- Pecora Commission
The Pecora Commission is the name commonly used to describe the commission established on
March 4 ,1932 , by theUnited States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs to investigate the causes of theWall Street Crash of 1929 . The name refers to the fourth and final Chief Counsel to the committee,Ferdinand Pecora .Created by a majority-Republican Senate, its first Chairman was Republican Senator
Peter Norbeck . Hearings began onApril 11 ,1932 , but were criticized by Democratic Party members and their supporters as being little more than an attempt by the Republicans to appease the growing demands of an angry American public suffering through theGreat Depression . Following the November 1932 election in which DemocratFranklin D. Roosevelt was elected President and Democrats gained majority control of the U.S. Senate, SenatorDuncan U. Fletcher chaired the Committee. According to the U.S.National Archives and Records Administration , the Commission's first two counsels were fired and a third resigned after the committee refused to give him broadsubpoena powers. Ferdinand Pecora, an assistantdistrict attorney forNew York County , discovered, upon taking the committee counsel position, that the investigation was incomplete.Following the Wall Street Crash, the U.S. economy had gone into a depression, and a large number of banks failed. The Pecora Commission initiated major reform of the American financial system. As Chief Counsel, Ferdinand Pecora personally examined many high-profile witnesses that included some of the nation's most influential bankers and
stockbroker s. As the Commission's first witness,Richard Whitney , president of theNew York Stock Exchange , declared that "The Exchange's refusal to pay heed to popular demand for reform was simply a manifestation of courage to do those things which are right, regardless of how unpopular they may be for the time being." Other important members of the Wall Street financial community to give testimony before the Commission includedinvestment bank ers Otto H. Kahn,Charles E. Mitchell ,Thomas W. Lamont , andAlbert H. Wiggin , plus celebratedcommodity market speculators such asArthur W. Cutten . Given wide media coverage, the testimony of the powerful bankerJ.P. Morgan, Jr. caused a public outcry after he admitted under examination that he and many of his partners had not paid any income taxes in 1931 and 1932.As reiterated by SEC Chairman
Arthur Levitt during his 1995 testimony before theUnited States House of Representatives , the Pecora Commission uncovered a wide range of abusive practices on the part of banks and bank affiliates. These included a variety of conflicts of interest such as the underwriting of unsound securities in order to pay off bad bank loans as well as "pool operations" to support the price of bank stocks. The hearings galvanized broad public support for new securities laws. As a result of the Pecora Commission's findings, the United States Congress passed theSecurities Act of 1933 and theSecurities Exchange Act of 1934 , instituting disclosure laws for corporations seeking public financing, and in 1935 formed the SEC as a means to enforce the new Acts.In 1939 Ferdinand Pecora published his memoirs that recounted details of the investigations. Titled "Wall Street Under Oath", Pecora wrote: "Bitterly hostile was Wall Street to the enactment of the regulatory legislation." As to disclosure rules, he stated that "Had there been full disclosure of what was being done in furtherance of these schemes, they could not long have survived the fierce light of publicity and criticism. Legal chicanery and pitch darkness were the banker's stoutest allies."
The Pecora Commission hearings ended on
May 4 ,1934 , and the Commission itself completed its work in 1936.References
* "The Separation of Commercial and Investment Banking: The Glass-Steagall Act Revisited and Reconsidered" - a retrospective of the Pecora Commission's conclusions by George J. Benston,
Oxford University Press , 1990.External links
* [http://www.archives.gov/legislative/guide/senate/chapter-05.html#1913 Guide to the Records of the U.S. Senate at the National Archives]
* [http://www.sechistorical.org/collection/papers/1930/1934_06_06_Intro_to_Pecora_C.pdf| Introduction to Pecora Commission Report]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,745272-1,00.html Damnation of Mitchell] "Time" magazine 1929.
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