But eight years after it was established, the Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program or SIGTARP, has grown frustrated. While it has succeeded in prosecuting senior executives of mid- to small-sized banks for various misdeeds, it has failed to do the same to the CEOs of large Wall Street firms.

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Those executives, according to the agency, are insulated by a Wall Street culture that keeps its leaders in the dark about potential fraud. Congress should pass legislation to prevent that from happening in the future, said Christy Goldsmith Romero, special inspector general with the Troubled Asset Relief Program, who investigates crime at companies that received taxpayer bailout funds.

The proposal “is the response to our years of finding it difficult to bring accountability to some of these bank

leaders,” Goldsmith Romero said in the interview. “Corporate culture should not allow crime and fraud to go unchecked.”

The measure would be modeled after 2002’s Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which requires corporate executives to certify the accuracy of company financial statements. CEOs and other senior executives also should be required to certify every year that they have conducted “due diligence” and that there is no criminal conduct or civil fraud in their organization. By requiring the executive to take steps to verify that the statement is true, it would give law enforcement a path to hold them accountable, the inspector general’s office said in its recommendation to Congress.

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“If a CEO says that their institution is too big or too complex to be able to certify about crime or fraud, then they have a much bigger problem – one that should be unacceptable, particularly at banks deemed so systemic that taxpayers bailed them out,” the inspector general’s office said in its quarterly report to Congress.

The measure would be a positive step that could empower law enforcement and force CEOs to become more diligent, said Jordan Thomas, a partner at Labaton Sucharow and a former Justice Department trial lawyer. “It is hard for a company to argue this is going to be something they shouldn’t be doing anyway,” he said. The question, he said, is whether lawmakers could craft a strong certification requirement that both eliminated potential loopholes for irresponsible CEOs that was also considered legally reasonable. “She is moving the ball in the right direction,” said Thomas.

The proposal comes as populist anger at Wall Street has become a rallying cry during the presidential election campaign. Last year, the Justice Department unveiled a new policy that would prioritize cases against individual company executives, not just corporations. But critics say enough still isn’t being done.

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Even after Wells Fargo acknowledged it had fired 5,300 employees over five years for setting up unauthorized accounts customers didn’t want, Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill both questioned why the bank was fined, but its’ executives were not prosecuted. “Why shouldn’t you be in jail?” Rep. Michael E. Capuano (D-Mass.) asked then-Wells Fargo CEO, John Stumpf, during a House committee hearing last month.

Leading the current effort is a small law enforcement agency with powers similar to the FBI. SIGTARP agents can make arrests and conduct searches. While it was established to police TARP bailouts, it also has the power to investigate any financial crime at a company that took taxpayer money.

It is also the watchdog for the $40 billion in bailout funds still being doled out to large financial institutions to help distressed homeowners. But it appears SIGTARP has also found new frustrations there.

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In its quarterly report to Congress, the inspector general’s office questioned whether banks such as Wells Fargo and Bank of America should continue to have access to a government foreclosure prevention program. The banks and other mortgage servicers have repeatedly broken the rules that govern the Home Affordable Modification Program, known as HAMP, according to the report.

HAMP was the Obama administration’s largest effort, by far, to help struggling homeowners after the 2008 financial crisis. So far, it has fallen far short of helping the number of homeowners hoped and, the inspector general’s office argued, the banks that participate in the program have repeatedly improperly broken the rules. Some have improperly either denied homeowners access to the program or wrongfully terminated them.

Of the $28 billion in taxpayer money allocated for the program, only $15 billion has spent so far. The rest will be doled out over the next seven years.