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Chomsky warns austerity policy has left European democracy in tatters

April 2, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

US linguist and political activist to give Frontline Defenders lecture in RDS, Dublin

Veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States. Photographer: Dara Mac Donaill/The Irish Times

Veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States. Photographer: Dara Mac Donaill/The Irish Times

The veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States.

Speaking ahead of a public lecture in Dublin this week, Prof Chomsky (84), a leading figure in the study of linguistics and a prominent critic of US foreign policy, said the European Central Bank was imposing unfair and counterproductive austerity measures on the people of Ireland and other EU member states hit by the debt crisis.

“I’m not a great admirer of the [Federal Reserve], but I think they’ve been much more constructive and thoughtful and progressive than the ECB has been. I mean, take Ireland. It was a crisis of the banks. It wasn’t the Government; it wasn’t the population. It’s fundamentally bank corruption,” he said.

“It’s the same in Spain. Spain had close to a balanced budget in 2007 and pretty good economic fundamentals. But the housing bubble, fuelled by Spanish and indeed German banks, you know they were the lenders, went way out and caused a great crisis for which the public is now paying.”

He warned that austerity policies were not only damaging democracy, but were stifling economic growth and failing to tackle the debt burden. “It’s been quite harmful everywhere it’s been applied,” he said.

Prof Chomsky is delivering the inaugural Frontline Defenders Annual Lecture at the RDS on Wednesday, which is being held in partnership with UCD School of Philosophy and TCD.

In an interview with The Irish Times today, he suggests that US president Barack Obama is more a representative of the traditional centre-right than of the left.

Jamie Dimon Resigns From JP Morgan, Says ‘Put Bankers in Jail’ – Bankers are the Criminals

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update

JP Morgan - credit default swap options

JP Morgan – credit default swap options

Jamie Dimon, often cited as the most responsible head of a Wall Street investment bank, reigned as Chairman and CEO of JP Morgan Chase today.

In a blistering letter published this morning in Britian’s Financial NewsDimon says he is tired of working in the “bankrupt moral culture” of finance and called for a criminal investigation into wrongdoing at JP Morgan and other major investment banks.

“For too long I have been a witness to what I consider to be unethical and sometimes even illegal behavior at the highest levels of Wall Street,” the letter reads. “I thought that I could change the system from the inside. But over the past few years I have been proven wrong.” – Jaime Dimon

“Despite the concerted effort of myself and my closest staff, the recent losses at our Chief Investment Office and the global LIBOR scandal show that firms such as JP Morgan have simply become too big to manage.

“For that reason I am resigning from my posts as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of JP Morgan Chase effective at noon EST today. And I urge global regulators to introduce new rules seeking to limit the size of scope of the largest international financial institutions.”

Starbuck’s Pequod

Long recognized as a less corrupt institution than competing banks such as Goldman Sachs and Barclays, JP Morgan has come under fire in recent months for a number of trading scandals. Most notably the bank lost over $6 billion on bad derivatives bets in the notorious London Whale fiasco.

But in his resignation letter Dimon did not limit his reasoning to recent events, explaining that he is disgusted by the behavior of investment banks during the financial crisis.

“Over four years has passed since the greatest financial collapse in the history of this nation,” Diamond recounts, “and still no one on Wall Street has been held accountable for the crimes which have been committed.

“Washington says they can’t find one single banker guilty of fraud. I can think of 15 people off the top of my head who should be behind bars.”  - Jamie Dimon Read the rest of this entry →

It Can Happen Here: The Banks Deposit Confiscation Scheme Planned for US and UK Depositors

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

by Ellen Brown  -  webofdebt.wordpress.com

Confiscating the customer deposits in Cyprus banks, it seems, was not a one-off, desperate idea of a few Eurozone “troika” officials scrambling to salvage their balance sheets. A joint paper by the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Bank of England dated December 10, 2012, shows that these plans have been long in the making; that they originated with the G20 Financial Stability Board in Basel, Switzerland (discussed earlier here); and that the result will be to deliver clear title to the banks of depositor funds.

New Zealand has a similar directive, discussed in my last article here, indicating that this isn’t just an emergency measure for troubled Eurozone countries. New Zealand’s Voxy reported on March 19th:

The National Government [is] pushing a Cyprus-style solution to bank failure in New Zealand which will see small depositors lose some of their savings to fund big bank bailouts . . . .

