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CONFIDENTIAL - NOT FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION
Agenda for Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Meetings
Monday, December 6, 2010 and Tuesday, December 7, 2010
5:00-8:00pm ET and 9:00-5:00pm ET
Location: FCIC Office, Large Conference Room
1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 800
Washington DC 20006
or
Conference Dial-In Number: 866-692-3582
Participant Access Code: 3387529

Monday, December 6, 2010,
FCIC MEETING – DAY 1
Time:
5:00-8:00pm ET
Location:
FCIC Office, Large Conference Room (1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 800)
5:00-6:00pm

Session One: Business Meeting
Agenda Item 1: Call to Order
Agenda Item 2: Roll Call
Agenda Item 3: Approval of Minutes of Telephonic Meeting of November 17,
2010 (attached)
Agenda Item 4: Chairman and Vice Chairman’s Report
(attached/PDF)
Agenda Item 5: Executive Director’s Report
Agenda Item 6: Procedures re: Dissents and Additional Views (attached)
Agenda Item 7: Comments and Questions from Commissioners
Agenda Item 8: Other Items of Business
Agenda Item 9: Adjournment of Business Meeting

6:00-6:15pm

Break (Dinner and Beverages served in the conference room)

6:15-6:30pm

Overview of Discussion of Report

6:30-8:00pm

Session Two: Discussion of Report
Background materials: See draft chapters distributed by FCIC Staff under
separate cover. Other materials may be forthcoming.
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Tuesday, December 7, 2010,
FCIC MEETING – DAY 2
Time:
9:00am-5:00pm
Location:
FCIC Office, Large Conference Room
1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 800
Washington, D.C. 20006
9:00-9:15am

Overview of Meeting

9:15-10:30am

Session One: Discussion of Report
Background materials: See draft chapters distributed by FCIC Staff under
separate cover. Other materials may be forthcoming.

10:30-10:45am

Break
(Beverages served in the conference room for those attending in person.)

10:45-12:00pm

Session Two: Discussion of Report
Background materials: See draft chapters distributed by FCIC Staff under
separate cover. Other materials may be forthcoming.

12:00-12:30pm

Break
(Lunch and Beverages served in the conference room for those attending in
person.)

12:30-2:45pm

Session Three: Discussion of Report
Background materials: See draft chapters distributed by FCIC Staff under
separate cover. Other materials may be forthcoming.

2:45-3:00pm

Break
(Beverages served in the conference room for those attending in person.)

3:00-4:45pm

Session Four: Discussion of Report
Background materials: See draft chapters distributed by FCIC Staff under
separate cover. Other materials may be forthcoming.

4:45-5:00pm

Wrap Up and Next Steps

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 3 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 17, 2010
Agenda Item 1: Call to Order
Chairman Angelides called the telephonic business meeting to order at 12:02pm ET.
Agenda Item 2: Roll Call
Chairman Angelides asked Gretchen Newsom to call the roll of the Commissioners. Present were Phil
Angelides, Bill Thomas, Brooksley Born, Byron Georgiou, Heather Murren, John W. Thompson, and Peter
Wallison. Commissioner Bob Graham joined the call during Agenda Item 4 and Commissioner Keith
Hennessey joined the call during Agenda Item 5. Commissioner Doug Holtz-Eakin was absent.
Also participating in the meeting were: Wendy Edelberg, Executive Director; Gary Cohen, General Counsel;
Gretchen Newsom, assistant to Chairman Angelides, Rob Bachmann, assistant to the Chair; Scott Ganz,
assistant to Vice Chairman Thomas; and Courtney Mayo, assistant to the Vice Chair.
Agenda Item 3: Approval of Minutes of Meeting, November 4, 2010
Chairman Angelides introduced the minutes from the FCIC meeting of November 4, 2010.
MOTION:

Murren moved and Born seconded a motion to adopt the meeting minutes (See
Attachments 1-3).

APPROVED: 7-0 (Commissioners Graham, Hennessey and Holtz-Eakin were absent.)
Agenda Item 4: Chairman’s and Vice Chairman’s Report
Chairman Angelides and Vice Chairman Thomas informed the Commission that their respective reports
would be covered within the agenda items of the meeting. Chairman Angelides later informed the
Commission to mark their calendars for Commission meetings on December 6th and 7th and December 15th
and 16th.
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Agenda Item 5: Executive Director’s Report and Progress on Report
Executive Director Wendy Edelberg informed the Commission that staff members are hard at work
producing chapters of the report for Commission review. Commissioners have already received the entirety
of Section III for their review and feedback, and Section I will be forthcoming by the end of the week,
followed soon by Section A.
Agenda Item 6: Document and Interview Review/Clearance Process
Chairman Angelides and General Counsel Gary Cohen introduced Mr. Cohen’s memo on suggested
procedures for review and approval with respect to the public release of confidential documents and
materials in the Report, the E-Book, and the Website. Discussion ensued among Commissioners on this
matter. Mr. Cohen clarified that if there are unresolved matters concerning the release of confidential
documents and materials that have been objected to by the submitting party and have not been resolved,
these matters will come before the Commission for review and action prior to public release. It was further
clarified that no confidential items can be publicly released except in accordance with Commission rules and,
where there are confidentiality agreements, under the terms of those agreements. Mr. Cohen was directed to
inform the Commission in a timely and regular fashion of items that have been objected to, and
Commissioners were asked to inquire about the status of documents that hold specific interest to themselves
through Mr. Cohen.
Mr. Cohen also briefly touched upon issues related to the archiving of Commission documents and informed
the Commission that a detailed memo will come before the Commission for consideration.
MOTION:

Born moved and Thompson seconded a motion to approve review and clearance
process as outlined in Gary Cohen’s memo (attached).

APPROVED: 9-0 (Commissioner Holtz-Eakin was absent.)

Agenda Item 7: Timing of Submission and Release of Report to Congress
Chairman Angelides informed the Commission of his opinion that in order to wrap up ongoing FCIC
investigations and research and to document our work properly, accurately, and thoroughly in a report that
meets our obligations, he believes it is necessary for the Commission to delay the issuance of our report and
to deliver the report in January. Chairman Angelides recommended proposed changes to Commission rules
to effectuate the issuance of the report in January. Discussion and debate of this matter ensued among
Commissioners (see Attachment 4 for a transcript of this discussion).
MOTION:

Born moved and Graham seconded a motion that the Commission
determines that it shall deliver its report in January 2011, and that the
Commission adopt the changes to the rules proposed by the Chairman
as the Commission received under Agenda Item 7(attached) and further
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move that the Chairman be authorized to inform the President and
Congress of this action immediately and that the information be made
public.
APPROVED: 6-3 (Commissioner Holtz-Eakin was absent.)
AYE: 6- Angelides; Thomas; Born; Georgiou; Murren; Thompson
NAY: 3 – Thomas, Hennessey, Wallison
ABSENT: 1- Holtz-Eakin
For the record, Commissioner Hennessey informed the Commission that
Commissioner Holtz-Eakin indicated to Commissioner Hennessey that he opposes the
measure to delay the issuance of the report.
Agenda Item 8: Procedures re: Separate and Additional Views
Chairman Angelides introduced a draft process for consideration by the Commission on a process for
incorporating and publishing additional or dissenting views. A discussion among Commissioners ensued on
this matter (see Attachment 4 for a transcript of this discussion).
Commissioner Born requested that the Commission postpone action on this matter until the following
meeting wherein the Commission would consider revisions to the proposal. Vice Chairman Thomas agreed
that he and Commissioners Hennessey, Holtz-Eakin, and Wallison would return to the Commission with an
estimate for a word budget on separate or dissenting views for the commercial report within a few days.
Agenda Item 9: Update on Archive Process
This agenda item was already covered during earlier discussion.
Agenda Item 10: Discussion of the Report
This agenda item was already covered during earlier discussion. Additional comments and discussion was
requested and none was offered.
Agenda Item 11: Comments and Questions
No comments were brought up or questions asked by the Commissioners.
Agenda Item 12: Other Items of Business
No other items of business were brought up by the Commissioners.

Agenda Item 13: Adjournment
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Chairman Angelides requested a motion to adjourn the meeting at 10:29am.
MOTION:

Georgiou moved and Graham seconded a motion to adjourn the meeting at 2:01pm.

APPROVED: 9-0 (Commissioner Holtz-Eakin was absent)

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 3 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 17, 2010
ATTACHMENT 1
Approved Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 4, 2010
Agenda Item 1: Call to Order
Chairman Angelides called the telephonic business meeting to order at 10:05am ET.
Agenda Item 2: Roll Call
Chairman Angelides asked Gretchen Newsom to call the roll of the Commissioners. Present were Phil
Angelides, Bill Thomas, Brooksley Born, Byron Georgiou, Doug Holtz-Eakin, and Heather Murren.
Commissioner Wallison joined the call during Agenda Item 3 and Commissioner Graham joined the call
during Agenda Item 6. Commissioners Hennessey and Thompson were absent.
Also participating in the meeting were: Wendy Edelberg, Executive Director; Gary Cohen, General Counsel;
Gretchen Newsom, assistant to Chairman Angelides, Rob Bachmann, assistant to the Chair; Scott Ganz,
assistant to Vice Chairman Thomas; and Courtney Mayo, assistant to the Vice Chair.
Agenda Item 3: Approval of Minutes of Meeting, October 12, 2010
Chairman Angelides introduced the minutes from the FCIC meeting of October 12, 2010.
MOTION:

Holtz-Eakin moved and Georgiou seconded a motion to adopt the meeting minutes
(attached).

APPROVED: 7-0 (Commissioners Graham, Hennessey and Thompson were absent.)
Agenda Item 4: Amendment to Commission Rules re: Report Approval Procedures
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Chairman Angelides introduced the amendment. Discussion ensued on the topic of the amendment as well as
the production status and schedule of the report, and the process and procedures of submitting differing or
separate views. A process for consideration of separate or dissenting views will be sent to the Commission
for consideration at the next Commission meeting. Vice Chairman Thomas recommended a friendly
amendment to the proposed amendment by inserting “grammatical” into the last sentence of the amended
language.
MOTION:

Georgiou moved and Wallison seconded a motion to approve the amendment with the
insert of the word “grammatical” (attached).

