2016 | USA | NR | 88 min.
After the 2008 financial crisis, only one bank was targeted for mortgage fraud in the US. It wasn’t Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, JP Morgan Chase, Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac; instead, the Feds targeted a small immigrant-run enterprise called Abacus Federal Savings Bank. After one of the bank’s employees was caught taking bribes, the Manhattan DA’s office accused Abacus of corruption. In this searing documentary, as riveting as any legal thriller, Oscar-nominated director Steve James (“Hoop Dreams”) unravels the judicial witch hunt that Abacus owner and Chinese immigrant Thomas Sung and his family endured over the next three years. James asks the crucial question: Why did federal investigators target a small, family-run business instead of any of the large corporations responsible for the Great Recession? Amid our current climate of suspected government corruption and regulation rollbacks, this film is a vital reminder of all that is at stake when profits come first, instead of people.
PRE-SHOW MUSIC BY
Tom Jolin (Wed)
Emma Guzman (Thu)
SPONSORED BY
Harriet & Clyde McKenzie (Wed)
Dr. Emmaline Weidman & Daniel Kantor (Thu)