OCC
Withheld US
Bank CEO
Letter It Used
To Approve
Union Bank
Merger Now
Appeal Filed
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Maxwell
book
SOUTH BRONX NYC,
Feb 14 –
How
untransparent
and pro-bank
are today's
regulators,
including the
Office of the
Comptroller of
the Currency?
The
example on
February 10,
2023 was the
OCC's denial
in full of
Inner City
Press' Freedom
of Information
Act request
about its
approval of
U.S. Bank's
application to
acquire Union
Bank, which
Fair Finance
Watch and
others
challenged
under the
Community
Reinvestment
Act.
Inner
City Press
submitted the
request in
November 2022,
and
immediately
clarified and
narrowed the
request after
an OCC
inquiry.
On
February 10,
2023, the OCC
responded -
and withholds
16 pages in
full,
providing no
information at
all. This on
the day the
OCC holds a
symposium
about mergers
- with
speakers from
corporate law
firms.
Here's
from the OCC's
letter:
"Your
request for
the October
10, 2022
letter from
Andrew Cecere
and records
related or
directly
referenced in
the October
10, 2022 is
denied.
We
have withheld
16 pages..."
On
February 14,
Inner City
Press filed
its appeal:
"This
is a FOIA
appeal of the
OCC's denial
in full of the
FOIA request I
submitted on
November 23,
2022 on behalf
of Inner City
Press and in
my personal
capacity,
which the OCC
summarized:
"You requested
the OCC's U.S.
Bank - Union
Bank merger
approval
order,
including any
conditions and
any and all
records
related to the
basis for the
conditions,
and approval.
By PAL message
dated December
7, 2022, you
clarified that
you are
seeking the
October 10,
2022 letter
from Andrew
Cecere to OCC
as referenced
in the
approval order
and records
related or
directly
referenced in
the October
10, 2022
letter (Date
Range for
Record Search:
From
01/01/2022 To
11/23/2022)."
On
February 10,
2023 -- eleven
weeks after
the request --
the OCC denied
the narrowed
request in
full,
providing not
a single line
or portion of
the letter on
which the OCC
conditioned
its merger
approval. This
is outrageous,
and is hereby
(within days,
not weeks)
appealed.
FOIA expressly
mandates that
any
"reasonably
segregable
portion" of a
record must be
disclosed to a
requester
after the
redaction (the
deletion of
part of a
document to
prevent
disclosure of
material
covered by an
exemption) of
the parts
which are
exempt. 5
U.S.C. §
552(b). And
see, Trans-Pac.
Policing
Agreement v.
U.S. Customs
Serv., 177
F.3d 1022,1028
(D.C.Cir.
1999) and PHE,
Inc. v. Dep’t.
of Justice,
983 F.2d
248,252
(D.C.Cir.
1993).
The
OCC's approval
order
said:
"The Resulting
Bank shall
comply with
the
commitments
contained in
the letter
from Andrew
Cecere,
Chairman,
President and
Chief
Executive
Officer, U.S.
Bank National
Association,
to Tanya
Smith, Deputy
Comptroller
for Large Bank
Supervision,
dated October
10,
2022."
The public and
community
groups have a
right to know
about, assess
and act on the
regulation and
supervision
activities of
the OCC, which
purport to
protect and
assist
consumers. But
to say that
the approval
is based on
"commitments"
by the bank -
with its own
compliance
problems -
while keeping
those
commitments
entirely
secret from
the public
undermines
this
principle, and
the
credibility of
the OCC. It is
inconsistent
with the
Administration's
and Acting
Controller's
claims. The
denial should
be immediately
reverse, and
the letter
provided."
Watch
this site.
***
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