APPROVED: 7-0 (Commissioners Graham, Hennessey and Thompson were absent.)
Agenda Item 5: Comments and Questions from Commissioners
No comments were brought up or questions asked by the Commissioners.
Agenda Item 6: Other Items of Business
Chairman Angelides informed the Commission that our publisher, Little Brown, was unable to meet a
revised production schedule and would no longer serve as our publisher. Our replacement publisher will be
Public Affairs and our royalty agreement will be the same as our former agreement with Little Brown except
that there will not be an advance. Public Affairs guaranteed a December 15th delivery date if the report is
delivered to them by December 7th, and has requested FCIC’s assistance with expedited shipping costs,
estimated to be $29,000-$40,000 so the report can be available in bookstores when it is released. Chairman
Angelides indicated that he would approve the shipping costs to ensure the book is widely and timely
received by the American public. Chairman Angelides also informed the Commission that as there is not an
advance with the Public Affairs agreement, our book agents have requested that the FCIC advance them a
portion of their fee of approximately $17,000 to be recouped by the Commission from royalties which would
otherwise go to the agents. Chairman Angelides indicated his approval of the request given the needed
services the agents are providing to assist in the publication of the report. To recoup the shipping expenses
and the advance, an estimated 50,000 copies of the report would need to be sold. Discussion ensued among
the Commission on these matters, and no objections were indicated. Commissioners also discussed the
production and review schedule of the report.
Agenda Item 7: Adjournment
Chairman Angelides requested a motion to adjourn the meeting at 10:29am.
MOTION:

Graham moved and Born seconded a motion to adjourn the meeting at 1:10pm.
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APPROVED: 8-0 (Commissioners Hennessey and Thompson absent)

Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 3 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 17, 2010
ATTACHMENT 2
Approved Document and Interview Review/Clearance Process

Memo To:

Commissioners of the FCIC

From:

Gary J. Cohen
General Counsel, FCIC

cc:

Wendy Edelberg
Maryann Haggerty
Cassidy Waskowicz

Date:

November 16, 2010

Re:

Considerations with Respect to the Public Release of Confidential Documents and
Materials in the Report, the E-Book and Website.
_____________________________________________________________________________________

The FCIC was created by the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act of 2009, which was signed into law on
May 20, 2009. The FCIC's mission is “to examine the causes, domestic and global, of the current financial and
economic crisis in the United States.” Congress empowered the Commission to “hold hearings,... take testimony,
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receive evidence,... and require, by subpoena or otherwise, the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the
production of books, records, correspondence, memoranda, papers, and documents.”
In connection with its mandate, the Commission has received millions of pages of documents, conducted
numerous surveys, interviewed hundreds of witnesses, held 19 days of hearings, compiled video records of testimony
before the Commissioners, and completed numerous reports, both confidential and public, on various aspects of the
financial crisis. The Commission has received or created approximately 15 terabytes of data, some of which remains
to be examined.
It is our intent to use in the Report and our e-book both public and nonpublic documents and to create on our
website a resource of public and nonpublic documents relevant to the Commission's Report and inquiry, all with the
purpose of meeting our statutory mandate to report to the President, Congress and the public on the causes of the
financial and economic crisis.
This Memorandum proposes a process to make the Commission's work available to the public in a meaningful
and useful way. To this end I consider documents (with a focus on nonpublic documents) that may be made available
in the Commission’s Report and e-book (Report Elements), or website (Web Elements). Release of Commission
internal materials (e.g., Commissioner and staff e-mails, Preliminary Investigative Reports (PIRs) and other work
product and documents), will be the subject of a separate memorandum addressing National Archives issues. You will
note below that I have recommended that all nonpublic material for use in the final Report and the website be run
through an approval process.

A.

I recommend that Report Elements include:

all documents,1 both physical and electronic, e-mails, video files, audio files, transcripts, and materials
prepared or compiled by the FCIC staff, such as the timeline, surveys and staff memoranda that have been
made public, that are included, referenced or footnoted in the written Report, or included in the e-book and ebook apps.

B.
I recommend that Web Elements for immediate inclusion in the website on the date the Report is
released (in addition to all material previously posted) include:

i)

all Report Elements,

1
As used in this memorandum documents should be broadly construed to include paper documents, electronic documents, audio files, video files, compilations of
data and the like, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.

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ii)
iii)
iv)
v)
vi)

all documents that previously have been cleared in connection with prior hearings (whether or not used
at the hearings),
all preliminary staff reports,
the expanded timeline and documents referenced in the expanded timeline,
all video and testimony from the Commission hearings, and
all MFRs, audio tapes and transcripts of interviews for which confidentiality was not requested (or which
have already been cleared).

C.
In addition, in addition to material that was previously dealt with pursuant to clause A and B above, I
recommend that Web Elements also include (when and after cleared, if necessary) the following documents:

i)
ii)
iii)
iv)
v)

D.

i)

ii)
iii)
I.

all of the documents referenced in PIRs and similar staff documents,
all of the documents and follow-up answers to questions asked at public hearings ,
all MFRs, audio tapes and transcripts of interviews for which clearance is obtained,
all surveys upon which conclusions referenced in the Report were based, and
materials relevant to our inquiry and the Report which were requested, received and reviewed or
prepared by the staff during the course of our investigation and which are not otherwise included in any
of the above categories.
However, it is my recommendation that no Report Elements or Web Element be released unless:

they are reviewed by appropriate Commission staff and approved by the Executive Director or General
Counsel as appropriate to release (documents already cleared for prior use in hearings do not have to be
re-cleared or authorized),
when dealing with documents covered by confidentiality agreements or understandings, after
consultation with (and if required, occasional approval by) the document providers, and
approved or deemed approved by the Commission (in accordance with the procedures below).

Process.
A.

Choice of Documents for the Report

If there is an e-book with embedded material, at most 1 GB of supplemental material chosen by the FCIC can
be included. The two forms of e-books that include supplemental material, an e-book application (iPad and Droid) and
an enriched e-pub, are each capable of including this amount of supplemental data, although the choice of data for each
platform can differ slightly because of their different capabilities. (In addition to embedded data, e-book platforms can
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include hotlinks pointing to external web content. This requires that, at the very least, the portion of the Commission's
website to which the hotlinks point be "live" when the e-book is published.)
Thus the task ahead for the Report and e-book suggests the following steps:

1.

Staff identifies and physically segregates in electronic form all Report Elements".2

2.
Staff determines the source of each Report Element and, where these were produced pursuant
to confidentiality or other agreement notifies and seeks (generally as per these agreements 14 days in advance)
comment from the Report Element provider to the use of the Report Element. (While the FCIC does not need
affirmative consent pursuant to most of our Confidentiality Letters, either receiving no response to the notice
letter or an affirmative consent should eliminate any concerns regarding release of trade secret or business
proprietary information.) (This process is already underway, and has resulted in a number of questions and
requests for clarification, objections to disclosure, and requests for further discussion from the recipients.) As
a courtesy, we are also telling providers of Report Elements that we might also use their previously cleared
materials in the Report.

3.
Staff determines if any Report Elements require special affirmative consent due to special
terms of any confidentiality agreements or other previously agreed-upon use restrictions, and pulls the
document if the same is not forthcoming.

4.
Where a request for comments elicits objections to disclosure or a required consent is not
forthcoming, Staff determines if release of the Report Elements raises trade secret, personal privacy, or
regulatory or statutory restrictions on disclosure, collectively "special concerns." If the staff determines that
the special concerns are not valid, subject to the other requirements herein, the documents will be released. If
valid, the staff will consider applicable legal requirements, and will weigh the benefit of disclosure by the
Commission against the potential harm to the provider caused by disclosure of the special concerns, negotiate
redactions if the same will be helpful in resolving disclosure issues and if the Report Element would still be
worthy of disclosure after the redactions, and raise the matter to the Commission if the special concern issues
cannot be resolved by staff and the document provider. Once resolved, the staff will then adjust the
composition of the Report Elements accordingly. The decision about whether to release or redact Report
2

This Memorandum primarily addresses electronic release of documents, but as these items will likely constitute documents used as the basis for footnotes, the
same considerations as to care in checking and clearance applies to use in the printed Report.

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Elements after valid objection must be made on a case-by-case basis depending upon the nature of the material
under consideration.
B.

Choice of Documents for the Website

Documents released via the website make up the next subset. (Choice of the location/hosting of the permanent
website will be the subject of a separate memorandum.) Website decisions for material hot-linked to the web
from the e-book must be made when the e-book is "printed." As a practical matter other website decisions can
be delayed until the end of January 2011 (to allow time to implement the decisions by February 13, 2011), and
so the Commission will have additional time to consider and clear documents not included, or referred to, in
the Report.

Thus the task ahead for the Web suggests the following steps (of course in all cases modified to the extent that
items have already been cleared as part of Report Elements):

1.

Staff identifies and physically segregates in electronic form all Web Elements.3

2.
Staff determines the source of each Web Element and, where these were produced pursuant to
confidentiality or other agreement notifies and seeks (generally as per these agreements 14 days in advance)
comment from the Web Element provider to the use of the Web Element. (While the FCIC does not need
affirmative consent pursuant to most of our Confidentiality Letters, either receiving no response to the notice
letter or an affirmative consent should eliminate any concerns regarding release of trade secret or business
proprietary information.) Staff also determines after consultation with the Web Element provider if there are
any needed redactions. (This process is already underway, and has resulted in a number of questions,
objections to disclosure and requests for clarification and further discussion from the recipients.) As a
courtesy, we are also telling providers of Web Elements that we might also place their previously cleared
materials on the Web.

3

Clearing MFRs and interviews is a very labor intensive process. The highest priority will be be given to MFRs and audio tapes or transcripts of individuals quoted
in the Report. Next, the staff will determine which interviews should have priority for clearance, although as a practical matter we are seeking clearance for all of
them at this time, and prioritization will come into play when dealing with objections. Some interviewees were assured by FCIC staff that the interviews would be
private, or were for background purposes only, and that, of course, will be respected. However, even in those cases , people may change their views and we should
ask about release anyway. If promised confidentiality is not waived, the interview materials should be left to the National Archives unless there is a compelling
reason to disclose documents and override the promise where circumstances permit. (Virtually all interviewees were informed that the interview materials would
be delivered to the National Archives.)

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3.
Staff determines if any Web Elements require special consent due to special terms of any
confidentiality agreements or other previously agreed-upon use restrictions, and seeks consent where needed
and pulls the document if the same is not obtained.

4.
Where a request for comments elicits objections to disclosure or a required consent is not
forthcoming, Staff determines if release of the Web Elements raises special concerns. If the staff determines
that the special concerns are not valid, subject to the other requirements herein, the documents will be released.
If valid, the staff will consider applicable legal requirements, and will weigh the benefit of disclosure by the
Commission against the potential harm to the provider caused by disclosure of the special concerns, negotiate
redactions if the same will be helpful in resolving disclosure issues and if Web Element would still be worthy
of disclosure after the redactions, and raise the matter to the Commission if the special concern issues cannot
be resolved by staff and the document provider. Once resolved, the staff will then adjust the composition of
the Web Elements accordingly. The decision about whether to release or redact Web Elements after valid
objection must be made on a case-by-case basis depending upon the nature of the material under consideration.
C.

Commission Approval Process

The decision to release publicly confidential documents is one which should be made by the full Commission,
either directly or through a process of delegation. It is unwieldy and impractical to expect that the full Commission will
review all of the Web Elements and Report Elements, so a procedure for approval should be considered. Currently, the
Commissioners are governed by the following:
The Ethics Guidelines for Commissioners provide that the Chairman or the Commission may release
confidential information.
Many of the Commission’s Confidentiality Agreements provide that documents may be released upon the
agreement of the Chairman and the Vice Chairman, or upon a majority vote of the Commission.
In addition, the Commission must approve the Report, which includes the Report Elements and, for our
purposes, Web Elements as well.
As noted above, in those few cases where there is staff discretion (such as under clause C(v) above), I
recommend that the Executive Director or General Counsel determine which documents should be recommended to the
Commission for a determination in accordance with its processes for inclusion in Report Elements or Web Elements.
This will primarily occur in situations where the staff has received objections to disclosure and the determination to
override the objections must be made.
II.

