Why do white-collar criminals so often get away with it?
I don’t know quite how to characterize The Chickenshit Club, by Jesse Eisinger. It’s an absorbing financial history, a monumental work of journalism, a not entirely persuasive polemic. It’s a first-rate study of the federal bureaucracy. It’s also an expansive parable: of righteousness and compromise, overreach and under reach, excess, deceit, greed—the whole American show. It’s fun to read but a real downer to think about.
The book offers an edifying tour of a century of white-collar crime—what Al Capone called “the legitimate rackets.” A recurrent theme is that the government is terrible at prosecuting it and always has been. “There has never been a golden age of white-collar prosecutions,” Eisinger writes. “The rich and powerful have always been rich and powerful.”
This story is from the July 17 - July 23 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.
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This story is from the July 17 - July 23 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.
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