Civics: politics, interests and finance

Jeff John Roberts:

I’d heard about the rumor from two people in Washington, one of whom shared Cohodes’s memo, and who say Warren’s office used it to inform an aggressive regulatory crackdown on the banks—both of which catered to crypto clients. The allegation here is that the powerful senator is so fixated on an anti-crypto vendetta that she took advice from a short-seller who cashes in when companies fail—the sort of person who, in the eyes of many progressives, epitomizes an amoral Wall Street culture they loathe.

It’s a great story—if it’s true. And the evidence for that is not conclusive. When I called Cohodes, he did not deny that he had been in touch with Warren’s office but said he “talks to all sorts of people” and didn’t provide any specifics. He described himself as “just one guy” who has a track record of exposing fraudulent companies, and, in a later email, called the two banks “Publicly traded Crime Scenes.” Cohodes insists he has no opinion on crypto but only in calling attention to what he says was the banks’ complicity in money laundering. He did confirm he made money from holding short positions in both Signature and Silvergate when the banks collapsed.

As for Warren, a staffer from her office did not deny contact with Cohodes but noted that people send the senator hundreds of emails every day on all sorts of topics and that, in any case, her policy decisions are based entirely on independent research.

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