Legal Considerations for the Release of Documents Received by the Commission
There Are Statutory and Regulatory Prohibitions on the Release of Confidential Information, but
Congress has investigative powers which have been held to override these provisions, and the
Commission has the benefit of those powers as a creation of Congress.
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18 USC §1905. Disclosure of confidential information generally -Whoever, being an officer or employee of the United States or of any department or agency thereof, any
person acting on behalf of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, or agent of the Department of Justice as
defined in the Antitrust Civil Process Act (15 U.S.C. 1311–1314), or being an employee of a private sector
organization who is or was assigned to an agency under chapter 37 of title 5, publishes, divulges, discloses, or
makes known in any manner or to any extent not authorized by law any information coming to him in the
course of his employment or official duties or by reason of any examination or investigation made by, or
return, report or record made to or filed with, such department or agency or officer or employee thereof, which
information concerns or relates to the trade secrets, processes, operations, style of work, or apparatus, or to the
identity, confidential statistical data, amount or source of any income, profits, losses, or expenditures of any
person, firm, partnership, corporation, or association; or permits any income return or copy thereof or any book
containing any abstract or particulars thereof to be seen or examined by any person except as provided by law;
shall be fined under this title, or imprisoned not more than one year, or both; and shall be removed from office
or employment.
In addition, 12 CFR part 261 creates similar limitations on the disclosure of "confidential supervisory
information" of the Federal Reserve Board, 12 CFR part 4 protects "non-public OCC information," 12 CFR part 309
protects "non-public information" of the FDIC and so forth.
The Commission is formed under Congress, and is entitled to the benefit of Congress’s authority and power to
obtain information, including but not limited to proprietary information, is extremely broad. The Commission's
inextricably related ability to release this information arises out of the objectives of the Commission, to issue a report.
While there is no express provision of the Constitution or specific statute authorizing the conduct of congressional
investigations, the Supreme Court has firmly established that such power is so essential to the legislative function as to
be implied from the general vesting of legislative powers in Congress. McGrain v. Daugherty, 273 U.S. 135 (1927);
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.S. 178 (1957); Barenblatt v. United States, 360 U.S. 109 (1959); Eastland v. U.S.
Servicemen’s Fund, 421 U.S. 491 (1975); Nixon v. Administrator of General Services, 433 U.S. 435 (1977). Even the
pendency of civil or criminal litigation cannot delay a committee inquiry. Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.S. 263
(1929).
The federal courts, when applying Congress’s broad investigatory power to obtain access to documents
containing confidential or proprietary information, have expressly held that executive agencies and private parties may
not deny Congress access to such documents, even if they may contain trade secrets or other sensitive information
whose disclosure to the public is otherwise statutorily barred. See, e.g., FTC v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp., 626
F. 2d 966, 970 (D.C. Cir. 1980); Exxon Corp. v.FTC, 589 F. 2d 582, 585-86 (D.C. Cir. 1978), cert. denied, 441 U.S.
943 (1979); Ashland Oil Co., Inc. v. FTC, 548 F. 2d 977, 979 (D.C. Cir. 1976). Specifically, courts have held that
release of information to a congressional committee is not considered to be disclosure to the general public, see
Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp., 626 F. 2d at 970; Exxon Corp., 589 F. 2d at 589; Ashland Oil, 548 F. 2d at 979;
Moon v. CIA, 514 F. Supp. 836, 840-41 (D.D.C. SDNY 1981), and once documents are in congressional control, the
courts will presume that committees of Congress will exercise their powers responsibly and with proper regard to the

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rights of the parties. See, Owens-corning Fiberglass, 626 F.2d at 974; Exxon Corp., 589 F. 2d at 589; Ashland Oil,
548 F. 2d at 979; Moon v. CIA, 514 F. Supp. at 849-51.
In addition, our statute expressly requires the Commission to seek testimony or information from principals
and other representatives of government agencies and private entities that were significant participants in the United
States and global financial and housing markets during the time period examined by the Commission. As the
Commission’s enabling legislation manifests the clear congressional intent to establish an independent legislative
branch entity with investigative powers, authorities and prerogatives equivalent to those of past and present standing
and special investigatory committees, the decision to release confidential documents or materials as part of its statutory
duty to report on the causes of the crisis rests in the Commission’s discretionary determination that such public release
will further fulfillment of its mandated statutory mission, a decision that cannot be limited by any court ruling or
regulatory or statutory standard. Such decisions must be made responsibly and with proper regard to the rights of the
parties involved. As such,, the disclosure of relevant information by the Commission as part of its Report should be
protected as outlined above.
This broad power to receive and disclose confidential and proprietary information is limited by the purpose for
which the information is obtained, however, and while the use of that information in the report to be delivered to
Congress and the President, and therefore to the American public would be within the powers described above, there is
a question as to whether the same standard would be applied should that information be disclosed in a commercially
released book without express or implied consent of the information provider. While this is an issue for the publisher
and not the Commission, I nonetheless recommend that the FCIC take special care to insure compliance with the
appropriate clearance procedures for all documents referenced of quoted in the Report or included in the enhanced ebooks.
Finally, it appears, based on a 5th Circuit Court of Appeals case, United States v. Wallington, 889 F.2d 573
(5th Cir. 1989) that violations of 18 USC §1905 require mens rea, a guilty mind or conscious intent, and inadvertent
violations are not actionable. (There are very few reported cases referencing §1905.)
The FCIC Has Entered into Confidentiality Letters Pursuant to Which It Has Received Confidential
Information
The FCIC has entered into at least 69 confidentiality agreements of various forms pursuant to which it has
committed to a process concerning the Commission's use of documents and other information submitted to it by
document providers, including federal agencies and departments, state and local government entities, and business
organizations and individuals. (A list of the parties to those agreements is attached as Appendix A.)
While the confidentiality agreements vary, virtually all of them contain provisions that require the FCIC to
maintain in confidence the documents designated as confidential and to consult with the document provider prior to
disclosing the information (and often specify a 14 day consultation period). The agreements all allow the FCIC to
disclose the confidential information it determines appropriate in any interim or final report or in connection with
public hearings upon the agreement of the Chairman and the Vice Chairman or upon a majority vote of the FCIC.
Many of the agreements specifically reference, for example, certain bank regulatory reports confidentiality provisions,
trade secrets and similar items protected from disclosure by statute or regulation as examples of the types of the
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documents entitled to confidential treatment in accordance with the letters. But that does not override the
Commission's ability to release the documents if it so determines. In many of the earlier Confidentiality Letters, the
FCIC has stated that it will ask the National Archives not to release confidential documents submitted to the
Commission for at least five years after the conclusion of the Commission's work (in keeping with a pattern set by the
9/11 Commission).
A typical corporate Confidentiality Letter provides:
In accordance with its statutory mandate and its duty to the American public, the Commission, if it determines
it is in the public interest, may release to the public non-public information obtained from XXX as part of any
interim or final report to the President and Congress, or in any public hearings, if the Commission determines
to do so by a majority vote, or by the decision of the Chairman and Vice Chairman acting together on behalf of
the Commission.
Prior to any release of non-public information under the above paragraph, the Commission will give written
notice to XXX, and allow XXX to consult with the Commission before the Commission uses any of the
XXX’s non-public information in any interim or final report to the President and Congress, or in any public.
With respect to interviews and related MFRs, it has generally been the practice of counsel to financial
institutions and departments and agencies to note either by e-mail as part of the process by which the interviews were
arranged, or during the interview, that the interviews would also be covered by the confidentiality agreements between
the FCIC and the respective financial institution or agency or department. Interviews conducted with industry
observers who are not affiliated with organizations subject to confidentiality agreements have usually not contained
those types of restrictions, but even in these situations an FCIC staffer should review the tapes to be certain. Some
interviews were conducted with assurances of a confidential treatment or under the explanation that they were "for
background purposes." For these interviews, I would notify the interviewee (and we are trying to notify all
interviewees) and see if he or she objects to disclosure before making a final release decision. And if there is no
objection then disclosure should be appropriate.
Not all entities and agencies have entered into Confidentiality Letters with the FCIC. Some have instead
submitted documents or consented to interviews pursuant to individual requests, letters or e-mails requesting
confidentiality of the applicable material.
Internally, the FCIC recognizes the sensitive nature of its work and has taken precautions to ensure the
confidentiality of nonpublic information that it receives. These steps include requiring all FCIC personnel to sign a
confidentiality and non-disclosure agreement, which protects all nonpublic information and specifically restricts the
dissemination of any trade secrets or other proprietary information.
Given the nature of the Confidentiality Letters into which the FCIC has entered, I believe there may be a
distinction between public release via the Commission's Report or website (which the FCIC will treat as ancillary to
the Report) and public release through the National Archives. As to the former, compliance with the consultation or
consent process described above should eliminate most concerns regarding the disclosure of trade secrets and other

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confidential information. As to the latter, delivery to the National Archives with a Commission suggested release
schedule is only the beginning of the analysis to be addressed at a later date.

Appendix A
Confidentiality Letters [to be updated]
TAB

NAME

1

SEC‐ Mark Cahn

2

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System‐ Ben Bernanke

3

OCC‐ Julie Williams

4

FDIC‐ Michael Bradfiel

5

FHFA‐ Alfred Pollard

6

DOL‐ Deborah Greenfield

7

CFTC‐ Dan Berkovitz

8

OTS‐ Deborah Dakin

9

DOJ‐ Ronald Weich

10

Treasury‐ George Madison

11

Citi‐ Brad Karp

12

LexisNexis‐ Kara Hinrichs

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13

HUD‐ Heather Kanovsky

14

FINRA‐ James Shorris

15

State Street‐ David Phelan

16

NY State Banking‐ Marjorie Gross

17

Goldman Sachs‐ Richard Klapper

18

Morgan Stanley‐ Raul Yanes

19

PIMCO‐ John Sopko

20

Vanguard‐ Nathan Will

21

Fannie Mae‐ Jeff Kilduff

22

UBS‐ John Moon

23

Barclays‐ Caroline de Onis

24

S&P‐ Brian Markley

25

CT AG‐ George O'Connell

26

OH AG‐ Doreen Johnson

27

omitted

28

AIG‐ Mitchell Berger

29

Cornwall Capital‐ William Gussman

30

Magnetar‐ Steven Ross

31

Moody's‐ Steven Ross

32

MKP‐ Patricia Alcamo

33

GSC Group‐ Daniel Ross

34

NIBC‐ Albert Lambert

35

Laura Schwartz‐ Robin Alperstein
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36

Scion‐ Michael Burry

37

ACA‐ Nathan Erickson

38

UBS‐ Maite Quino

39

Alan Roseman‐ Robert Bennett

40

Charles Gates‐ Daniel Zinman

41

Markit‐ Mark Davidson

42

Eric Dinallo‐ John Kenny

43

TCW ‐ Michael Cahill

44

Andrew Forster‐ David Brodsky

45

Joe Cassano‐ Jim Walden

46

Credit Suisse‐ Daniel Zinman

47

Wachovia‐ Robert Kelner

48

NCRC‐ Josh Silver

49

Ally Financial‐ John Hromy

50

S&P (Special)‐ Brian Markley

51

PIMCO –

52

Moody's (Special)‐ Sharon Nelles

53

Wendy Ruberti

54

Fremont General‐ Jim Caroll

55

NCUA‐ Robert Fenner

56

Maryland Insurance Administration‐ Neil Miller

57

David Sambol‐ Walt Brown

58

ICAP North America Inc.
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59

RMIC‐ John Heitkamp

60

Greg Levine

61

Aladdin Capital‐ Sharad Samy

62

Stone Tower‐ Robert Carangelo

63

Vanderbilt Capital‐ Peter Simmons

64

PMI‐ Andrew Cameron

65

Alliance Berstein‐ Mark Manley

66

Tim Harkness‐ BlackRock

67

ING‐ Gerald Lins

68

Deerfield Capital‐ Jonathan Polkes

69

MGIC‐ Jeffrey Lane

4827‐8096‐8711, v. 3

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 3 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 17, 2010
ATTACHMENT 3
Approved Revisions to Timing of Report Submission

IX. Reporting to the President and Congress

A. Submission of Report and Testimony

The report of the Commission and appearance before and consultations with Congress are governed by
FERA § 5(h), which provides that the FCIC’s report is due to the President and Congress on December 15,
2010, and that the Chairperson shall, within 120 days after the date of the report’s submission, appear before
the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee and the House Financial Services Committee.
The Commission has resolved that the Commission shall deliver its report to the President and Congress at
such time in January 2011 as determined by the Commission.

B. Vote on Report

The full Commission shall vote on approval and submission to the President and Congress of the
Commission’s report. The Chairman shall set the time and date for a meeting of the Commission for the
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purpose of voting on approval and submission of the report, which date shall be no later than seven days
before its due date.two days before the approved report is anticipated to be delivered to the Government
Printing Office, as the Chairman shall determine. Notice of this meeting must be provided to all
Commissioners no less than one week prior to the date of the meeting, along with a draft copy of the report
in its then current form, and any material changes to the report thereafter shall promptly be delivered to the
Commissioners in redlined form from time to time prior to the meeting. Commissioners who are unable to
attend the meeting at which the vote on approval and submission is scheduled may vote telephonically or by
email by transmitting their vote in either manner to a staff member designated by the Chairman. Approval
and submission requires a majority of the votes of those Commissioners physically present and voting and
those who vote telephonically or by email. After the meeting and vote, absent another vote, (which may be
called for by the Chairman on 48 hours notice), only grammatical, and technical, non-substantive changes, as
determined by the Executive Director may be made to the report.

