[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Too Freak-Off to Check: Diddy Trial Confirms Link to Trump Club Shooter?

US official admits misleading Trump on US troop numbers in Syria

Iran pitches joint nuclear venture with US NYT

For The First Time, Common Hospital Superbug Found To Break Down Medical Plastics

Is One Of The Worlds Largest Supervolcanoes About To Erupt?

Fusion Power Just Got Real: New Method to Remove Heat From Tokamak Plasma Solves One of Nuclear Energys Biggest Obstacles

India's little war hands Pakistan wins on multiple fronts

Newly Discovered Ancient Tools Shatter Accepted Timeline of Civilization and Rewrite Humanity's Deep Past

'Is It Being Investigated?': Paul Questions RFK Jr. About Incident Involving Ebola At Fort Detric

Enraged England Produces SHOCK Response

Crime SWEEP or Political WAR?

DISTURBING: Experts Sound Alarm Over MOLECULAR CHAOS in Covid-Vaccinated

The misconception that they can demand not to be touched while they are being arrested is peak child like behavior

New York University is withholding a student’s diploma after he spoke out against Israel’s brutal war on Gaza

Is This The Most Honest Interview Ever? (Immigration)

Ava Gardner Smitten By Marine Medal of Honor winner

Scientifically proven diet to boost your Testosterone!

Stop Walking 10,000 Steps/Day (do 10 minutes of intense exercise)

4 Ways to Detox Your Body From Toxic Microplastics (backed by science)

TRump Negotiating 3 deals without Israel

Nobody on this list has a chance.

The 76 shots that children in this country receive None of them have been safety tested in pre-licensing studies against a placebo

3M Settles New Jersey's 'Forever Chemicals' Contamination Lawsuit For $450 Million

Big Daily News

What does public school do to children?

Guilty of Transphobia?

Elizabeth Warren has claimed, "Check my website. I don't take contributions from Big Pharma executives.

Walmart Is Preparing to Welcome Its Next Customer: The AI Shopping Agent

Mehdi Hasan debunks top 7 lies about Gaza

Why The Qataris Are Happy To Dump Their 747 On Trump


Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: Eight years after they helped wreck the economy, Ireland sends 3 bankers to prison
Source: [None]
URL Source: [None]
Published: Aug 1, 2016
Author: Max Bearak
Post Date: 2016-08-01 06:47:30 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 375
Comments: 2

In the aftermath of the Great Recession of 2008, amid the destruction of businesses, lives and trust, many clamored for accountability. People wanted trials, convictions, the closing of tax loopholes and a broad repudiation of bankers’ being above the law. Nearly a decade after Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy and the financial crisis unraveled, those calls have largely gone unanswered, including in the United States.

But on Friday, a court in Dublin convicted three top-level bankers of crimes related to their roles in the global market meltdown. The punishments, which range from two to about four years, may seem light but represent a rare instance of prison sentences for actual individuals, rather than fines levied against companies at large. The trio were part of just a handful of banking executives charged over their roles in the crisis. One was the finance director at Anglo Irish Bank, which failed in 2011.

All three bankers were convicted of conspiring to dupe clients through what the judge called “sham transactions” and a “very serious crime.” In short, their scheme went like this: They would deposit money in one another’s banks but label those deposits as having been made by customers. Because customer deposits are viewed as more secure than those made by other banks, this was a way to defraud investors and creditors. In doing so, they essentially inflated Anglo Irish Bank’s deposit levels by about $8 billion.

That inflation was meant to obfuscate the funding crisis at Anglo Irish Bank, which had invested heavily in a property bubble in Ireland that popped almost as soon as the financial crisis began in the United States. As the crisis spread from the United States to the European Union, of which Ireland is a part, Irish banks were frantically asked to pay back loans and debts to U.S. banks, but they couldn’t. That, in turn, led to Ireland asking the European Union for the most expensive bailout in its history.

“By means that could be termed dishonest, deceitful and corrupt they manufactured 7.2 billion euros in deposits by obvious sham transactions,” Judge Martin Nolan said in his ruling. “The public is entitled to rely on the probity of blue chip firms. If we can’t rely on the probity of these banks we lose all hope or trust in institutions.”

Former Irish Life and Permanent chief executive Denis Casey was sentenced to 33 months. Willie McAteer, former finance director at the now-defunct Anglo Irish Bank, got 42 months. And John Bowe, Anglo Irish’s former head of capital markets, got two years. The 74-day trial was Ireland’s longest to date. The convicted have 28 days to appeal.

Nolan was unsparing in his critique of the men’s business practices and called Anglo Irish “probably the most reviled institution in the state.” After he read their sentences, the former bankers were led away from the court to be transported to Mountjoy Prison, Ireland's largest.

Anglo Irish’s two most senior executives, former chairman Sean FitzPatrick and chief executive David Drumm, are free on bail pending trials, which might not take place until 2017. They face dozens of charges of fraud and concealment. Drumm fled to the United States in 2009, where he failed to win bankruptcy protection. A U.S. judge ruled that Drumm used his wife to shelter assets, and he subsequently spent five months in a U.S. prison before being extradited to Ireland in March.

Ireland’s Finance Ministry forecast last month that banks there may need 15 more years to fully recover from the hit they took after 2008.

No senior banking executives in Britain or the United States have been sent to prison over their roles in the financial crisis.

www.washingtonpost.com/ne...-sends-3-bankers-to-jail/


Poster Comment:

Who are the guilty: bankers trying to wiggle out of a tough spot or house speculators, flippers and local bureaucrats whose countless regulations make it difficult to build/add to accommodation which puts upward pressure on house prices, increasing assessment values and tax revenues?

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

How much are to paid to be a troll? Defending bankers and blaming the problems on house flippers?

"Have Brain, Will Travel

Turtle  posted on  2016-08-01   16:43:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Turtle (#1)

Since there's likely two sides to a story/event, this is the best I can do. As to troll: never assume since it has an ass a u and a me.

Tatarewicz  posted on  2016-08-02   5:44:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]