Open Bank Resolution (OBR) is Finance Minister Bill English’s favoured option dealing with a major bank failure. If a bank fails under OBR, all depositors will have their savings reduced overnight to fund the bank’s bail out.

Can They Do That? Read the rest of this entry →

New Sanders Bill Would Break Up Big Banks

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective

‘If an institution is too big to fail, it is too big to exist’


U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said today he will introduce legislation to break up banks that have grown so big that the Justice Department has not pursued prosecutions for fear an indictment would harm the financial system.

The 10 largest banks in the United States are bigger now than before a taxpayer bailout following the 2008 financial crisis. At the time Congress, over Sanders’ objection, approved a $700 billion bank rescue because of concerns by some that the financial institutions were too big to fail. Another $16 trillion from the Federal Reserve propped up financial institutions.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. now says the Justice Department may not pursue criminal cases against big banks because filing charges could “have a negative impact on the national economy, perhaps even the world economy.”

“In other words,” Sanders said, “we have a situation now where Wall Street banks are not only too big to fail, they are too big to jail. That is unacceptable and that has got to change because America is based on a system of law and justice.” Read the rest of this entry →

Prosecute the Banksters! – banks are the real criminals

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

by Nathan – occupy sacramento

bankers-should-be-jailed

Five years into the crisis and not a single banker has been prosecuted. Over 333,000 of us signed a petition demanding that the President and the Department of Justice prosecute the bankers. Join Occupy Sacramento, and others to deliver those signatures to the Department at Justice, and tell President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder that nobody is above the law, no matter how “big” they are. Oust the Banks !

Tuesday, 2 Apr 2013, 1:00 PM

Sacramento, US Dept of Justice, Federal Courthouse, 501 I Street

Banks Find More Wrongful Foreclosures Among Military Members

March 4, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

BY JESSICA SILVER-GREENBERG AND BEN PROTESS   –   nytimes.com

Banks Are The Real Criminals

Banks Are The Real Criminals

The nation’s biggest banks wrongfully foreclosed on more than 700 military members during the housing crisis and seized homes from roughly two dozen other borrowers who were current on their mortgage payments, findings that eclipse earlier estimates of the improper evictions.

Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo uncovered the foreclosures while analyzing mortgages as part of a multibillion-dollar settlement deal with federal authorities, according to people with direct knowledge of the findings. In January, regulators ordered the banks to identify military members and other borrowers who were evicted in violation of federal law.

The analysis, which was turned over to regulators in recent days, provides the first detailed glimpse into the extent of wrongful foreclosures amid the collapse of the housing market. While lenders previously acknowledged that they relied on faulty documents to push through foreclosures, the banks claimed borrowers were rarely evicted by mistake, including military personnel protected by federal law.

That thesis, which underpinned the government’s response to the financial crisis, helps explain why homeowners languished for years without relief. The revelations of more pervasive harm could provide fresh ammunition for Wall Street critics and prompt regulators to adopt a tougher stance.

Housing advocates say the findings also underscore the broader flaws with the settlement. In the latest negotiations, according to people briefed on the talks, the banks secured favorable terms for doling out some aid, a deal that could diminish the relief to homeowners. Read the rest of this entry →

It’s Silly: The Trillion Dollar Coin and the Monetary System

January 12, 2013 in Editorial, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

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Toby Iverson  –  tshirttoby.blogspot.com

While celebrating Christmas with the family I had a conversation with my 8 year old nephew.  He knows that I’ll explain anything to him in a comprehensible way. (Well, almost anything.) We were talking about money and I told him how you used to be able to trade your dollar bill in for silver but can’t anymore.

“So what can you trade it in for?” he asked

“You can’t. It’s not backed by anything now.”

“Then what makes it worth a dollar?”

After a brief pause looking around at the rest of my family who was now listening in.”Faith.”

“Faith?”

“Yes. Because we believe it is worth something makes it valuable.”

After a moment of contemplation my nephew says. “Well that’s silly.”

We all laughed as I agreed. “It is silly.”