C. Additional or Dissenting Views

Commissioners may submit additional or dissenting views for publication in the report submitted to the
President and Congress. They may be submitted by one or more Commissioners. They are to be provided to
the staff member designated by the Chairman by a time designated by the Chairman (that shall be prior to the
final deadline for completion of all report material), and the staff member shall promptly circulate to all
Commissioners all additional and dissenting views that are received. Additional or dissenting views not
provided by the time specified by the Chairman will not be included in the report submitted to the President
and Congress.

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 3 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Minutes of Telephonic Business Meeting of
November 17, 2010
ATTACHMENT 4
Transcript of Discussion of Agenda Items 7 and 8 of the Business Meeting on
November 17, 2010

United States of America
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Business Meeting
(Partial Transcript
Re Agenda Item 7 and Item 8)
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
*** Confidential ***

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
‐‐o0o‐‐
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Let’s move on to Item 7, which is the timing of

submission and release of report to Congress.
Let me make just a quick opening comment on this, which is that -and I think I’ll make it short and sweet -- which is, at least in my opinion,
to deliver -- to be able to complete our ongoing investigative -- or wrap up
our ongoing investigative and research work and to document that properly in a
report that meets our obligations, I believe it’s necessary for us to determine
as a commission, as other commissions have done before, to deliver our report
to the President and Congress in January, prior to the end of January, at a
date determined by the Commission.
I’m not going to make a long speech about it, except to say, this is
just where we are, given the volume of information, the pace at which the work
is going, and also the need to ensure that the work is absolutely accurate and
thorough.
And so what I did present with members today is, on Item 7, some
suggested change to our rules which would effectuate that.
So I will stop there and open the discussion.
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Is there any discussion?
COMMISSIONER MURREN:

I have no problem with the specific, if it

helps us to get this –- get the job done.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Others?
Well, I think it’s very important that we

complete our investigation and our documentation of that investigation properly
and appropriately.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Bill?
Let me ask you some questions.
Uh-huh.
This –- this requires us to change our rules and

change the date in which we are going to be submitting this to the Congress and
the President, correct?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Correct.
We have a statutory date that was provided to us

by the Congress and the President -CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Correct.
-- right?
Yes.
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VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

How are we able to change the statute by

changing our rules?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I don’t think we are.

I think what we’re doing is

making a determination that the report is best delivered in January.
this regard, I did ask staff to look at historical precedent.

And in

And there’s a

number -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Okay, you don’t have to go any farther than

that.
So we’re going to vote on this, and then you’re going to notify or
send a letter to Congress and the President that we want the date changed in
the statute?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No.

What we’re informing them is that we plan to

deliver our report in January.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

What happens if they say, “That’s unacceptable.

We want you to meet the statutory date”?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, then, I guess that’s an issue.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

We’ll discuss it then.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Why don’t we inquire, through back-channels, if

they would be receptive to this so we don’t get egg all over our face?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I will tell you that over the course of a

period of time, I’ve asked this question in -- I have asked this question not
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specifically with respect to this motion today; and the answer has been that if
more time is needed -- as you know, you and I spoke some about the schedule.

I

made some back-channel requests, and was told essentially to everyone that I
made, that this would not be an issue from their perspective.

At least the

people I spoke with, meaning, leadership on both sides of -- at least on the
House and Senate side.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I don’t -- I can’t tell you that I’ve had the

same high comfort level with discussions that I did not initiate but were
proffered to me.
And so my question is -- we miss the date, we miss the date.

That’s

not the most infrequent violation of all of the commissions and folks dealing
with regulations and all the rest.

They are almost a strong suggestion and

sometimes aren’t even a strong suggestion.
I’m trying to figure out how we minimize our damage to us, because
if this comes out -- if we actually take a vote and we’re on record, you know
we’re going to be inundated with phone calls, wanting to know why, with all
kinds of speculation, and all we’re going to get is a bunch of press with a
bunch of stories by

a bunch of people, none of whom I think are

[unintelligible] what we’re going to be doing and how difficult it is.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I will let other members weigh in; but my

view on that is -- and, Bill, you and I talked about this -- my view is that
absent taking an action and just floating and missing the date would be much
more damaging; and I think we need to say it, put out our rationale versus, as
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I think I told you this morning, there’s already a couple reporters calling,
saying, “Gee, we heard you’re thinking of doing findings in December and a
report in January.”

And I just think we ought to grab the bull by the horns,

lay it out so, in fact, we’re not embarrassed by missing the date.

We just say

clearly, because of the importance of the investigation, the importance of
having the best facts for the American people, we intend to deliver in January.
At least the back-channel I have done indicates there will be -there is very strong support for that approach.
But I think it would be a mistake to not take an action and then
just let the date float by.

I think that would be the worst of circumstances,

because in the meantime, there will be rumors that will be swirling, there will
be leaks, and then it will be like, these clods never even told anyone.

That’s

my view.
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

And, Phil, do you think it would also be a

mistake to go ask Congress to change the statute?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

My indication is, is that, at least from the folks

I’ve spoken to, that the best route to take, is to inform the date -- I think
we could do both -- say, we intend to deliver.

But I think given their

schedule right now, which is they intend to leave in -- I think on Thursday of
this week and then come back after Thanksgiving; and I just don’t think it’s
practicable.
I would have -- without going over history, I think that might have
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been a preferable route earlier in the year, yes.
But I will say -- and I don’t want to just say that there’s ample
precedent for commissions that have not missed their date by a year; but, you
know, for example, the many, many commissions here -- I have a list of them, if
people are interested -- where they, in fact, submitted, instead of, you know,
in March, they submit at the end of March, instead of March 1st; or, you know,
instead of March 1st, June 10th, without seeking

law changes; instead of an

original date of December, there is an amended date of April, and then the
submission was actually made May 6th.
I’ve identified at least seven commissions over the past, I guess it
would be seven or eight years or ten years that have done exactly this, and
that was just a cursory search.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Phil?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:

Well, Phil, is the debate or difference of

opinion on whether or not, or the form in which we could take and notify?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Is that a question for me, John?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:

It’s a question, quite frankly, for Bill,

more so, because -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yeah.

Yeah, let me respond, John.

My question to Phil, first, would be, you had mentioned all of those
commissions that made shifts in their dates.
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Did all of them also ask for a 20 percent additional increase in
their budget?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I don’t know.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, see, that’s part of my real worry, because

one of the reasons I think we argued, to a certain extent, that we wanted the
money, was to be able to bring on enough people to get the job done.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Or to do the --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

So they gave us the money, and now we’re pushing

the date -- or we’re asking to push the date back.
My assumption is, the letter will go to more than one member of
Congress and more than one member in each House.
Are we certain that the names that we place on that letter will all
be comfortable and say “Yes”?

Because if you get someone who says, “No.

You

know, we gave you the money and now you’re not going to go with the date,”
you’re going to get people -- all you need -- I will just tell you, I have a
little understanding of the culture -- all you need is one person to say, “No,
you have a statutory date, and you’d better meet it.”

No one else

will stand up and defend us on pushing the date back, I can assure you of that.
COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:

Well, Bill, with all due respect, it seems

to me that no one on the Hill would want us to put forth a document of poor
quality.

And so my assertion would be, we don’t necessarily ask for an
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extension.

We inform them that in order to produce a quality document, it’s

going to take an extra couple weeks.

So be it.

And if they want to make

political fodder out of that, so be that as well.
But I think our goal here -- at least my impression of our goal -is to create a quality report that we can all stand behind, independent of how
people on the Hill might react to the fact that we’re deferring the thing a
couple, three weeks.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
argument.

That -- I don’t have a problem with your

My point would be, I don’t know why we go on record and vote to

create a change of the date in our rules.
And, Phil, I know your argument on that.
I’m just saying, we can get closer to the due date; not talk about
the fact that we aren’t going to make the due date; and then, John, take your
argument when it’s closer, and say, “You know, it looks like we’re not going to
make it, and it’s going to be…” -- you know, I hope you can say nothing like,
“It will be by the end of the year or something.”

Because if you go past

January 3rd, you’re now delivering a product to an entirely different-looking
Congress than approved the statute that created us in the first place.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Phil?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

And I don’t know why we have to go on record as

a commission; and if we don’t go on record unanimously, that itself is going to
create additional problems for us.
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If you’re going to do this, I’m trying to get you to think about how
we minimize the ability to have people to make something out of this.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Well, this is Brooksley --

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Phil -- Phil, this is Keith.

Okay, and then Brooksley.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Brooksley.

Yes, Brooksley, please, go

ahead.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Well, I just have to say that I feel very

strongly that we need to complete the investigation appropriately, and we need
to document that investigation in our report appropriately.
And I’ve become convinced by what I’ve heard from Phil and the staff
and Bill, that we’re not there yet, and that we need the extra time in order to
do the kind of job that we owe to the public and to the Congress and to the
President.
I think we need to change our rules which currently seem to read
that we’ll provide our report on December 15; and I think we need to be open
and frank with Congress, with the President, and with the American people, that
the report should be expected in January, and that that’s necessary in order
for us to accomplish our mission.
So I would like to move -COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Well, let’s –- I mean you have one more
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person -CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, before the motion –-

COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.
Okay, why don’t we hold on the motion?

Keith?
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Yes.

Thanks, Phil.

I appreciate the point that people think we need more time to get
the work done.
I also appreciate, Phil, your point, about wanting to rip the press
Band-Aid of this off and just sort of be straight and direct about it, and say,
“Look, we need more time, it’s taking more time.”

But I think there’s a fatal

flaw in this option, which is that it requires us, as commissioners, to take an
explicit action.
As I understand it, it either violates the
inconsistent with the law.
really

law or is highly

And to me, that’s just a legal nicety; but I am

uncomfortable with the idea of voting to change the Commission’s rules

in a way that is inconsistent with the statute.
That problem would not exist if we were going to Capitol Hill and
saying, “Please change the statutory date,” because everything we would be
doing would be legal and above-board.

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And I appreciate that they don’t want to do that.

But what this

does is, this puts us, as commissioners, in a position where, because -background work done by the deadline and because we anticipate that Congress is
likely to say “No” when we ask them to change the law, that we would be taking
an action that, as best I can tell, is us deciding not to follow the law.

And

that causes me extreme discomfort, no matter how many times it’s been done
before.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right, does anyone else have a comment?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
jail?

Keith, what are they going to do, put us in

Come on.
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

That’s not the point.

The point is -- the point is not what are the consequences.

The

point is, I’m not going to -- I’m not going to make a decision that I know is a
violation of the law.
COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
MR. COHEN:

Gary, would you please comment?

Well, the statute -- you know, the statute says what it

says.
I’ve made inquiries.

There doesn’t appear to be any penalty, and

this is a fairly –- this is not an unusual event.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I’d just --

What, missing the deadline or sending a formal

notice that we voted as a group to violate the statute?
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MR. COHEN:

Missing a deadline.

I haven’t made an inquiry as to the

process.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, Bill -That’s my point.
But, Bill, can I -- can I say something?
[Unintelligible] -But at the National Medicare Commission, you guys

sent a letter a few days in advance saying, “We’re not going to make March 1st,”
which is the statutory deadline.

And you sent a letter prior to that, saying

that you intended to keep working because the issues were difficult and of
great importance.

It’s not -- this has been done before.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
commission.
solutions.

Yes, but let me tell you, since you quoted that

We had a supermajority that we had to reach.

We had to find

We had to come up with options.
That is not the case with us.

what happened.

We were simply to examine and report

It’s an entirely different situation.

If we had to come to a political agreement, in a stacked committee,
with a supermajority required to report back solutions to solve the Medicare
problem, no one would argue that we would take a few more days to do that.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I --

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COMMISSIONER MURREN:

If I could comment.

I personally think that

the level of difficulty associated with any Commission is in the eye of the
beholder.

