Bailout Docs Still Redacted
In October, we noted that the U.S. Treasury Department had blacked out key details of contracts it awarded as part of its $700 billion taxpayer-funded bailout plan.
Treasury officials said it would be only a matter of weeks before they shared the information.
Since it’s been a month, we got to wondering whether Treasury officials have followed through and removed the redactions. Turns out, they haven’t.
Treasury still won’t reveal how much it’s paying Bank of New York Mellon to keep the books for the government’s purchase of toxic securities. In the publicly released copy of the contract, compensation figures for the bank, described by the government as the “prime contractor,” are just as blacked out as they were a month ago.
Asked when the information will be released, Treasury spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli declined to provide a timeline.
Zuccarelli explained that the department does not want to reveal the financial terms of the three-year deal while other contracts related to the bailout are being negotiated. “We don’t want to put ourselves at a competitive disadvantage,” she said.
The department, for instance, is still looking to hire equity asset managers for the plan and accepted applications for the job until today. “We intend to make it public” once the asset managers are hired, Zuccarelli said.
But Zuccarelli conceded that the responsibility of an asset manager is remarkably different from that of Bank of New York Mellon, which will be the custodian of the bailout plan. So it remains unclear how the publication of one contract might affect the other. And the Treasury has released the terms of other contracts it has awarded as part of the plan.
The Treasury’s explanation “doesn’t hold water,” said Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists.
“It’s disappointing that they failed to grasp the urgent public interest in the release of this information,” he said.
Aftergood also warned that the Treasury’s withholding of contract details could set a precedent for future transparency (or lack thereof) in the bailout plan. “They’re just testing what the system will tolerate,” he said.
The government released the redacted Bank of New York Mellon contract one day after a Treasury Department official touted the bailout plan’s transparency.
“Consistent with Congress’ intent, we are committed to transparency and oversight in all aspects of the program,” said Neel Kashkari, the Treasury’s interim assistant secretary for financial stability.
Meanwhile, the Bank of New York Mellon is not the only contractor to have its compensation redacted. BailoutSleuth, a site created by Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, has been flagging more examples, including contracts with accounting giants Ernst & Young and PricewaterhouseCoopers. But unlike its handling of the Bank of New York Mellon contract, the Treasury Department announced that the first phase of the accounting contracts will be worth $492.006.95 and $191,469.27, respectively.
Get Updates
Our Hottest Stories
- The 182 Percent Loan: How Installment Lenders Put Borrowers in a World of Hurt
- IRS Office That Targeted Tea Party Also Disclosed Confidential Docs From Conservative Groups
- Six Facts Lost in the IRS Scandal
- Medicare Drug Program Fails to Monitor Prescribers, Putting Seniors and Disabled at Risk
- Sound, Fury and the IRS Mess
- On Victory Drive, Soldiers Defeated by Debt
- A Prosecutor, a Wrongful Conviction and a Question of Justice
- The Most Important #Muckreads on Rape in the Military
- A Prolonged Stay: The Reasons Behind the Slow Pace of Executions
- Congressmen to Hagel: Where Are the Missing War Records?
- IRS Office That Targeted Tea Party Also Disclosed Confidential Docs From Conservative Groups
- Six Facts Lost in the IRS Scandal
- The 182 Percent Loan: How Installment Lenders Put Borrowers in a World of Hurt
- How the IRS’s Nonprofit Division Got So Dysfunctional
- On Victory Drive, Soldiers Defeated by Debt
- Sound, Fury and the IRS Mess
- Medicare Drug Program Fails to Monitor Prescribers, Putting Seniors and Disabled at Risk
- Congressmen to Hagel: Where Are the Missing War Records?
- The Most Important #Muckreads on Rape in the Military
- A Prolonged Stay: The Reasons Behind the Slow Pace of Executions







2 comments
Mehul Asher
Nov. 14, 2008, 12:17 a.m.
When you click read more, it gives you a 404 error. Don’t know if there is more?
Rick Blum
Nov. 14, 2008, 10:07 a.m.
Under the Freedom of Information Act statute, Treasury is required to state the specific exemption used to justify the redaction. I don’t see that in this contract.
This requirement was signed into law by Pres. Bush on Dec. 31, 2007 and took effect immediately. The Justice Department has already provided guidance on how this can be accomplished. (it’s pretty straightforward, and helps make sure that all redactions are appropriate).
Commenting on this story is closed.