The whole trillion dollar coin idea is silly.  But it is no more silly than the rest of our financial system.  It will probably never happen and should be understood in that context.  But if you leave out the silliness and likelihood of it happening, it is not a bad idea. Read the rest of this entry →

Frontlines in the National Fight for a Moratorium on Foreclosure

June 20, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, Video Perspective

The Cruz family home in Minneapolis, Minnesota, went into foreclosure in 2011 when PNC failed to withdraw an online mortgage payment and then demanded two months’ payment as punishment. Unable to pay more than the current month’s installment, the family home fell into foreclosure.

by Occupy Homes MN  original article here

Despite acknowledging that the Cruz’s foreclosure was due to a bank error and repeated claims that they are working “behind the scenes” to get the Cruz family back in their home, PNC Bank has refused to accept the documents necessary for the loan to be modified. So Alejandra and David Cruz, along with several supporters, are going hand-deliver the documents to PNC’s headquarters in Pittsburgh, PA!

The community, as a whole, has rallied to help the Cruz family, and many other families defend their homes from unethical and often illegal bank foreclosures. [see videos below of these events, including one featuring musician Brother Ali talking about these issues and why this struggle is so important] – roguemedia

The Cruz family stopped today at the regional headquarters of Freddie Mac, the bailed-out secondary market lender that has posted guards and boarded up the doors and windows with reinforced steel to keep the Cruz family and supporters out of their home. After this, they marched, with supporters to a nearby PNC branch, where they refused to allow them to go inside and present loan modification documents.

Since April 30, Occupy Homes MN has been working with the Cruz family, whose home went into foreclosure when PNC Bank mishandled an online payment. Although PNC executives have acknowledged their error and repeatedly told Cruz supporters that they are working on a solution, their actions have shown the opposite.  They have refused to work with the family, instead working with Freddie Mac and the city of Minneapolis to launch a series of costly police raids against home, resulting in 23 arrests in less than a week.  Despite ongoing protests, PNC still thinks we’ll go away if they ignore us long enough.  It’s time to show them otherwise: on June 19, Alejandra and David Cruz will be travelling along with a team of supporters to PNC’s Pittsburgh headquarters to hand-deliver their modification documents and demand a meeting with CEO Jim Rohr! Occupy Homes MN is calling for a national day of action on PNC to coincide with the Cruz’s arrival on Thursday, June 21.   see videos below

Read the rest of this entry →

Transit fare hikes getting you down? Blame the banks.

June 20, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

By  Nicole Schlosser  –  metro-magazine.com

This week, the Refund Transit Coalition, a group of transit advocates, workers and supporters, including the Amalgamated Transit Union and the Transportation Equity Network, released an interesting report. It alleges that a major cause of many recent fare hikes and service cuts is due to interest swaps: financial arrangements that transit systems across the U.S. made with banks on a percentage of their debts, which ended up working in favor of the banks when interest rates plummeted in 2008 and were kept artificially low because of the recession.

We got wind of the report, “Riding the Gravy Train – How Wall Street is Bankrupting our Public Transit Agencies,” through WNYC, which ran a story on how the deal has caused the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (N.Y. MTA) to lose almost $114 million a year and how the agency will likely continue to lose money on the deals for the next 30 years. Read the rest of this entry →

Home Mortgages Underwater : Fraud YOU Need to Know About!

May 31, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

Two Big Mortgage Frauds: MERS and Tranche Insurance Payoffs

MERS stands for “Mortgage Electronic Registry Systems,” and was started in 1997 by the big banks to help expedite the quick buying and selling of loans. They are found in 65 million mortgages across the US, about 60% of all American loans. You may find them in your mortgage chain of title posing as either the nominee mortgagee or in an assignment of your deed of trust, which is recorded at the Register of Deeds office where your property is located.
They are strictly a registry system with NO authority to buy and sell a note; and,
   it appears they VOID your note if they appear ANYWHERE in your mortgage transaction.  The mortgage/deed of trust cannot be separated from the note (US Supreme Court, 1872, Insurance v. Eldredge.) They are incorporated in Delaware and have offices in Reston, VA and in Flint, Michigan. Read the rest of this entry →

Home Owners Across Nation Sue All Bank Servicers and Their Offshore Havens

May 8, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update

occupywallst.org

Home Owners Across the Nation Sue All Bank Servicers and Their Offshore Havens;

Spire Law Officially Announces Filing of Landmark Lawsuit Largest International Money Laundering Network in History Formed During Obama Administration;

U.S. Banks’ Theft of Home Owners’ Money Laundered Through Cayman Islands, Isle of Man and Numerous Offshore-Based Affiliates NEW YORK, NY, Apr 23, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — In a lawsuit alleged to involve the largest money laundering network in United States history, Spire Law Group, LLP — on behalf of home owners across the Country — has filed a mass tort action in the Supreme Court of New York, County of Kings.