And I’m not sure that it’s relevant, necessarily, to this

discussion.
I think what’s relevant to it is determining the legality of it, and
also the degree to which there is precedent.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Well, I -- this is Brooksley.

I know -- for

example, I don’t know what’s on Phil’s list; but I know from my own time as the
chair of a federal commission, that I tried to meet our deadlines, and
generally did.

But I remember that the SEC had a number of studies with

particular deadlines that they missed by as much as a year, and nothing was
ever said.
So I think it’s terribly important that we do our job well.

I’ve

become convinced that to do our job well, we won’t be able to get the report
published and to Congress and the President by December 15.

And, therefore, to

ensure that the investigation is appropriately completed and the report
documents it appropriately, I move that the Commission determine that it shall
deliver its report in January 2011 and that the Commission adopt the changes to
the rules proposed by the chairman as we have received under Agenda Item 7.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

And in terms of the ability to inform?
I further the Chair should be authorized to

inform the President and Congress of this action immediately and that the
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information be made public.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

There’s a motion on the floor.
Is there a second?
COMMISSIONER GRAHAM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Second.

Second.

The second was from Bob Graham.

All right.

I think we will -- Bill, any more discussion on this matter?
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, I have some discussion, Phil.

All right.

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

This is Peter.

And I worked to the deadline of December 15th.
as Keith does, the statutory requirement.

I take it seriously,

And I’m going to be prepared on

December 15 to release what I have written because I think that’s what we
originally agreed.
In addition, I’m influenced in this by the fact that you have also
proposed that a vote of the Commission could separate a dissenting or a
separate statement of some kind from the report of the Commission, and publish
it in different volumes.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

That’s a separate -– that’s a separate item, but
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you’re free to -COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

I understand it’s a separate item.

I

understand it’s a separate item, but I have to take that into account.
I am not sure that there will be a report at the rate things are
going.

We were first promised a draft in April.

the full report yet.

We don’t -- we haven’t seen

So I am not prepared at this moment to say that I will

not release what I have written on December 15th.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

But, of course, you would be subject to any

compliance with our confidentiality restrictions.
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

I will.

And, of course, if I am at that

point, I will have to say that there are certain things that are not in my
report because the Commission has refused to agree to allow them to be made
public.

But that’s a different question right now.

We’ll see what happens.

But I am not prepared to say, whatever the Commission votes now,
that that can overcome a statutory requirement and bind me.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

I’m going to leave -- I should probably leave this well enough
alone.
We still have distributed the drafts to all members; and comments on
the drafts are welcome, I might add.
We have not received them from any members who appear to be very
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anxious to meet the deadline.
All right, but I think we’ve said -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Phil?
Yeah.
Phil?
I mean, it’s a frustration, Bill.
Yeah, I know.
I mean, Bill, I think everyone’s worked here in

good faith; but also we’ve had no comments on drafts, we’ve had people unable
to make meetings.

So I don’t think this -- I think what we ought to try -- I

think we’re trying to lay out what we think is best for a good commission
result; and I respect also the views I’ve heard on the other end.

But I just

at least have to say that there’s been an honest effort here to try to move
this timely.

And so when someone says that we haven’t, the absence of

participation in the document doesn’t necessarily lend to moving it timely.

I

just had to say that for the record.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

That’s fine.

And for the record, when did we get the hard copy of the language
that you now have in front of us, which has been moved without, I consider, a
complete debate?

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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

If there’s more members who want to comment, let’s

hear it.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Usually, you make –-

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

The hard copy --

COMMISSIONER BORN:

-- a motion and then debate it.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

There’s been no discussion, to any real extent,

about the position that we’re going to formally take, that was moved when there
was still discussion available.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, let’s -So, Phil, if you want something for the record,

this looks to me like this was all prestructured, and everybody’s got a role to
play.

And if that’s the case, then, fine, go ahead with what you’re going to

do.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

No, if there’s any debate -Bill -- Bill, I made the motion on the

understanding, when I’ve participated in, for example, the American Bar
Association House of Delegates, we make motions and then we debate them.
That’s the way that procedure goes.
And I assume that my making the motion just framed the question to
be debated.

I’m not calling for a vote before all discussion has been

completed.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:
discussion?

All right, but having said that, is there more

Any comments by members?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Any --

Let me tell you that if we are going to vote on

this, Phil, in my opinion -- and I haven’t talked to other people about it, or
structured it in any way -- that there are a number of options that we can
take.

This can be taken at any time.
I don’t know the reaction on the Hill.

happen.

I don’t know what’s going to

It’s an entirely different environment than when we started, as you

well know.

And, now, we’re carrying it over to a new Congress, with new

chairmen, and a new party majority.

I don’t know what’s going to happen.

Why in the world would we pull the trigger right now, at this
telephonic meeting, when we have a month before that deadline occurs?

We know

what our timeline for working is, we know the difficulty that it’s going to be,
and we know we probably wouldn’t be able to do it.
Why do you telegraph it now?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I actually believe –The time that is appropriate --- I believe that’s to the benefit of Congress.

But, Bill, if there’s a -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I had no chance to make calls, really, because

this didn’t come up.
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When did we get the written copy as to what the specific was in Item
Number 7?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, yesterday.

last week different approaches.

And

You and I, though, discussed

I told you that I believe that what we

needed to do was extend it -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

But I never saw the preparation of the paper,

Phil; and I did not involve myself in that discussion, nor did you choose to
involve me in working with Gary to complete this piece of paper.
The piece of paper, which is your position, was shown to us
yesterday.

And we’re taking a formal vote to lock us in to not honor the

statute, to send off a letter to X number of members of Congress, who we don’t
know how they’re going to react.
I just don’t like doing this without having an understanding of what
the terrain is that you’re asking the troops to take.
That’s my position.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Thank you.

Go ahead -- Yes, the floor is open to all members.

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Bill -- Bill, let me ask you a question.

It’s Byron.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yeah.

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Yeah, Byron.

Would you -- would you -- if you were to

add -- make back-channel calls, would you support the continuance of the
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delivery of the report until January?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

My question would be, “What do you think of us,

Senator, about us formally changing the rules and then sending you a letter,
informing you of what we were going to do?”
COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Right.

But how realistic is that in light

of the lame-duck session?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

It’s actually going to happen, unless the

senator or the congressman or -woman react based upon what is an anticipated
action.
They might say, “Well, you know, do what you think you gotta do, but
how come you’re doing it formally now?”
COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Well, but I guess my question to you is, how

realistic do you think it is to modify a statute here in a lame-duck session,
where people are really not even around?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
to try to modify the statute.

I mean…

I would never, ever suggest to you that we ought
That’s an impossible thing to do, and it makes

us look even more removed from an understanding of –COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

-- how to

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
I misunderstood you.

Okay –[unintelligible].

I mean, I agree with you there; but I guess

I thought you -- somebody was suggesting that it would be
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appropriate to pursue the modification of the statute.
So assuming that that’s not realistic, or not practicable, then what
are you -– what -- what do you propose as a solution that might pull us all
together with regard, at least to this mod- -- relatively moderate procedural
determination of when we deliver this report?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

What would you suggest?

I guess in part, Byron,

I don’t think we can

undo the rung bell, because it’s in print, people know about it, it’s on the
schedule; and I guess we ought to just go ahead and vote.
But I’m telling you, the manner in which this -COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, whose --

-- has been exposed, is going to put this

Commission inundated with press calls.
COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

When, where --

I don’t know why we couldn’t wait at least until

that December 6 or 7 meeting to make the decision.

We would have got clear

past Thanksgiving without having this schism, which is clearly going to occur
in public of the Commission.
COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

When was this -- when did the press --

And it’s being forced here by a formal vote.

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:

Is the press -- you say the press has
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already got this so they’re writing about it?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I’m telling you, John McKinnon from The

Wall Street Journal already has a question in about, understands the Commission
is thinking about splitting its report between findings in December and a
report in January.

It’s not something I put on the table, and certainly I

haven’t talked to that reporter about.

So, I don’t know, it seems to me that

it’s already traveling out of these rooms.
COMMISSIONER MURREN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Phil, it’s Heather.

Yes, Heather?

COMMISSIONER MURREN:

For me -- perhaps not for everyone -- but the

essential question is really the fundamental as to what our charge is, which is
queued, in each one of us’ best opinion, do the best work we can, make sure
it’s thorough, it’s complete, and it’s articulated in a manner that’s
understandable to the American people.
And it is my feeling that having another few weeks would be
enormously beneficial in making sure that that outcome comes to pass and that
we have an excellent, thorough, comprehensive, high-quality report.
I can’t speak to the practical realities of it, I can’t speak to the
press, and I can’t speak to the politics of it.

But in my mind, all three of

those things are less relevant to this discussion than the report itself.
And I think, ultimately, I do think that if we had some more time,
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we could do much better work, even with, you know, a small amount of pushing
back of our deadline.

And I don’t think that we necessarily are pressured by

time.
And, you know, as I mentioned to you earlier, Phil, this isn’t
Apollo 13.

We’re not trying to bring people back from the moon.

is not the essential characteristic of what we’re doing.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I mean, time

That’s my opinion.

All right, thank you.

And I just want to say something, Members, as a point of personal
privilege.

This is not a position I like finding ourselves in, but given that

I share Heather’s view that the most essential thing is to make sure we can do
this well.

I am as anxious to get this done in a time frame expected of us;

and on a personal note, I know how much commitment of time everyone has put
into this.

And I know that the team is also anxious, even though we’re not

Apollo 13, to get the ship back home.
All right, is there any more discussion on this matter by anyone?
Because I want to make sure everyone has their say.
(No response)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

All right, I think we have a roll call.
I’m sorry, I wasn’t prepared for that one.

Phil Angelides?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes.
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MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Bill Thomas?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

No.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Brooksley Born?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Yes.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Byron Georgiou?

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes.

Keith Hennessey?

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

No.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Is that a “no”?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

We couldn’t hear you.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

I couldn’t hear you.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I’m sorry.

We couldn’t hear you, but we think we heard you.

No?
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, thank you.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No.

Hennessey.

No.

I’m sorry, it just didn’t come through, Keith.

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MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Bob Graham?

COMMISSIONER GRAHAM:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes.
John W. Thompson?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Heather Murren?

COMMISSIONER MURREN:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes.

Yes.
Peter Wallison?

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

No.

And Doug Holtz-Eakin, absent.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Are proxy votes permitted?

Doug gave me

his proxy.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I don’t believe they are under our rules.

But I

think we can note for the record in our minutes here, that -COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Okay, so please record “No,” it’s Doug by

proxy, if that’s permitted, or as -CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, not as a vote.

But we can certainly reflect

in the minutes, Keith -- and we will -- that you indicated that Mr. Holtz-Eakin
told you that he opposed it, all right?
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Correct.

Thank you.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Absolutely.

All right, let’s -- let’s move on to Item –(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I don’t know whose phone that is, but let’s try to

get through it, huh?
(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER BORN:

It’s not ours.

(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Huh?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

It’s not our phone.

(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Somebody is making a great deal of static.

(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Maybe put your cell phones on mute or something

like that.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Can someone who is working on a cell phone be on

mute just in case there’s wind or something?
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Star-six.

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(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Huh?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Star-six.

(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
It’s not me.

Phil, this is Keith.

It might be [unintelligible].

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

It might be what, Keith?

(Telephonic tone)
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Hello?

(Loud static noise)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE:

[Unintelligible.]

(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Hello?
I’m taking them all off, one at a time, to allow

them to speak.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MS. EDELBERG:

What are you doing?

She can mute everybody, and then --

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

I can mute everybody and then I can unmute them
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all.
MS. EDELBERG:

-- unmute -- can you unmute one by one?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes.
They can hear us -- they can hear us, right?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes, they should be able to.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Okay.

So they’re all on mute; and now we’re

going to -MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

And I’m -- we’re going one by one --

COMMISSIONER BORN:

-- put them back one at a time?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

I’m putting them on, so I can see which one it

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Okay.

is.
Have each one of them speak as you put it

on.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Hello?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Is anybody on?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yeah, they’re all on.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Can anyone speak?
Yeah, I’m on.

