this is worded a bit stronger. See if you can guess who the "various voices" are
>
> House Committee to Hold Hearings About SEC
>
> Financial Services committee to investigate flap over insider
>trading accusations.
>
> By Editorial Staff
>
> May 14, 2007- U.S. House Financial Service Committee Chairman
>Barney Frank (D-Mass.) said Friday that the panel will hold hearings to
>examine the Securities and Exchange Commission next month. All five SEC
>commissioners, including Chairman Christopher Cox, will be called to
>testify.
>
> "There have been concerns that various people have voiced,"
>Frank told Bloomberg. "There is no point in prejudging, but obviously there
>are enough questions in the air that we are holding a hearing."
>
> Specifically, the committee is concerned that the enforcement
>division is being stripped of its powers and that the SEC will make it more
>difficult for investors to bring lawsuits against companies.
>
> The hearings come on the heels of an SEC investigation that
>the Government Accountability Office began in October at the request of
>Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa). The probe was the result of a flap over an
>insider-trading charge at hedge fund Pequot Capital Management. A former
>SEC attorney, Gary Aguirre, suspected Morgan Stanley Chairman John Mack,
>who had briefly served as chairman of Pequot, had tipped off insiders at
>the hedge fund that General Electric and Heller Financial were about to
>merge in 2001. When the SEC's enforcement division declined to investigate
>further, Aguirre complained and was fired shortly thereafter; he believed
>it was over the investigation, but the SEC maintained it was for abrasive
>and temperamental behavior.
>
> Then, earlier this year, the SEC instituted new rules
>requiring attorneys with the SEC to obtain authorization from the
>commissioners before negotiating settlement fines with companies. Critics
>say that will limit the staff's ability to set fines.
>
> Then in April, the SEC said it was considering a rule that
>would allow companies to create bylaws that would require shareholders to
>settle disputes out of court. Since, then, however, Cox has told Frank that
>the SEC is likely to drop that rule.