(keeping Riggs bank scandal stuff together here)
Treasury IG Vs. OCC Over 'Obstructions'
American Banker Friday, June 11, 2004
By Michele Heller
WASHINGTON - The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is under fire again - this time by the Treasury Department Office of Inspector General.
The IG's office is complaining that the banking agency has hampered its ability to investigate national banks accused of criminal activities, according to documents sent to Congress.
"The Department of the Treasury Office of Inspector General will conduct investigations of matters involving possible obstructions or corruptions of the bank oversight and examination responsibilities of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency," then-Treasury Inspector General Jeffrey Rush Jr. wrote in a March 30 letter to eight congressional committees, including the Senate Banking, Senate Governmental Affairs, and House Financial Services panels. Mr. Rush retired in April.
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According to the letters and other documents obtained by American Banker, OCC employees, including Deputy Chief Counsel Daniel Stipano, thwarted the inspector general's investigators who were brought into bank fraud cases by the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Justice Department. This began late last year, and the IG formally complained to Comptroller John D. Hawke Jr. in mid-March, and then Congress later that month.
"On March 9, members of my office of investigations met with Brian McCormally, OCC's director of enforcement, to request access to OCC records and assistance with our inquiry in connection with the Guaranty National Bank in Tallahassee, Florida," Mr. Rush wrote in a March 18 memo to Mr. Hawke. "I am informed that Mr. McCormally not only refused our request for information, but also questioned the authority of my office."
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http://www.americanbanker.com/article.html?id=20040610WP7ZGAVD&from=HomeSounds like OCC not only protected Saudis for 7 years (even after 9/11), but were also protecting a predatory lender (now failed) in Tallahassee.
So, reviewing, we're up to three Florida banking operations that OCC let slide (BAC, Riggs International, Guaranty National).