The U.S.-led investigation of top FIFA officials is commendable for its decisive action to punish blatant corruption. But it should also disgust. Far worse crimes occur every day in the financial sector, but the Department of Justice, while obviously aware of them, has done too little. FIFA doesn’t come close to Wall Street in terms of havoc wreaked upon the public.

Yes, 1,200 workers have died on the job building structures for FIFA to use during Qatar’s 2022 World Cup, and 4,000 will likely die by the time the first game is played. [Editor's note: The Washington Post and the Guardian report that 1,200 is the number for total migrant worker deaths in Qatar since the 2022 World Cup announcement in 2010, rather than for the number of fatalities among those directly involved in World Cup-related construction.] That’s an alarming number and a tragic loss of life. But Wall Street’s greed-driven destruction of the global financial system in 2008 led to at least 10,000 additional suicides across 54 countries from 2008 to 2010 — more than twice the number of actual and projected worker deaths in Qatar, in a fraction of the time.

FIFA’s bribery and corruption are certainly significant to soccer fans, and the harsh treatment of workers building their stadiums is deadly to those workers and their families. But the financial crisis affected every single person alive. Millions of people lost homes, their savings and their jobs and drowned in debt. Thousands of people around the world committed suicide at abnormal rates in the years following the financial crisis. Bankers did not murder these people. But their drastic actions were a direct result of financiers’ reckless behavior on the market. And sadly, America’s newest top lawyer is one of Wall Street’s most loyal allies.

The U.S. government’s investigation of football’s international governing body is focused largely on financial crimes of racketeering, bribery, money laundering and fraud, making it all the more hypocritical. In the Justice Department’s official indictment, nine football officials and five corporate executives from around the world “are alleged to have systematically paid and agreed to pay well over $150 million in bribes and kickbacks to obtain lucrative media and marketing rights to international soccer tournaments.” That sum is chump change to Wall Street. Big banks’ donations to political campaigns, while technically legal, are certainly not done without expectation of reciprocation in the form of loose regulations or a slap on the wrist when the bank has done something meriting a criminal investigation. In the two election cycles leading up to the 2008 financial crisis, Wall Street donated more than $250 million to the congressional campaigns of Democrats and Republicans. And in the three election cycles that followed, those banks donated more than $230 million to congressional campaigns. That’s almost half a billion dollars in legal bribery. The resulting kid-glove treatment of Wall Street banks by the government is an indicator that those legal bribes were successful.