The year the Labor Qld Govt sold Cairns Airport to J P Morgan - TopicsExpress



          

The year the Labor Qld Govt sold Cairns Airport to J P Morgan Chase, 2008, was the same year J P Morgan Chase committed illegal acts which precipitated the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, which caused great economic harm to Cairns, a crime for which J P Morgan Chase now has to pay USD$13 billion in fines (but none of which will go to Cairns). Cairns Airport Pty Ltd still reserves the right to destroy half the Barron Delta mangrove wetlands surrounding the airport since its latest Land Use Plan endorsed by Cairns Regional Council even though Councillors were anly allowed to see a portion of the document they were endorsing! A major change like this to Cairns critical habitat (mangroves being the most critical for a number of reasons) should have gone to a referendum. news.firedoglake/2013/10/21/jpmorgan-to-pay-13-billion-for-causing-2008-financial-crisis/ JPMorgan To Pay $13 Billion For Causing 2008 Financial Crisis By: DSWright Monday October 21, 2013 8:02 am The financial meltdown in 2008 was not the result of ethereal and enigmatic forces, it was the result of fraud in the financial markets. That truth was initially hidden by politicians, regulators, banks, and the bought priesthood of mainstream economics. But despite all the lies, the day of reckoning has finally arrived for one of the world’s most powerful corporations, JPMorgan. Of course, there won’t be jail time for executives – prison is for the little people. But, contrary to some Republican presidential candidates, corporations aren’t people. They are mindless engines of profit and the only acts of contrition the machines can output is in the form of paying money and JPMorgan has already agreed to pay $13 billion for crashing the economy in 2008 through fraud and greed. JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO Jamie Dimon has pleaded with and complained to the U.S. Justice Department but cannot convince the government to end its criminal probe of his bank because prosecutors are not yet certain of their findings, people familiar with the matter said. Dimon has negotiated a tentative $13 billion deal to settle many of the U.S. investigations into mortgage bonds that JPMorgan – and the banks it bought during the financial crisis – sold to investors. Finally we are talking about a fine that might sting a little. The previous fines Wall Street banks have paid have been laughable. But a $13 billion fine would be more than half of JPMorgan’s profit last year. Serious money. Though apparently JPMorgan thinks it might have to pay even more for its wrongdoing. JPMorgan has set aside a total of $23 billion to pay for legal issues, and faces more than a dozen probes globally. What kind of business needs that much money to deal with criminal investigations and lawsuits? A criminal enterprise? The fraudulent mortgage derivatives JPMorgan and other Wall Street banks sold to investors helped trigger the 2008 financial crisis when the fraudulent loans went bust and no one had enough capital to cover the losses – despite AIG providing insurance in the form of credit default swaps on the mortgage derivatives. AIG, as we all know now, was incredibly reckless and was unable to cover the derivatives it had insured. Ultimately the Too Big To Fail banks received billions from the taxpayers with TARP and over a trillion dollars from the Federal Reserve in the form of secret loans. No bankruptcies for the banks but plenty of painful foreclosures for homeowners who did nothing wrong. Now JPMorgan inc. is saying sorry the only way a corporation can – paying out lots of money. But have the banksters learned their lesson?
Posted on: Mon, 30 Jun 2014 00:54:09 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015