Jesse Eisinger
National Fellow, 2016
The only United States bank indicted for mortgage fraud related to the 2008 financial crisis is the one you鈥檝e never heard of.听
Charged with securities fraud, mortgage fraud, and conspiracy, Chinatown鈥檚 Abacus Federal Savings Bank 鈥 the country’s 2,531st largest bank and a cornerstone of the Chinese immigrant community 鈥 became the only bank in the U.S. to face criminal charges in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Part legal thriller, part underdog saga,听, a film from director听Steve James听(Hoop Dreams, Life, Itself),听tells the incredible tale of the Sung family and their five-year, ten-million-dollar legal battle to defend themselves and their bank鈥檚 legacy.听
Thomas Sung, a prominent lawyer and real estate developer, opened the Abacus听bank in 1984 to provide the small housing and business loans that Chinatown鈥檚 residents and business owners were routinely denied. The small, fiscally conservative bank weathered the 2008 worldwide economic meltdown, but at the same time large, global banking institutions were deemed 鈥渢oo-big-to-fail鈥 and given bailouts, Abacus saw its employees marched out of the bank in chains for the evening news.
On September 7,听国产视频 NYC presented a screening of听Abacus: Small Enough to Jail,听followed by a conversation with the film鈥檚 director, the Sung family, and legal experts on the unequal application of corporate justice in America and what 鈥 if anything 鈥 is being done to correct it.
Steve James听
Director,听Abacus: Small Enough to Jail
Thomas Sung
Founder & Chairman, Abacus Federal Savings Bank
Jill Sung
President & CEO, Abacus Federal Savings Bank
Jesse Eisinger听
Senior Reporter, ProPublica听
Fellow, 国产视频
Author,听The Chickenshit Club: Why the Justice Department Fails to Prosecute Executives
Sheelah Kolhatkar听
Staff writer, The听New Yorker
Author,听Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street