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UNIDENTIFIED MALE:

Okay, so it wasn’t you, Bill.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

It’s not you, Bill.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, I’m not on a cell phone.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Let’s move to --

Is everybody else back on so that they can talk?
Keith, are you still on?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

No.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

No?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Some of them dropped off on their own.

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
MR. COHEN:

I’m on.

Aha.

COMMISSIONER MURREN:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Heather’s on.
It’s John from -- what’s John’s connection?

John, what are you on?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:

I’m on a hard line.

(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER BORN:

He’s on a land line.

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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Is it his phone?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

[Unintelligible]

phone.

What?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:

I haven’t changed my location or anything

for the last hour and a half of the day.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

Well, let’s see if maybe it abates, out of luck.
Let’s move to the item, which is Item Number -COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

8.
-- Item Number 8, which is the additional or

dissenting views procedures.
Are there any -- and, Keith, are you on?
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I don’t think he’s dialed back in.
Okay, I want Keith on, because I understand he had

some issues or concerns on this matter.
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Can you call him, or…
Why don’t we -– why don’t we start the discussion,

though, right now?
(Telephonic tone)
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Keith?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No, that’s somebody dropping off.
Okay.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

That’s Bill dropping off.
Bill?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yeah?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Oh, maybe not.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No, Bill’s on.

Bill’s on.

Well, let’s start -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Was the action just taken?
Yes, Bill?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
MR. COHEN:

Gary?

Yes?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Would you give me the context in which the

Commission is now operating based upon the reports?
(Loud static noise)
MR. COHEN:

Excuse me?

(Telephonic tone)
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COMMISSIONER BORN:

Bill, we didn’t hear you.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

What is the structure

and operating procedure

of the Commission [unintelligible] —(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, we’re having a –- we’re having a –- we

can’t -- we’re getting -- we should -MS. EDELBERG:

Can you mute everyone but Bill?

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes.

(Loud static noise)
COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, we’re going to mute everybody -We’re going to mute everyone but Bill for a

minute, if you would all please stay with us.
Bill, go ahead.
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Hold -- give me one second, okay?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Because we can’t hear you, Bill –-

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

No, the question is –-

COMMISSIONER BORN:

-- because of the static.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

-- based upon the recorded vote just taken in

terms of the structure of the Commission, the actions of the Commission.
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Because we have a significant recorded split vote on a fundamental action of
the Commission.

And my assumption is, this is now the governing structure of

the Commission; is that correct?
MR. COHEN:

Well, this is an amendment to the rules of the

Commission, yes.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

So we have an amendment to the rules.

What if it is not found acceptable by the Congress or a member of
the Congress that we’re going to send the letter to?

Are they going to have to

vote to have a majority accepting it?
MR. COHEN:

I think we’re not asking for approval.

informing the Congress that the report will be delayed.
a request for permission.

We’re just

I don’t think there’s

I think it’s a notification.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

And what, therefore, is the rule and function of

the statutory date in the legislation that created the Commission?

Is that

null and void?
MR. COHEN:

No, I think that the statutory date is still the date.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MR. COHEN:

Yeah, we didn’t affect that.

We’re going --

We’re not -- we can’t change that.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

We’re going to miss the date -Is the commissioner in violation if they alter
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the statutory date?
MR. COHEN:

If they which the –- if they --

MS. EDELBERG:

[Unintelligible] is Peter in violation?

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No, I don’t think Peter’s in violation.

I don’t know that he can release documents on his own.
But -- I’m not an attorney, Bill; but, no, I don’t know that
someone’s in violation.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, we should know the consequences if we’ve

now taken a formal vote and some people were excited about doing it, so that we
have a clear understanding of what commissioners, who were on the losing side
of that vote, in a dilemma in which the Commission has now created a new date,
by vote, when we are still governed by a fixed date by statute.
Is the commissioner in violation of the Committee rules, and will
they be sanctioned if they follow the statute, notwithstanding the fact the
majority of the Commission chose to ignore it?
MR. COHEN:

It doesn’t appear to me that a single commissioner can

comply with the statute on his own.

It’s not the Commission’s report, Mr. Vice

Chairman.
The Commission is to deliver a report under the statute by
December 15th, not an individual commissioner.

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VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, then you’ve put a number of us in a real

dilemma about whether we can stay on the Commission.

I just want you to know

that.
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

I’m going to unmute all.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Okay.

So now Gretchen is unmuting the rest of

the people on the phone, so they can speak if they wish.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

So all the commissioners weren’t present when I

made those statements?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

No, they heard.
They were just muted so that we could hear you,

Bill.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

And they -Gotcha.

Gotcha.

Everyone heard it and –- and who is on the --

everyone heard it is on the phone; they just couldn’t comment because we were
trying to find the source of the static.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Gotcha.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

They’re all on now.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

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MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

For the ones who are still on.
All right, now, there is the next item, is Item 8

on “Separate and Additional Views.”

And this was a process which I, at the

last meeting and also in an e-mail to Keith, said I would bring forward.
And I guess we should just open discussion about this.
Keith, are you on?
COMMISSIONER MURREN:

May I ask a question?

We do not have materials on this particular number; is that correct?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes, you do.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Yes, you do.

COMMISSIONER MURREN:

Actually, you’re right.

I’m sorry.

I have

them in front of me.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Keith, are you on?
Maybe somebody should call Keith, since he

wanted to comment on this.
(Telephonic tone)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Keith?

Let’s do a new roll call quickly.
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Sure.
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Phil Angelides?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Here.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Bill Thomas?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Here.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Brooksley Born?

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Here.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Byron Georgiou?

COMMISSIONER GEORGIOU:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Here.

Bob Graham?

COMMISSIONER GRAHAM:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Here.
Keith Hennessey?

(No response)
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Doug Holtz-Eakin?

(No response)
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Both absent.

Heather Murren?
COMMISSIONER MURREN:

Here.

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MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

John W. Thompson?

COMMISSIONER THOMPSON:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Peter Wallison?

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Here.

Here.

Okay, so it’s just Keith and Doug.
All right, let’s talk about Item 8.

we can -- is Keith not rejoining us?
MS. MAYO:

Do we have any indication?

I called on my line.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I sure hope

No.

Because I know he had some comments and questions

about this.
COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well…
All right, are there comments and questions about

this item?
(Telephonic tone)
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, if no one else has any, I will --

Why don’t you -–
Who came on?
Well, who just came on?

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COMMISSIONER BORN:

Or did we lose someone?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Or maybe somebody left.

MS. KINNEY NEWSOM:

Sorry, I wasn’t watching.

I can’t tell.

I

wasn’t watching.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

If someone -- you e-mailed Keith and told him

specifically that -MR. COHEN:

I just sent him an e-mail.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- because I know he had issues on Item 8.

Peter, why don’t you start?
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
faith.

Well, I look at this as simply a breach of

Very serious, very –- and unacceptable to me.
But what it provides -- as you know, you’ve read it -- is that the

Commission can at any time decide that anything that is a dissenting statement
or a separate statement –(Telephonic tone)
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

-- or a different statement, can be placed

in a separate volume in the report that goes to Congress and the President.
In addition, in the commercial book, if there is one, any separate
statement is limited -- according to the proposal, at least -- to about 2,500
words.

So you know, I can’t even imagine why someone would do something like
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this.

It is -- it is something that goes way beyond anything I might have

expected to be put before us.

It changes completely the nature of this

Commission at the last minute.
If you told us this at the beginning, then we might have had a
completely different attitude toward the whole Commission.

But keeping this to

the end, a very -- a very partisan move to depress dissent is simply
unacceptable.
And the idea that the Commission can vote at some later time to
separate a separate statement or a dissent from the regular report, put it in a
different volume -- I mean, what you just did, this vote you just took is an
example of what’s going to happen to anyone who waits to the end, in good
faith, to supply a separate statement.
The answer will be, “No, you’ll be put in Volume 2.”

And it’s

unbelievable to me that you would do it.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right, so let me --

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Keith just joined.

Oh, good.

I’m glad you’re back, Keith.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Keith is here.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Thank you, Keith, because I know you had

Good.

concerns about this.
So, Peter, let me respond to your comments.
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First of all, with respect to this, the provision you’re referring
to about the separate volume was only a function not knowing the length of what
people were intending in the way of dissents, which apparently has been the
focus of the work, whether those were 100, 200, 400 pages; and whether,
physically, they had to be separated.

There’s no real desire to separate under

3.B.1 and 2 into separate volumes; but only if a physical determination was
made by the GPO that that would somehow be necessary in the production of the
report.
I have no idea, sitting here right now.
very actively working on a dissent.
100 pages, 400 pages.

Apparently, you’ve been

I don’t know if it’s 20 pages, 50 pages,

So that’s what that was.

That was mechanical.

That -- the intent is not to just plop those into a separate
document; but if it -(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- but if it was physically required --

(Loud static noise)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- required then -- if it was physically required

to separate into two volumes, that was that.
Secondly, in terms of the commercial publication, there is a limited
number of pages that have to be accommodated in that version.
And I might say that if we do not, apparently, you wouldn’t be
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joining -- you intend to have an additional or dissenting view.

But I should

indicate that at least the current thinking in terms of major findings of the
majority is -- you know, to be succinct, this was to -- basically, we have to
be within a -- there’s a -- within a page budget.
So with the commercial version -- there is no limitation on the Web,
no limitation in the official report; and it was only a reflection that the
commercial publisher needs a certainty in terms of the length of document,
period.

That’s all it is.
It’s not a partisan move, it’s not an attempt to quell dissent.

Everything goes on the Web.

Everything goes in the official report without

limitation.
And I might add, just because things are being said, if you look
back through a whole set of precedent of commissions, most of the commissions,
again, that I’ve looked at for precedent had extraordinarily limited size of
dissents.

They were all in the order -- you know, they tended to be on the

order of two or three pages; some, you know, did run up to -- I think the
congressional oversight panel had anywhere between six and 36 pages.

They were

on the upper end.
The decision here, in terms of our procedure, was not to limit in
any way, shape, or form, the amount that was placed on the Web or in the
official report.
If the objection is to a second volume, genuinely, folks, that was a
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mechanical issue.

You know, if the GPO can accommodate it all in one volume,

God bless.
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

Then why is the Commission supposed to be

voting on it?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MR. COHEN:

They don’t need to.

Somebody has to make the decision.

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, why is it in there?

Well, for the very reason if the GPO comes back

and says it’s impractical.
Now, I don’t know -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

[Unintelligible.]
Excuse me, sir?

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
GPO might do?

Phil, this is Keith [unintelligible].

Why are we -- why are we anticipating what the

Have we talked to them?

CHAIR ANGELIDES:
MR. COHEN:

Do we know that?

Gary?

Yeah, I have talked to them.

They can --

they can print a very fat book and, depending upon the size of the additional
views, it may or may not be an issue.
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The publisher, the commercial book, you know, we’re looking at a cap
of about 500 pages, I think; and the GPO -- or less.
800 pages, they’ve told me.

The GPO can print 700,

So, you know, if the additional views are not more

than a couple hundred pages, I think it’s one volume.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I mean, do you have any sense –-

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- any sense of length, gentlemen?

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Phil?

Yeah, Phil, this is Keith.

Yeah, Keith.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Can I offer what I think is a constructive

suggestion that can square the circle here?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Because what I’m hearing, I don’t think

that the goals are in conflict.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

And I take what

you’re saying at face

value in terms of your intent and yet your constraints from a publishing
standpoint.
Peter -- you know, Peter has told us that he’s working on an
additional view.

I have been working on an additional view.

I’m not sure what
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I’m going to do with it or if I’m going to do something with it.
But my suggestion is that we decide, as a commission, that anyone
who is considering submitting an additional view should commit themselves to
the Commission to a maximum word length.
So maybe Peter would say, “My additional view will not exceed” -- I
don’t know, I’m making this up -- “around 14,000 words.”
And I would say, “If I have an additional view, it will not exceed,
I don’t know, 9,000 words.”

