A Field of Schemes
A Field of Schemes
Introduction
This is the city. Chicago, Illinois. A place where people work hard, save their money, and trust their banks. But trust has a way of being broken.
The story you’re about to read is true. The names and places are real. People trust their bankers with their money, their futures, their lives—but not all bankers are worthy of that trust. And the consequences—lives ruined, faith broken—speak louder than the just facts, maam.
There are many stories like this—tales of banking crimes, fraud, and deception. Some make the front pages, others vanish into the footnotes of financial history. What follows is just one of them.
This is the story of A Field of Schemes.
Marvin Wagner turned to see a thirty-something man (John) wearing a Chicago Cubs’ t-shirt entering the bank lobby. Wagner knew him. They exchanged smiles. Wagner knew most of his customers. He spent a fair amount of time on the lobby floor each day socializing with them while hovering over his array of household gadgets and other premiums.. People generally want to be acknowledged and entertained, and Wagner was a consummate “schmoozer” as well as the bank president.
The “bank,” City Savings and Loan, located in Chicago’s “West Town” - a neighborhood closely allied with "Ukrainian Village" and known for its historic architecture, and vibrant culture was part of the broader Savings and Loan industry. Most of City’s customers were from Eastern Europe. Ukrainians, Poles, Czechs, and Hungarians. Wagner is a German name (wagon maker), but Marvin had an ear for Slavic languages and was able to get by in casual conversation with most of his depositors - and he was an artful talker.
Chicago in the sixties was alive and bustling—skyscrapers and factories towered over crowded streets, streetcars clanged along State Street, jazz and blues drifted from clubs, and neighborhoods pulsed with ambition and tension, filled with immigrants arriving in search of opportunity, often too trusting in a city that offered both promise and inequality.
And the S&L industry was facing tough times strained by the effects of inflation, competition from other financial institutions, and fluctuating interest rates. Federal regulation capped rates and to attract depositors, S&Ls like City Savings offered promotional giveaways: like toasters, blenders, or cookware, electric blankets, and electronics, even television sets - to attract customers capitalizing on the booming consumer culture.
The regulatory framework governing S&Ls was inadequate at the time to responsibly manage their financial risks. Regulations that were meant to protect these institutions instead limited their ability to adapt to changing market conditions. And when market (interest) rates rose, their portfolios of low yielding long-term fixed rate loans did not adequately fund the interest they had to pay depositors and cover operating costs. Many S&Ls eventually failed and City Savings did as well, but it had help.
Fraud.
As president, Wagner approved numerous loans to cronies with abysmal credit in exchange for large kickbacks - loans that quickly went into default. His embezzlement involved siphoning money directly from deposits and creating false accounts to hide the illicit withdrawals. Sometimes he would use the bank’s money for his own speculative investments including buying property in his name. He “cooked the books,” manipulating financial statements to misrepresent the bank’s health by inflating asset values and understating liabilities giving a false impression of solvency and profitability. Ultimately auditors from the Federal Home Bank Board, the agency that provided oversight of S&Ls, uncovered Wagner’s schemes and found him guilty of fraud, embezzlement and financial misrepresentation. City Savings was closed by its regulators in 1964, and Wagner was sentenced to prison.
In lockstep with the Eight Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, judicial guidelines stipulated that Warner’s sentencing reflect the severity of his crimes and the significant financial damage caused to the government and the community. The process was linear. The exact duration of the prison sentence was to be based on the number of fraudulent transactions (counts), the total amount embezzled, and the overall impact on the institution’s failure. But interestingly, Wagner, who had been a prominent figure in the Savings and Loan industry, maintained considerable political connections and for some reason the sentencing judge decided to “go easy” on him, referring to his misdeeds as just white collar crimes. He was sentenced to serve time at an “honor farm”, a minimum-security prison where he performed agricultural work: Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Bryan, Texas. The prison's amenities included recreational activities, educational programs, and a commissary offering personal care items leading some to describe it as a "country club" prison.
One sweltering August afternoon, Marvin Wagner was detailed with other prisoners to work in the prison’s cornfields. His fellow inmates watched as he veered from his assigned row, slowly slipping away farther from their sight as though the stalks themselves beckoned him inward. Deceit was his legacy, so even behind bars and surveillance, he likely tried to evade responsibility and leave the work for the others. Step by step, the rows swallowed him, the striped cloth of his back fading until it was gone in the green. His fellow inmates saw him go in, but no one ever saw him return. Somewhere in that endless maze of corn Wagner still wanders, a wayfaring stranger shackled less by the prison than by the weight of his own deceit.
Galatians 6:7 – “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap.”
Submitted then for your approbation then is one Marvin Wagner, a huckster whose lies though taller than the stalks, were swallowed by field that fed upon them like summer’s rain leaving only guilt in the wind.
Meme:
Strangely, even after word got out that the bank was failing and depositors scrambled to withdraw their savings, Wagner stood in the lobby and was able to convince many of them it was not true, and they redeposited their money.

Another wonderful story!
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