are thinking of asking the Dail for permission to compel Sean Fitzpatrick to appear before a completely powerless Dail committee where he can refuse to answer questions concerning allegations of massive fraud.

Time to throw them out

Sean Fitzpatrick, the man who headed up the bank responsible for the biggest fraud in the history of the State has just given two fingers to the Dail’s Economic and Regulatory Affairs Committee and by extension the people of Ireland. The auditors of the bank also gave the two fingers to the people of Ireland.

These people are 100% confident in their actions because they know that the corrupt regime that governs Ireland will continue to protect them. It is only when that corrupt regime is, literally, overthrown that Ireland can begin to build a system of governance similar to that of all other Western democracies.

Revolution – First shots fired?

An AIB branch in Cork was attacked by a man in a suit who threw dozens of eggs at the building. Here’s the full report from RTE.

AIB bank in Cork egged by man in suit

Tuesday, 17 February 2009 13:13

An AIB branch in Cork literally has egg on its face after it was hit by a man in a suit.

AIB has said it does not know the identity of the man who threw dozens of eggs at its regional offices and branch on the South Mall in Cork city around 11.30 today.

The well-dressed man stood on the street and brought traffic to a halt for a number of minutes as he threw eggs from a cardboard box at the building.

He disappeared shortly afterwards, leaving the empty box behind him.

An AIB spokeswoman confirmed the incident, but said the man did not come into the building.

The spokeswoman said AIB did not know who the man was or why he threw the eggs at the building.

She said the bank would not be making a complaint to the gardaí.

Financial Regulator – A 'captured regulator'

Gavin has just informed me that there is an official description for regulatory agencies like the Irish Financial Regulator who act in favour of special interest groups rather than the public good (my emphasis)

Regulatory capture is a term used to refer to situations in which a government regulatory agency created to act in the public interest instead acts in favor of the commercial or special interests that dominate in the industry or sector it is charged with regulating (This is an exact description of how the Irish Financial Regulator operates).

For public choice theorists, regulatory capture occurs because groups or individuals with a high-stakes interest in the outcome of policy or regulatory decisions can be expected to focus their resources and energies in attempting to gain the policy outcomes they prefer, while members of the public, each with only a tiny individual stake in the outcome, will ignore it altogether.

When this imbalance of focused resources devoted to a particular policy outcome is successful at “capturing” influence with the staff or commission members of a regulatory agency so that the preferred policy outcomes of the special interest are implemented, then regulatory capture has occurred.

Regulatory capture theory is a core focus of the branch of public choice referred to as the economics of regulation, economists in this specialty are critical of conceptualizations of regulatory intervention by governments as being motivated to protect public goods. Two often cited articles are Laffont & Tirole (1991) and Levine & Forrence (1990).

The theory of regulatory capture is associated with Nobel laureate economist George Stigler, one of its main developers. Two other cited references are Bernstein (1955) and Huntington (1952).

Copy to:
Financial Regulator

ESB – Ripping off customers?

There’s something very rotten in the ESB. On Liveline last week (Mon, Tue, Wed) there was an endless line of callers expressing shock at the massive increase in their bills. Here are some examples.

Previous bill €250 – Latest – €323
Previous bill €243 – Latest – €424
Previous bill €140 – Latest – €280
Previous bill €408 – Latest – €667
Previous bill €180 – Latest – €485

A Dublin woman living in a one bed-roomed apartment saw her bill increase from €265 to €453. She has two Dimplex and one storage heater, no washing machine, no dishwasher, only uses the sink immersion and all her bulbs are energy saving. She’s taking out a credit union loan to pay her bill.

A man in Roscommon opened a petrol station in 2002 when the price of a litre of petrol was 95c and his electricity bill was €800. Today, a litre of petrol is still 95c but his electricity bill has increased to €3,000

As Joe Duffy said, the ESB is ripping off its customers. The recent price increases do not explain these massive increases. Isn’t it curious that when such scandals are exposed in Ireland, nothing happens?

Everybody has a pretty good idea of what’s going on but no state authority will act unless the media dig deeper and expose the full truth.

See here for an excellent article by Senator Shane Ross which gives a good idea of how rotten things are in the ESB.

Medical consultants and strip clubs

Liveline (Friday) had some interesting calls last week regarding the fees charged by medical consultants. Here’s an example.

Margaret noticed some lumps on her arm. Her GP had no idea what they were but charged €55 before referring her to a consultant. The consultant had no idea what the lumps were but charged her €230 before referring her to a surgeon who would be charging €150 just to have a chat. So, €435 and Margaret is none the wiser about the lumps on her arm.

It reminds me of the old strip club scam (I, er, read about this someplace).

The customer arrives at the club and is charged, say, €20 before being led into a small bar where he is encouraged to buy some very expensive drinks. Where’s the action he pipes up? Oh, that’s in the club proper, it’s just an extra €50.

He’s then led into an even bigger bar where the expensive drinks become very, very expensive. By this time the customer is drunk and becoming impatient and very angry. The bouncers arrive, give him a good thrashing, rob his wallet and throw him out the back door.

Yes, I think that’s a pretty accurate description of how certain parts of the Irish health system operates.

Politicians – All the same?

Recently, during a discussion on the imposition of the levy on civil servants, Ivan Yates made a curious comment.

“I sent a text to Brian Lenihan saying – good days work, keep it up.”

Yates is a former Fine Gael politician; he left politics nine years ago. What’s he doing with the Minister for Finance’s mobile phone number?

I know Irish politicians are great buddies behind the charade of opposition but are they ‘that’ close?