A U.S. Attorney's office has publicly defended its investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, asserting that the central bank repeatedly sidestepped information requests concerning budget overruns and Powell's congressional testimony. According to the office's statement, these uncooperative responses from the Fed left investigators with no choice but to pursue formal legal mechanisms to obtain the necessary documentation. The dispute highlights growing tensions over transparency and information access within the nation's monetary policy apparatus.
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MEV_Whisperer
· 11h ago
The Federal Reserve is pulling this stunt again? Even transparency has to rely on lawyers to pry open the door...
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NFTArchaeologist
· 01-13 20:03
Is the Fed playing hide and seek again? Is transparency really that difficult for central banks?
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CrashHotline
· 01-13 03:22
The Federal Reserve is shifting the blame again. Their transparency is truly remarkable—just the usual bureaucratic routine.
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GasFeeCrying
· 01-13 03:19
Is the Federal Reserve starting to shift the blame again? Transparency really is a luxury for them.
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DevChive
· 01-13 03:14
Is the Federal Reserve playing dead again? This trick is really worn out; no matter how much money is poured in, it can't change this constitution.
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ResearchChadButBroke
· 01-13 03:05
Fed is playing hide and seek again, and this time they got caught red-handed.
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DefiVeteran
· 01-13 02:59
The Federal Reserve is still playing hide and seek, hilarious. The transparency is just ridiculous.
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WhaleShadow
· 01-13 02:55
Fed is playing hide and seek again. I don't understand why transparency is so difficult.
A U.S. Attorney's office has publicly defended its investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, asserting that the central bank repeatedly sidestepped information requests concerning budget overruns and Powell's congressional testimony. According to the office's statement, these uncooperative responses from the Fed left investigators with no choice but to pursue formal legal mechanisms to obtain the necessary documentation. The dispute highlights growing tensions over transparency and information access within the nation's monetary policy apparatus.