Source: AllGov
David Wallechinsky and Noel Brinkerhoff
Now that congressional auditors have gained access for the first time to the financial records of the Federal Reserve,
their assessment has turned up serious conflicts of interest for the
board members overseeing the branches of the national bank.

For instance, at least 18 former and current directors were
affiliated with financial institutions that relied on the Fed’s
emergency assistance programs during the crisis that swept Wall Street.
In September 2008, the chairman of the New York Federal Reserve was
Stephen Friedman, who also happened to be a member of the board of
directors of Goldman Sachs. When Goldman applied to become a bank
holding company in order to gain access to cheap credit from the Federal
Reserve, the New York Fed approved, and Goldman came under the
regulatory purview of the New York Fed, which gave Friedman a waiver to
continue in his position despite the obvious conflict of interest. After
it was revealed that Friedman, in December 2008, purchased 37,300
additional shares of Goldman Sachs, he was forced to resign.