Whatever -- whatever the numbers happen to be.

Then we take all of those numbers and add them up; and that’s a
commitment on the part of the person who is considering submitting an
additional view.

And then we add those words up and we go talk to GPO.

But

that we not change the rule to make the decision at the end of the process.

If

what you need is a fixed length budget, then let’s have everybody say, “My view
will be no longer than X,” and let’s see if we can actually fit those into a
fat volume.
I’ll tell you, as a Hill staffer, I remember that the Ways and Means
Committee, which Bill used to chair, had something called the Green Book, which
was probably three and a half to four inches thick.
So I’ve got to believe that there’s a way to allow Peter and me and
others to get in, you know, 10,000 words, 15,000 words, whatever it might
happen to be, and not get into publishing problems.

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But it seems to me we don’t change the rules other than to require
individual commissioners to commit, you know, fairly soon to a maximum word
budget.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, so I think with respect to the GPO, this was

not an issue.
And, I mean, I would just say right here and now, that if people
want to delete 3.B -- I don’t want to get ahead of everyone else here -- I
don’t have a problem with that.

I’m sure we can work it out with GPO, Keith,

all right?
I do think with a commercial publisher, we have a significant issue.
And I just want to put something on the table in terms of the views that the
majority would express if, in fact, we can’t come to some common denominator,
you know, which would be the actual official findings of the report.
We’re not looking at a hundred pages.
a pretty regimented budget.

So

We’re going to be subject to

I do think the commercial version, there has

to be -- there has to be a tighter limit than ones in the GPO.

It’s just a

fact.
COMMISSIONER BORN:

When you’re talking about findings, you’re not

talking about the kinds of narrative that we’ve been -CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

No, correct.
-- getting, which -Page 70 of 98

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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No.

Narrative or specific observations by the

Commission on that narrative.
But I assume that an additional view would be -- would be, “Here’s
what either I” -COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
for the commercial version.

Separate views.
Yes, separate views on the causes, yes.
Right.
But I do think we need a word budget, Keith, there
I just think that’s a fact.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Have we been told by the commercial

publisher -CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

And what is that maximum word length?

Wendy knows it.

down to about 480 pages -- correct?
MS. EDELBERG:

-- that there is a maximum word length?

I don’t know it.

But it comes

And they need to set that.

Right, so that the actual -- the actual number of

words will probably be dependent on, you know, specifics, like typesetting and
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font size.

But, yes, we are -- we are somewhere around 480 pages.
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

480 pages?

Okay.

Of which most -- of course, which most of it,

Keith, will be the narrative that is being circulated, for example, all right?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

If we choose it –-

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

If we choose it to be.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Right.

Right.

And what I’m asking here is –-

Correct.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

-- why -- why don’t we have to allocate, it

sounds like, 400-plus, or 420 or 430-plus of 480 pages to one view, even if
that is the view of six commissioners?

Why can’t we allocate, you know, a

significant share; or why can’t we go back to the commercial publisher and say,
“We’ll pay you more for a longer length”?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

It’s not a matter of paying more.

They’re just

saying, they just don’t -COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

They won’t do it.
They won’t do it, and…

Well, but it’s also not something that they believe that the public
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will in any way take up, period.

That’s in their lengthy experience.

And, by the way, I wouldn’t -– I wouldn’t say -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Wait a minute, wait a minute.

I’ve –- I’ve let a lot of stuff go here; but, Phil, for you to tell
me that the publisher is going to not tell us it’s 480 pages, but they’re also
going to tell us what is going to sell and not going to sell,

and they’ve

told you that dissents don’t sell and you have -CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No, they didn’t say -- no, they never said -- I

never said -- they didn’t say dissents didn’t sell.

I just talked about a

length of the volume, Bill.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Let me finish.

Let me finish.

Well, but…
Let me finish.

You have specified a fixed number of words for dissents.

I think it

equals somewhere, roughly, five pages.
You have 480 pages to spend.

You have told four members who might

be interested in a dissent, they get 20 pages.

You have 460 pages for the

majority.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, I don’t agree with your char- -It seems to me you are creating a fundamental
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schism here by talking about

having to deal with a publisher.

And I heard

some very strong language about what this Commission should be committed to do
in terms of doing a good job; and yet you’re willing to submit for another
recorded vote the fact that a member who wishes to dissent gets five pages, and
everybody else in the majority gets 480 pages to do their -- 460 pages to do
their thing.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

So, Bill, let me just -- I need to say this.

So your characterization is, the narrative that the staff is -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

[Unintelligible] -Now, let me just say --- the publisher –Now, let me just -–
-- the publisher as an excuse -No, Bill.
-- for limiting dissents.
No, Bill, I’m not -We can make it 400 pages and 80 for dissents.

We can make the story of 300 pages and 180 pages for dissent.

That’s a

decision the Commission can make.

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You’re making it through the back door on limiting the dissent.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

No, Bill, now, let me just say something here.

So

you’re saying that the three- to four-hundred-page narrative that the staff is
preparing of the results of the examination are, in fact, quote, unquote, “our
view.”
You and I sat in my office, where I said, “What do you think the
length is going to be of the additional or dissenting views?”

And you thought

they might be -- and this is my recollection -- in the 10- to 15- to 20-page
period.
We are looking -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I was not -Hold on.
Phil, if you’re going

to -- if you’re going

to put words in my mouth, I was not speaking for Peter.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, that’s fine.

But you are characterizing the

body of the report that we will adopt as fully our views.

In other words,

you’re saying that the Commission investigation and narrative –VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I didn’t say that.
-- is all our 480 pages.

just -- it’s -- that’s ludicrous.

It’s

We’re not taking all 400 pages to lay out

our views.
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We may take -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
the majority for their view?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Then what is the number of pages available to
That isn’t in here.
Because --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

You have dissents limited to a number of pages.

You don’t have the majority findings and conclusions to a limited number of
pages.

You have 460 pages available to you the way that language is

structured.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

And so you think we’re going to take 460 pages

just to lay out our -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
You haven’t talked to me.

I don’t know what you

are going to do, Phil.

I only saw this language for a day.

But it limits a

five-page –CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

But, Bill –-- dissent, and it does not limit the majority

to their conclusion or advocated policy position.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, first –That’s the story and the majority and the

minority.
You’ve limited the minority, very clearly, to virtually nothing.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, first of all --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

[Unintelligible] the majority.
First of all, there is a report, and then there

are additional and dissenting views.
Anyone else want to comment?
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Well, let me just say this.

It’s hard to have

this discussion without any kind of picture of what the dissenting views’
length are.

We –- it seems --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Or the majority’s view.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Well, everybody has been seeing the report

coming out.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Everything is shared every day.
You know, and we’re all asking you to comment.

I understand that you haven’t been commenting.
haven’t been commenting.

I’m sorry you

I urge you to --

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Bill has -- Bill has -- Bill has been.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

-- do so.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

No, no --

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Bill has been.
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COMMISSIONER BORN:

But --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

-- wait a minute.

Are you telling me that the

story is the majority’s findings and conclusions?
COMMISSIONER BORN:

I am sure there will be additional findings and

conclusions that will accompany the narrative.
But let me just say this:

We are saying that everything will be on

the Web site, without any restrictions.

So if the minority wants to write a

thousand-page document, that can be on the Web site.
We’re also saying that the dissenting views can be in the GPO
report, whether or not GPO will come and say, “We can’t put everything in a
single volume,”

I don’t know.

But let’s just leave it up to GPO to decide how

they can do that.
All the dissenting views will be there.
The question is, now, how long the dissenting views, included with
the Commission’s report, in the commercial book could be.

And it’s very hard.

I mean, Phil has come up with 2,250 words, five typeset pages.

If

we knew that what people wanted was seven pages or ten pages, you know, we
could certainly consider that.

But without any information from your side as

to what the interest in terms of length is for inclusion in the commercial
book, I don’t see how we can just say whatever you want.

You know, you can

overwhelm the whole book.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes, and, Bill, it was put in –-

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, so I have --- brackets because I do think --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

The question -- the question is, how many pages

are the minority going to be available to present the majority’s point of view?
If you’re telling me that this story is going to be socked full of
the majority’s position, that isn’t my understanding of how we were going to
write the body of the story, and that the chairman offered findings and
conclusions which clearly appeared to be separate from the story.
So if we’re not going to have majority’s views, minority’s views,
and a story, but we’re going to have 20 pages of minority dissent, and
460 pages of the majority’s position available to you, you won’t limit the
majority’s position here.

Why don’t we put down a number of pages that you get

as the majority, and the rest has to be fairly objective story-telling?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

So, Bill -You’re letting the argument of the publisher in

writing a book control the voice -- the ability to speak, to present a position
to the minority on this commission.
I find it ironic that the publisher is going to be the one who
limits our ability to express ourselves, and you are unwilling to limit your
ability to express yourself.
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That is not called a “majority.”

Minorities have rights.

You are

assigning a fixed number; and by vote, you are opening yourself up to whatever
you want to do for the rest of the pages.
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Bill, what about my suggestion to ask

people for word budgets for the -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I don’t have a problem –-

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

-- actual report that [unintelligible].

-- with that.

But I think it should be open to

everybody, including the majority on a word budget.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, except the one thing I want –-

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I agree.

Okay, the one thing I want to say, though, on the

report itself is, the report itself is the report itself, which we will all
consider as a commission.
Within that report, for example, I have heard members of both sides
here say that, for example, when you get -- here’s an example -- that the
decision to save Bear, not save Lehman, was problematic.

I have heard people

say that, with respect to the -- what happened with Lehman was, it may not just
have been on the basis of legal authority.
Those may -- those kinds of items may well be in the body, the
chapters of the report.
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We are not –- I’ll just tell you right now, there’s no way that -- I
don’t know what Peter’s length is.

I don’t think the majority, in terms of

major findings and conclusions that would go at, for example, the front of this
book, I don’t think anyone here is contemplating a hundred pages.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Okay, are you limiting yourself to a hundred

pages?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Let me -- for what, Bill?

For findings and

conclusions?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

These findings and conclusions.

If the minority is 20 pages, how about we take a hundred pages, and
we make it 60-40?

You get 60, we get 40?

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right, I –- I hear what you’re saying.

The goal here -- first of all, let me just start at the beginning
here.

Remember how this all starts, which is that unlike a lot of other

commissions, the deliberate effort here was not to limit in any way on the Web
and GPO version what could be done or said, or to truncate anything of anyone
who had an additional or dissenting view.
We do have a legitimate page budget to meet in a commercial
publication; and so we are trying to do this in a way that I thought was fair
and reflective of what at least, Bill -- and I’m not putting words in your
mouth -- I had understood.

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VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Are you getting the feeling that maybe that’s

not the case since we just had one day to see this?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, you and I have talked about this previously

on a number of occasions.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

But not –- not in a formal, structured way,

Phil.
Come on, quit acting like I knew anything that was coming out over
the last few days.

And do you think I would have allowed something that said

that you get 2,500 words, and each of you get that, and we get the entire rest
of it because the publisher -- and I don’t know that the publisher said no.
I think you’ve created a structure here, and we’re telling you that
it’s way too confining.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, first of all, let

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
reconvene.

[Unintelligible] --

Okay, maybe we should break on this issue and

But also, I think there is some –VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

heard.

me --

[Unintelligible] --

Look, we want to make sure dissenting views are

But I do want to say, the report is the report.

It’s not like there’s

two reports here.

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There is a report.

There is a report that goes to Congress, adopted

by a majority of the Commission.

That’s just the way it is.

And this was not

set up to say there’s going to be a majority and a minority report.
I think what Keith’s suggestion is, if people want to file
additional dissenting views -- and, you know, it seems to me that a lot of the
focus has been on just that for the recent past -- then people ought to say,
“Then here’s the budget we need,” and we can -- let’s see if that can be
accommodated.
But I don’t think we want to get into discussion about if we have a
report now, beginning to constrain what the report says.

