Thursday, April 2, 2009

a new initiative to join federal and state prosecutors in combating financial fraud and white-collar crime.

TO BE NOTED: From the WSJ:

"
By EVAN PEREZ

JIUTEPEC, Mexico – U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department is planning a new initiative to join federal and state prosecutors in combating financial fraud and white-collar crime.

"We'll be working with them to come up with a way to deal with these fraud problems and white-collar problems. The federal government can't do this alone," Mr. Holder said in an interview on the sidelines of an arms-trafficking conference here.

The attorney general said his review of the Justice Department's past policies and priorities extends beyond detainees at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the national-security cases that garner headlines.

Mr. Holder is in Mexico with Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to meet with Mexican counterparts to discuss ways of improving joint efforts against violent Mexican drug cartels. U.S. prosecutors, as well as agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, are attending training sessions amid tight security at a resort near the historic city of Cuernevaca, south of Mexico City.

Following on the heels of a visit by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and before a visit later this month by President Barack Obama, the visit by the two Obama cabinet members this week shows how high a priority the administration considers the Mexico drug fight, Mr. Holder said.

Mr. Holder, in office eight weeks, said that beyond national security, he also is changing course on the way the top law-enforcement agency pursues street-crime cases. He said he is stepping up the department's role in policing the billions of dollars being spent to boost the U.S. economy out of recession.

One change is likely to be in whether to appoint a task force on financial crime, akin to one that was organized during the Bush administration following the collapse of Enron Corp.

Mr. Holder's predecessor in the Bush administration, Michael Mukasey, was disinclined generally to set up task forces because he thought they could be inefficient. He studied the idea of a national task force to focus on fraud and the mortgage crisis but decided against it because he said the crisis differed in various parts of the country and wouldn't benefit from a centralized strategy.

Mr. Holder differs on the effectiveness of a national strategy and said an official announcement would be coming soon. "Based on my experience, I know that task forces work," he said, adding that state prosecutors have developed capacity and expertise on financial fraud that could benefit the federal government.

Write to Evan Perez at evan.perez@wsj.com"

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