Aug. 27 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve argued yesterday that identifying the financial institutions that benefited from its emergency loans would harm the companies and render the central bank’s planned appeal of a court ruling moot.
The Fed’s board of governors asked Manhattan Chief U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska to delay enforcement of her Aug. 24 decision that the identities of borrowers in 11 lending programs must be made public by Aug. 31. The central bank wants Preska to stay her order until the U.S. Court of Appeals in New York can hear the case.
“The immediate release of these documents will destroy the board’s claims of exemption and right of appellate review,†the motion said. “The institutions whose names and information would be disclosed will also suffer irreparable harm.â€
The Fed’s “ability to effectively manage the current, and any future, financial crisis†would be impaired, according to the motion. It said “significant harms†could befall the U.S. economy as well.
The central bank didn’t say when it would file its appeal.
Fed lawyer Kit Wheatley told Preska in a conference call today that she did not know how long it would take for the Fed board to search the New York Fed for records.
“We really don’t know what’s in New York,†Wheatley said. “We don’t control the system of record-keeping in New York.â€
The Standard
The Fed’s lawyer went on to say that she did not know what records would fall under a “delegated function,†which would be a task assigned to the New York Fed.
Preska interrupted Wheatley, saying that “Ms. Wheatley, I held that’s not the standard. You didn’t search under the regulation. You’re supposed to search under the regulation.â€
Preska scheduled another conference call for 2:30 p.m. today to discuss the schedule for a search of the New York Fed.
“Nobody is going to deny you your right to an appeal,†Preska said on the call, “We’re going to do it expeditiously, not in a piecemeal fashion and hand it all off to the Second Circuit.â€
The Fed has refused to name the financial firms it lent to or disclose the amounts or the assets put up as collateral under the emergency programs, saying disclosure might set off a run by depositors and unsettle shareholders.
Bloomberg LP, the New York-based company majority-owned by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, sued on Nov. 7 under the Freedom of Information Act on behalf of its Bloomberg News unit.
Public Interest
“Our argument is that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the banks’ interest in secrecy,†said Thomas Golden, a lawyer with New York-based Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP who represents Bloomberg.
Preska’s Aug. 24 ruling rejected the Fed’s argument that the records should remain private because they are trade secrets and would scare customers into pulling their deposits.
“What has the Fed got to hide?†said Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent who sponsored a bill to require the Fed to submit to an audit by the Government Accountability Office. “The time has come for the Fed to stop stonewalling and hand this information over to the public,†he said in an e- mail.








This is so typical of the
This is so typical of the Federal Reserve. The Fed and their largest beneficiaries (the biggest banks) do not want any accountability for their actions - while the smaller banks are left to twist in the wind.
Oh, Shelly, I really like
Oh, Shelly, I really like your blog... keep up the good work!
The real scary part is how
The real scary part is how much of these "Loans" probably are political pay offs for support to get certain obvious supporters, internationally, of global economy. Do we even know how deep the FED and Chase Manhattan are in bed? I think we have a very powerful family behind all this... may I dare say Rockefellers'? I hope investigation of this corrupt scheme happens. I am not as brave to risk my neck investigating that relationship.
Well ... shouldn't these
Well ... shouldn't these banks be "hurt" since they are effectively insolvent?
Love the scaremongering here. "Irreparable harm" will be done to these banks and the economy, but no explanation of what that harm might be, just vague shadow threats intended to frighten.
Insolvent banks need to be shut down. Nothing is "too big to fail". The assets of failed institutions will migrate to the people who didn't make the errors in the first place and who ought to therefore be managing those assets.
Responsible parties must not be required to pick up the tab for irresponsible parties.
The worms are squirming, I
The worms are squirming, I see the FED as finnished also, I'm envisioning a life without these rogues, lets all put that position vision through our hearts and send it out to the universe!
If the Fed doesn't want to
If the Fed doesn't want to open their books... they should consider making a peace offering to the American people... Here's an idea, why don't you extend low-interest loans to the millions of people drowning in high-interest debt.... Seems pretty obvious that if you get the loan sharks off the backs of the American people, the economy would start rolling again...
Maybe they should check the
Maybe they should check the records of the local AFL-CIO office too, since the new head of the New York Fed office will be a union boss.
The Fed is dead.
The Fed is dead.
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