But if people have

legitimate budgets that they’re considering right now, then we ought to be able
to consider those legitimate budgets.
We may be arguing if -- you know, if Keith is saying, “I’m thinking
about 7,000 words,” you know -- or, I don’t know, I’m just being
hypothetical -- and

I don’t know if you, Bill, Keith, and if you guys are

thinking of a joint dissent, if there’s a budget for it, then I think what’s
important to do is say, “Here’s what we think we need to express our view.”
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

So what we --

So putting on a piece of paper with a fixed

number of words for the minority and no limit to the majority?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, there’s no limit on the report, Bill.

There’s no limit on the report.
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COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Yeah, but, Bill, as long as –- as long as I

have enough words to say my additional view, I don’t care how much is left for
everybody else.
And I’m willing to -- if Phil wants to set a date, by Friday or
Monday of next week, I’m willing to give a commitment that I can live with no
more than
one.

X words for, you know, for my additional view, if I were to have

I don’t know if Peter is willing to do that.
But then couldn’t we have this discussion from a more concrete

standpoint?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, I think -- I think concrete --

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

[Unintelligible] you and I have enough

words.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

And I apologize that Doug could not make it

because I’m sure he has a view on this.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, but I would say that

I think Keith’s

suggestion merits something.
But even if, you know, the view from Peter would be, “Look” –- and
I’m not -– “I want 200 pages,” that can be accommodated in the GPO version and
on the Web.

There’s no stifling of dissent in any form.

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Let me -But, Phil, why –- why preclude from that
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from the commercial report until we’ve seen what those numbers actually are?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Let’s see what the numbers are.

Exactly.

But I

also think -COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

No, I’m not -- this is not -- this is not

satisfactory to me because, as I said when I started out, there was a breach of
trust here in this proposal.
And I don’t believe -- I’m not -- I cannot believe anymore that
whatever number I provide will be agreed to, abided by, when the Commission
comes to vote on what gets into the report as a separate statement and what
does not.

Because I just saw the Commission change the statutory requirement

that we report by the middle of December, to something else.

Sometime in

January.
And so when we get to January, and maybe there is a report, and I
submit something, and I’m supposed to have a certain number of words, well,
actually, it turns out, we’re not going to have that many words allowed in any
report, and the Commission will vote.
will be 9 to 1.

And it will probably be 6 to 4, maybe it

But there will be a vote, and whatever I submit will -- could

be excluded.
So it is no longer possible to agree, to me, from my point -- to
agree that we’ll all submit some words -- word numbers, and that will be
sufficient for the commercial report, or any other element of what the
Commission is doing.
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I think a very serious error was made in putting out this Item 8.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

So you -- Peter, I just need to ask you; so you

think if there’s a commission report of 200 pages, what would be sensible is a
single member could submit 300, and that would be what would be fully published
in the commercial part?

You think that that’s a reasonable approach?

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Five pages.

We’re talking five pages, not a

hundred.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, I -Well, that’s the question, isn’t it, Bill?
I don’t know that it’s not a hundred, Bill.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Peter says he won’t give us a number.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

[Unintelligible] we make a decision.

What’s

wrong with that?
COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

At the time that the report comes --

whatever we say tonight –- you’ve just asked me to give you a number.

And if I

gave you a number and then I came in at that number, nevertheless, at that
moment, when the report is to be decided what goes into the report, this
Commission, as I now see, can vote 6 to 4, or 9 to 1, that that’s too –- that
that is too large.
Yes, I know we agreed at the beginning that you could submit
whatever number you wanted; but it’s really too large.

Because we did agree at
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the beginning of this Commission that anyone could file a dissent; and we did
not add any restriction on the size of that dissent.
And saying it is going to go on the Web or saying it is going to –it will be -- there will be photographs of it, or whatever you want to do -there will be a puppet show -- I don’t think any of that means anything.
Whatever a commissioner submits, which is intended to modify in some
way or express disagreement with what the main report says, should be,
according to our original rules, accepted.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, we are accepting it on the Web and the GPO

version.
And I’d like -- I’m just -MR. COHEN:

That’s what goes to Congress.

CHAIR ANGELIDES:

What goes to the President and Congress and the

Web is being fully accepted.
And I -- I mean, the only thing, Peter -- and I think we should draw
this to a close.

You have made it clear you’re not even commenting on the

report.
So with respect to talking about participation on this Commission,
you have made it clear for months now that you’re not even commenting on the
draft.

So your whole focus has been –COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

That’s false.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- the dissent.

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

That –- that is false.

I did make a statement in the last meeting we had about why I am not
commenting on the fact statement that had been distributed.
I have not said anything about what I will do with other parts of
the report, and I have not yet seen anything that describes what caused the
financial crisis.
So merely making statements of fact about what happened with Merrill
Lynch and what happened with AIG and so forth is all very nice.
actually, that I thought it was rather well-written.

And I said,

But it’s irrelevant to

what the Commission is supposed to be doing, which is to tell Congress and the
President what caused the financial crisis.
When that comes along, I well could have some comments on that.

Not

that I expect that they will be accepted, because none of my other suggestions
so far have been accepted; but I do believe that that would be the appropriate
time to make the comment.
So don’t say I haven’t participated.

I’ve been at every meeting of

this Commission -- mostly present at these meetings -CHAIR ANGELIDES:

I agree.

COMMISSIONER WALLISON:

-- and always by phone if not present.

So I

have participated, and I’ve been at every hearing.
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Don’t start with me that I have not participated and been a
participating commissioner, because it is not true.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

All right, now, I think -- but I want

to hear from other members -- that Keith’s suggestion, even though Peter, I
know, doesn’t agree with it, as to a -- kind of what the need is, is a good
place to start, so that maybe this discussion doesn’t need to be hypothetical,
it can be real.
So, Bill, to the extent that that’s something that at least Keith,
Doug, and you want to be able to say, “Here’s what we think we need,” that
would be very helpful.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, it would, but you’re probably going to

need more than a day or a half a day.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yeah, that’s fine.
And I guess part of the problem is, we have in

front of us -- I don’t think it’s been moved yet -- but I thought the story was
that you always move something so you have something to discuss.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, it hasn’t been moved because it’s been

discussed -VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

No.

No, but we were just told earlier that you

-- that someone moved it so that we would have something to discuss.

That’s

what the attorneys’ division always did.

We’ve

But we haven’t moved this.

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had -CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Right.
-- a very good discussion.

But there’s nothing

locking us in.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yes, so we -I was just trying to -We should --- [unintelligible] why Item Number 8 is being

handled differently than Number 7?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well --

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

That’s my first question.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

Because I wanted to move Number 7, Bill; and,

therefore, I did it.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

Okay.
I’m glad we adopted it.

I wanted to move it,

and I did move it.
I think we’re still groping for the appropriate solutions on
Number 8; and I think Keith’s suggestion that at least he is willing to propose
what length is appropriate for his separate views is a real step forward; and I
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applaud that.

I think I would welcome that; and I think we should postpone

action and continue to discuss this based on –VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I agree.

COMMISSIONER BORN:

-- new information.

VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I think we should take down Number 8.

Let

people at least begin to try to put down on paper what they would like to
have -CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Yup.
-- and then we can see if we can reconcile it,

instead of someone arbitrarily assigning a number of words for someone who has
been on the Commission, who has participated in the Commission, and is told
they get five pages.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Bill, it was in -I don’t think that is a -Bill --- democratic way to determine how we -Bill, Bill, Bill.

Just in fairness, it was in

brackets so we could have a discussion.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

-- will submit some idea of what they think

their length ought to be.
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CHAIR ANGELIDES:

All right.

Anyone -- okay, I think we should continue this item, or postpone
this item.
Yes?
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Phil?

Phil?

This is Keith.

Could I try to –- again, I’m trying to be constructive here.

If I

could summarize what I think I’ve heard, which is, I think that there is no
disagreement that any additional dissenting views of

any length will go both

on the Web and will go in the GPO report, which is the official document that
goes to the President and Congress.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Correct.

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

And that the official report, produced by

GPO, which goes to the President and Congress, will be a single volume, not
multiple volumes.
And then what we’re discussing here is limited to the commercial
report.
And I have a suggestion on the table, which it sounds to me like, at
least so far, everyone except Peter may be comfortable with.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Well, and --

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Is that an accurate statement of where we
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are?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, I think so.

Yeah, and -- I believe so, yes.

And, obviously, the next step would be to say, “What do these –what do these kind of word budgets look like,” and then we can sit down and
talk directly and see if we can’t work this out -COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

-- because --

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

And I will produce one of those –-

-- for my own possible additional view.

-- because I will just say that I do think we’re

going to have differing views; and I think it’s important that differing views
be reflected and accorded respect, period.
And we have not done what other commissions have done, which is
strictly limit to a thousand words or whatever.

We haven’t done it.

We’re

just trying to make it work.
So I think -- how long do you think -- Keith, Bill, Doug -- Peter, I
understand your position -- do you guys want to mull this around for?
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

I don’t know, I have to get -- Scott will have

to get ahold of Doug and see if he has a number.

But I would think it should

be just a few days.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Okay, fine.

Take what you need and we’ll talk.
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VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Great.

(Telephonic tone)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
Bill.

And we’ll have a more formal discussion about it,

And if we need to include a couple of other members in it, beyond you

and me, to hammer it home, let’s do that.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

All right?

Well, I think we should include as many people

as we can, because we’ve driven a pretty big wedge here, and I’d kind of like
to keep it open.
And might I suggest that we withdraw Number 8, and it doesn’t come
back in any form?

Number 8 doesn’t exist -- in the structure that’s been

offered doesn’t exist, so that we don’t use that as the basis for voting next
time?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, it’s okay.

We will withdraw it -- even

though I don’t -- I just want to say, I didn’t think I didn’t hear objection to
a lot of the other mechanical stuff that was in here.
VICE CHAIR THOMAS:

Well, it’s easy to put in if there’s agreement

later.
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yeah, I mean, I would like to hear from members,

if there’s any other objection -- I think it would be very helpful, apart from
this issue, of any of the other mechanical provisions about timing are an
issue; all right?
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Keith, I haven’t heard –- huh?
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Fine for me, yeah.

All right, fine.

So let’s just do that.

And we will -(Telephonic tone)
CHAIR ANGELIDES:
COMMISSIONER BORN:

I think we’re losing people.

So let’s do this --

Wasn’t there going to be some discussion about

dates for meetings?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Yes, I did want to say that I think we should

point to December 6th and 7th to hold on people’s calendars for a review of the
report.

And

I think we should hold December 15th and 16th as days for review of

the report based on my best understanding -COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Phil?

Hello?

COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:

Phil, will you -- Phil, will you tell us

soon when, in advance of the December 6-7 meeting, we can anticipate a complete
draft to be able to review?
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

This is Ms. -- this is Ms. Edelberg’s -- the

goal -- I mean, I know is -- I mean, I would hope that it would be to everyone
a week in advance; and it may miss -- it may miss small pieces of it.

But I
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would hope a week in advance.
But it’s going to continue -- all of Section 3 should be to you,
Keith.
Section 1 should be to you by this weekend and -- yeah.

And,

obviously, if Keith -- we’re holding those dates, but we won’t -- we’ll make
sure that the document is available in advance of those meetings.
I mean, one thought is if 80 percent of it’s available or
90 percent, we have the ability to discuss and comment on that.
COMMISSIONER HENNESSEY:
CHAIR ANGELIDES:

Thank you.

I will have Wendy give you her best schedule.

Well, I’ll have you give your best schedule of when they can expect
pieces.
All right, Wendy?
and meet them.

You need to do that.

And let’s make them real

All right?

(End of requested partial transcription.)

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 4 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Chairman and Vice Chairman’s Report
See Separate PDF for materials

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Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Agenda Item 6 for FCIC Meeting of December 6, 2010
Procedures re: Dissents and Additional Views

See Separate Word Document for Redlined Material

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