Home owners across the country have sued every major bank servicer and their subsidiaries — formed in countries known as havens for money laundering such as the Cayman Islands, the Isle of Man, Luxembourg and Malaysia — alleging that while the Obama Administration was publicly encouraging loan modifications for home owners, it was privately ratifying the formation of these shell companies in violation of the United States Patriot Act, and State and Federal law.

The case further alleges that through these obscure foreign companies, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo Bank, Citibank, Citigroup, One West Bank, and numerous other federally chartered banks stole hundreds of millions of dollars of home owners’ money during the last decade and then laundered it through offshore companies. Read the rest of this entry →

ICELAND FORGIVES ENTIRE POPULATION OF MORTGAGE DEBT!: And So Can We! “TDP Calls For Nation-Wide Mortgage Debt Forgiveness!”

May 5, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

truedemocracyparty.net

The government of Iceland has forgiven the mortgage debt for much of its population. This nation chose a very different way of stopping the crisis from the rest of European countries. It decided to hear the requests of the population and to put politicians and bankers on the bench of the accused three years after their financial excesses would sank one of the most prosperous economies in 2008.

Iceland Forgives Mortgage Debt for the Population. Putting Bankers and Politicians on “Bench of Accused”
This is awesome. It shows when the people DO STAND UP they have more power and win against the corrupt bankers and politicians of a country. Iceland is forgiving and erasing the mortgage debt of the population. Read the rest of this entry →

While Banks Have the Upper Hand, the Global Economic Crisis Will Continue

March 25, 2012 in Editorial, Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

The stock market may be up, but for working people the global political economy is likely to remain in crisis for at least another three to five years.

By William K. Tabb

Because the state of the economy looms so large in the outcome of the 2012 presidential election there is a tendency on the part of those who would like to see the president re-elected to be optimistic about recent job creation, factory orders and other indicators that there may be light at the end of the tunnel. The reality may be very different however and the changes needed go far beyond what Mr. Obama is proposing or is likely to get now or in the new Congress. The stock market may be up but for working people the global political economy is likely to remain in crisis for at least another three to five years, with high unemployment and slow growth. The character of this period makes a grim cyclical crisis worse by adding to it both a financial component and a deeper structural crisis which challenges a model of accumulation dependent on financialisation and corporate globalisation. A year ago, then European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet expressed the view that the next ten years could be a ‘lost decade’. Median income in the US declined by 7% between 2000 and 2010 and the Wall Street Journal’s poll of 50 leading business economists expects the losses will not be made up before 2021. These are not the testimonies of radical Marxists (who generally hold similar opinions). Read the rest of this entry →

Busted for Busting Out at Bank of America

March 14, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

nationofchange.org

“Stripping Protestors In Pink Bras Crashed Bank Of America CEO Brian Moynihan’s Speech,” declared Business Insider on March 8, showing Moynihan’s stern photo with a pink bra playfully dangling in the air beside him.

It’s true, things did get a bit wild at Citi’s Financial Services conference at New York’s Waldorf Astoria when Brian Moynihan got on stage and began flipping through his tedious powerpoint.

While the hotel security was busy watching anti-bank protesters rallying outside, CODEPINK cofounder Jodie Evans, dressed in a hot pink bustier, burst into the conference room. “Bust up Bank of America before it busts up America”, she shouted, before being hauled out by security guards. “As I was saying,” continued a deadpan Moynihan to the laughter of the crowd, returning to the dreary slides that tried to put a rosy spin on this dinosaur of a company whose share price has plummeted while it continues to foreclose on families’ homes and faces tens of billions of dollars in damages from lawsuits over mortgage investments.

