Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Alexandria Ocasio-CortezHouse passes bill to avert shutdown Trump attacks Omar for criticizing US: 'How did you do where you came from?' The Memo: Dems face balancing act on SCOTUS fight MORE (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday questioned major banking CEOs on whether more industry figures should have gone to prison over the 2007 financial crisis.

In a House Financial Services Committee hearing meant to assess preparedness since the crisis, Ocasio-Cortez expressed “concerns about how much things have really changed” since the recession. She noted fines and penalties in the interim, such as Bank of America’s $16.5 billion settlement in 2014 over misconduct related to mortgage-backed securities as well as a $20 million and another $720 million in consumer relief.

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She questioned the bankers on whether the fines and penalties were viewed as “the cost of doing business” rather than something to be avoided.

"I represent kids that go to jail for jumping a turnstile because they can't afford a MetroCard,” Ocasio-Cortez told JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon. “Do you think that more folks should have gone to jail for their role in a financial crisis that led to 7.8 million foreclosures in the 10 years between 2007 and 2016?"

.@RepAOC @AOC to JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon: "I represent kids that go to jail for jumping a turnstile because they can't afford a metro card. Do you think that more folks should have gone to jail for their role in a financial crisis that led to 7.8 million foreclosures…?" pic.twitter.com/3RFEdkCD6B — CSPAN (@cspan) April 10, 2019

Dimon responded that people should not be imprisoned for jumping turnstiles but demurred on whether more figures involved in the financial crisis should be imprisoned, deferring to “legal experts.”

Ocasio-Cortez, a progressive freshman lawmaker, has made income inequality and financial reform a key focus of her time in Congress so far.

The committee summoned the CEOs of the nation’s largest banks as a group for the first time since 2009 for the Wednesday hearing, during which the witnesses claimed their respective companies have become safer and more responsible since they were bailed out during the crisis.

However, committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters Maxine Moore WatersPowell, Mnuchin stress limits of current emergency lending programs Pelosi: House will stay in session until agreement is reached on coronavirus relief Omar invokes father's death from coronavirus in reaction to Woodward book MORE (D-Calif.) expressed concerns that “several of these institutions are simply too big to manage their own operations, too big to serve their communities, and too big to care about the harm they have caused.”