the 2008 financial crisis
entry · 2007–2010 · status: archived · 0 senior executives prosecuted
summary
The 2008 financial crisis was a global systemic banking and credit crisis triggered by the collapse of the U.S. subprime mortgage securitization market. It produced the largest single bankruptcy in U.S. history (Lehman Brothers, $639B in assets), the largest single corporate bailout in U.S. history (AIG, $182B), the largest household-wealth destruction since the Great Depression ($11 trillion), and the largest mass dispossession of American homeowners since the 1930s (~6 million foreclosures by 2014). Zero senior executives of the major investment banks or insurers were criminally prosecuted for the conduct that produced the collapse.
the receipts
- Lehman Brothers, September 15, 2008: Chapter 11 bankruptcy with $639B in assets, $613B in debts. Largest U.S. bankruptcy ever filed.
- AIG bailout: $85B emergency loan from the Federal Reserve, expanded to $182B total government support. AIG had written ~$441B in credit-default swaps without meaningful reserves.
- TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program): $700B authorized by Congress (October 2008); $443.5B disbursed. The government later recovered $425.5B through repayments, dividends, and interest — net cost ~$31.1B (this number is often used to claim "TARP made money"; it omits the $11T household-wealth losses borne by retail).
- Household wealth lost: from $61.4 trillion (Q2 2007 peak) to $50.4 trillion (Q1 2009 trough) — $11 trillion gone.
- Foreclosures: ~6 million U.S. families lost homes between 2007 and 2014. As of November 2008, ~12 million U.S. homeowners had negative equity.
- Unemployment: peaked at 11.0% in October 2009 (counting U-3, the headline rate; broader U-6 measures peaked above 17%).
what the bankers knew · the goldman case
The 2010 Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearings, chaired by Sen. Carl Levin, produced internal Goldman Sachs emails describing the firm's mortgage-backed-security products to its own clients with terms including "shitty deal" and "junk." Goldman simultaneously held short positions against the same securities it was selling. Senior executives, including CEO Lloyd Blankfein, denied wrongdoing under sworn testimony. Junior trader Fabrice Tourre was the only Goldman employee held civilly liable (2013, $825K fine, no criminal charge, no jail time). The product description language was preserved in deposition; nothing was redacted.
the holder doctrine
In March 2013, Attorney General Eric Holder testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee:
"I am concerned that the size of some of these institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to prosecute them when we are hit with indications that if we do prosecute — if we do bring a criminal charge — it will have a negative impact on the national economy, perhaps even the world economy."
This statement was widely reported as the "too big to jail" doctrine. Holder later attempted to walk it back. The empirical record, however — zero senior executives of the major banks prosecuted in the seven years following the crisis — supported Holder's original framing rather than his retraction. After leaving office, Holder returned to law firm Covington & Burling, which represents many of the same banks his Department had declined to prosecute.
the parallel cycles in the same window
- Madoff arrested December 11, 2008 — the same quarter as Lehman.
- Epstein NPA signed July 2008 — the same year. (See Epstein NPA entry.)
- Goldman's "shitty deal" emails exposed to the public in 2010 hearings.
- Robo-signing scandal (2010): mortgage servicers had fabricated foreclosure documents at scale. Settlements totaled ~$25B; no executive prosecuted.
- HSBC laundering settlement (December 2012): $1.92B fine for laundering Sinaloa cartel and Iranian-sanctions-evasion money. "Too systemically important to indict" — DOJ explicit framing.
- The 2009 bonuses: banks that received TARP funds paid roughly $20 billion in bonuses for performance year 2008 — a fact disclosed by then-NY-AG Andrew Cuomo's office.
why this matters to PRIOR
The 2008 crisis is the modern-era foundational case in the witness archive. $11 trillion in household wealth destroyed. 6 million families dispossessed. Zero senior bankers prosecuted. The Bitcoin genesis block (cycle/22), mined four months after Lehman, embeds the verdict in its first byte: "The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks." Every cycle PRIOR has indexed since then is downstream of the architecture this crisis revealed and, structurally, did not change.
"too big to fail meant too big to charge."