Little did Moynihan know that the excitement at what is normally a bankers’ snoozefest had just begun. CODEPINK codirector Rae Abileah and I were already seated in the front of the room. Wearing dark business suits, we did our best to blend into the crowd of stodgy white men in black business suits. Read the rest of this entry →

Occupy the Crime Scene

March 5, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

occupysac.com

IS YOUR HOME IN FORECLOSURE?
ALREADY FORECLOSED?
IS YOUR HOUSE WORTH LESS THAN YOU OWE?

Learn how the banks are playing fast and loose with the rules. Does anyone know who owns your note? Do you understand the terms of your loan? If you’re having trouble making payments, has your loan servicer told you what options you have and helped you pursue them? 
Learn how to find out information about your loan – and what might help in your situation. Read the rest of this entry →

Free Trade or Democracy, Can’t Have Both

March 4, 2012 in Editorial, Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

by: Dave Johnson, Campaign for America’s Future | Op-Ed

Recent stories about the conditions of Apple’s contractors in China have opened many people’s eyes about where our jobs, factories, industries and economy have been going, and why. The stories exposed that workers live 6-to-12-to-a-room in dormitories, get rousted at midnight to work surprise 12-hour shifts, get paid very little, use toxic chemicals, suffer extreme pollution of the environment, etc. Is this “trade?” Or is it something else?

Is This “Trade?”

“Trade” means to exchange, to buy and sell, you buy from me and I buy from you. I have something you want and you have something I want, and we exchange. We both end up better off than where we started. Read the rest of this entry →

3 Mega – Banks Screwing You With Sneaky Fees — Again

March 4, 2012 in Finance, Headline

In recent years, the U.S. government has imposed important new regulations on big Wall Street banks — rules designed to keep banks from preying on consumers. But ironically, the mega-banks have responded to those regulations in a decidedly anti-consumer manner, with a relentless campaign to impose unfair new fees on the very consumers the regulations were designed to protect.

For years, big shiny banks like Chase and Bank of America were where you went to get “no fee,” “no hassle” checking accounts. We all got so used to seeing ads touting free checking accounts that many of us just came to accept free checking as the norm. At the same time, many of us have had our checking accounts with the same big bank (and/or the big bank that bought out our original bank) for years, giving some of us the impression that we’re still getting the same great deal as when we signed up.

But think about it for a second: How many advertisements for “free checking” have you heard in recent months? Probably not very many, because free checking is no longer standard at big banks. Quietly, banks have ratcheted up the fees associated with their accounts, and now, according to research firm Moebs Services, virtually all of the big banks have stopped offering free checking accounts. At the same time, the banks have increased fees for everything from lost debit card replacements to account minimums and even the “privilege” of speaking to a bank teller — fees that often disproportionately affect poor consumers who may have less flexible schedules and a harder time maintaining account minimums. Read the rest of this entry →

A World Bank for a new world

March 4, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Jeffrey Sachs writes: The world is at a crossroads. Either the global community will join together to fight poverty, resource depletion and climate change, or it will face a generation of resource wars, political instability and environmental ruin.

The World Bank, if properly led, can play a key role in averting these threats and the risks that they imply. The global stakes are thus very high this spring as the Bank’s 187 member countries choose a new president to succeed Robert Zoellick, whose term ends in July.

Read the rest of this entry →

Foreclosure Fraudulent–Why are Bankers Still Getting Away with Crimes?

March 3, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

By Kai Wright

Someone broke the financial system, and evidence that the break was willful is now piled as high as banking execs’ bonuses.

An old Eddie Murphy bit, made famous in his raunchy 1980s album “Raw,” tells you all you need to know about the foreclosure crisis. In the bit, a cheating husband has been caught in the act by his wife. “It wasn’t me,” he protests. “But I

Last week, five of the nation’s largest banks and 49 of its attorneys general announced a $26 billion settlement that essentially let the banks off the hook for the widespread use of fraudulent documents in the foreclosure process. Thursday, the San Francisco County assessor released an audit suggesting that many, many more demonstrable crimes were committed during the foreclosure bust of the past few years. My use of passive tense is not accidental; the audit doesn’t name names, though it’s long past time we start doing so. Read the rest of this entry →

My Journey from Iraq to Working on Wall Street to Occupy Wall Street

February 12, 2012 in Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

By Derek McGee

Photo Credit: edenpictures on Flickr

In late September 2001, I was living in a tent in Lower Manhattan with the 2nd Battalion, 25th Marines, a reserve unit just outside the city. We were occupying Battery Park, which at the time served as the National Guard’s headquarters. “Guarding the guard,” we called it.

The two weeks I spent there were profoundly affecting. There I was, at the center of the world, watching America at its finest, showing at once nearly impossible perseverance and limitless compassion. Generosity sprouted everywhere throughout New York City; people gave out food, shoe inserts, massages, coffee, flowers, hugs, kind words and anything you needed. I told someone I liked Red Bull, and hours later he came to my tent, dragging a handcart with eight cases of the stuff. I would slip one under each of the other marines’ pillows while they slept, and when we woke up for guard duty I would say the Red Bull fairy had come.

Exploring the city on my one afternoon off, I stumbled upon the Wall Street Bull. The smooth metal sculpture is stunning, always on the verge of some wild movement—a lunge or a charge, at the least, a bellow with a head toss. Too tarnished to be gold, too big to be a calf, it’s revered nonetheless. I would come fairly close to worshiping it myself years later. But for now, I just had my picture taken on top of it. From where I stood, the whole world seemed to feel empathy. It was one of the only times in my life that I felt like I was exactly where I needed to be.

Another time was when I was living under a bridge along the Euphrates River. A nearly ceaseless convoy rolled overhead. I wasn’t particularly keen on the invasion of Iraq, but if we had to have one, I knew I needed to be there with my fellow marines. A Subaru filled with reporters pulled up and offered us cigarettes to hasten our search of their car. “They’re just outside Baghdad,” they told us. The whole world is watching, I thought.

Read the rest of this entry →

Banks Walk, Dept. of Justice Makes Excuses

February 9, 2012 in Uncategorized

By the end of the S&L crisis, vast financial fraud had devastated the real estate market, contributed to the early-90′s recession, and banks have cost the US taxpayer $124 billion. Bad as this was, at least a reckoning was made: thousands of bank executives were prosecuted, and more than 1,000 went to jail.

This time around, vast financial fraud has wrecked the entire world’s economy, put millions of people out of work, and cost trillions of dollars. And how many banks execs have gone to jail?

Zero.

Gee, why not? The Wall Street Journal today lists the excuses explanations:

Since the financial crisis erupted in 2008, many legal experts have said the U.S. government faced an uphill battle in prosecuting financial-industry executives. Criminal intent is especially hard to prove in complex financial cases, because prosecutors must convince jurors, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a fraud was intentional.

Some financial executives have said it is unfair to punish them for what is nothing more than their failure to predict the financial crisis. Many legal experts have said much of the most controversial behavior likely was a product of poor judgment, not criminal wrongdoing.

Uh-huh. But maybe there’s a simpler explanation,  maybe banks aren’t all bad…:

Read the rest of this entry →

City of Berkeley Takes Steps to Move Its Money to a Local Bank

February 3, 2012 in Headline, Occupy, Politics

by John C. Osborn   -   from  eastbayexpress.com

In what could well be one of the more significant consequences of the Occupy Wall Street movement, Berkeley may become one of the first cities in the country to pull its assets out of a major bank — in this case, Wells Fargo — as response to its role in the financial meltdown.

The city council unanimously decided to review the feasibility of transferring its $300 million or so in assets from the bank to either a local bank or a credit union, and whether an institution of that size would be able to handle the banking transactions required of a medium-sized city.

The move, spearheaded by Councilmen Jessie Arreguin and Darryl Moore, has been in the works since 2010, ever since the city’s Human Welfare and Community Action Committee made the request, according to a staff report. Since 2004, the city has had a banking contract with Wells Fargo.

You can read the city’s short narrative exploring Wells Fargo’s role in the financial meltdown here, including what city officials consider the “unethical practices” of the bank for having “falsified loan documents and pushed borrowers into subprime mortgages.”

The challenge will be finding a local bank or credit union that has the infrastructure in place to handle the sizable banking needs of the city, including “payment collections, revenue sharing, and sophisticated money transfers.”

Until then, city staff will begin the process of determining what fiscal and operational impacts such a transfer of assets will have and ensuirng that public funds would be invested with a responsible institution. We’ll keep you posted.