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Today is the end of the 90 day period Holder gave to indict Banksters for the Financial Crisis (Original Post) n2doc May 2015 OP
It's more important to hassle people for pot hobbit709 May 2015 #1
He did good with voting rights... Wilms May 2015 #2
K&R..... daleanime May 2015 #3
K & R AuntPatsy May 2015 #4
Well ... There is one relevant story on this ... 1StrongBlackMan May 2015 #5
Well I guess that's it. Not his problem! n2doc May 2015 #6
Too busy trying to pass TPP TBF May 2015 #7
See: Fitzmas IDemo May 2015 #8
C'mon, Doc Jack Rabbit May 2015 #9
Legs Dimon and Pretty Boy Lloyd Unknown Beatle May 2015 #18
Many of the important initiatives have been thrown into the phucket. DILLIGAS? erronis May 2015 #10
It probably wouldn't be wise sulphurdunn May 2015 #11
Did anyone really think there would be any indictments? zeemike May 2015 #12
+1 How many carefully placed headlines did we see, woo me with science May 2015 #38
He and Duncan have been an unqualified disaster Doctor_J May 2015 #13
I have no hope. I see no future. n/t Hotler May 2015 #14
Marvelous (sarcasm) nt Duval May 2015 #15
kick midnight May 2015 #16
Chirp, Chirp blackspade May 2015 #17
Ronnie Raygun's not in office anymore One_Life_To_Give May 2015 #19
Here's a good detailed report on the 1 unfortunate bankster…. n2doc May 2015 #21
Thank you. woo me with science May 2015 #22
K&R CORRUPTION. woo me with science May 2015 #20
Obama must be looking forward again. CharlotteVale May 2015 #23
CORRUPTION woo me with science May 2015 #24
Heard on the street tonight n2doc May 2015 #30
+1000000000 woo me with science May 2015 #33
Champagne corks are a popping on Wall Street tonight... Fumesucker May 2015 #25
kick woo me with science May 2015 #26
kick woo me with science May 2015 #27
Not Holder's fault. Neither Jamie nor Lloyd ordered any indictments. Scuba May 2015 #28
"Thank God It Passed!" RandiFan1290 May 2015 #29
This needs to stay on top. woo me with science May 2015 #31
K&R RandiFan1290 May 2015 #32
+100000 woo me with science May 2015 #34
I'm trying. Octafish May 2015 #35
K&R for the original post and subsequent informative posts and links. JEB May 2015 #36
kick woo me with science May 2015 #37
Today's Mike Luckovich Toon n2doc May 2015 #39

hobbit709

(41,694 posts)
1. It's more important to hassle people for pot
Mon May 18, 2015, 12:25 PM
May 2015

After all the dopers didn't contribute millions to the campaigns.

n2doc

(47,953 posts)
6. Well I guess that's it. Not his problem!
Mon May 18, 2015, 01:40 PM
May 2015

He must not have informed his successor about it. Darn. We could have had Justice but for that one fatal flaw....

Jack Rabbit

(45,984 posts)
9. C'mon, Doc
Mon May 18, 2015, 01:44 PM
May 2015

Actually, I didn't notice it. I really don't remember his announcement of a 90-day period. If I did see it, I just didn't take it seriously enough to remember it. It was hard to take anything Holder said about indicting Legs Dimon or Pretty Boy Lloyd seriously.

C'mon, Doc. Don't tell me you took Holder seriously.

The fact is that not frog-marching Jamie Dimon and other banksters to stand trial under federal indictments over the 2008 meltdown is the major failure of the Obama administration. He will leave office in 2017 without any adequate regulation in place to assure that such a meltdown will not happen again The banking industry needed to be re-regulated and it wasn't. The Glass-Spielgal Act is still under repeal. Banksters are still gambling with our savings and if they lose it, they'll reimburse the casino crowd before they reimburse us. They haven't mended their ways at all from how they did business before the meltdown. If they're caught doing anything illegal, they negotiate a plea where they pay a light fine that's far less than they made from criminal activity. That's not the way to make criminals mend their ways.

The banksters, of course, like this arrangement. Legs Dimon arrogantly told Senator Warren "so, hit me with a fine; we can afford it." Criminals like that are never too big to fail. They're just too big for their breeches.

Unknown Beatle

(2,672 posts)
18. Legs Dimon and Pretty Boy Lloyd
Mon May 18, 2015, 03:24 PM
May 2015

I'm stealing those, the names, not the actual persons, although I do wish there would be a bounty on their heads for financial crimes - bank robbery. It's so simple that it makes me wonder why I didn't come up with those names.

erronis

(15,287 posts)
10. Many of the important initiatives have been thrown into the phucket. DILLIGAS?
Mon May 18, 2015, 01:46 PM
May 2015

It's got to be hard to be on the point for so many years. One by one the ones that Did Look Like they Gave A Splat (maybe) are finding other things to do.

Don't worry, the same Too Big To Prosecute Friends-of will still be there to be prosecuted. The same corporations will pump sewage into our environment and bodies and will pump money into the political process.

The next administration can deal with them, just like the Bushies left the mess in the ME for the next can-kicker.

zeemike

(18,998 posts)
12. Did anyone really think there would be any indictments?
Mon May 18, 2015, 02:25 PM
May 2015

The 90 day rule was just to put it to bed.

woo me with science

(32,139 posts)
38. +1 How many carefully placed headlines did we see,
Wed May 20, 2015, 07:25 AM
May 2015

suggesting that it was just about to happen?

Many statutes of limitations expired years ago. Those deadlines always pass very quietly, just like the stories we kept trying to keep in the news months ago about how criminal bankers have been actively PROTECTED and those who tried to expose them fired or jailed.

The depth of the corruption is staggering and horrific.

One_Life_To_Give

(6,036 posts)
19. Ronnie Raygun's not in office anymore
Mon May 18, 2015, 03:48 PM
May 2015

As much as we don't like him. He and G H put nearly a thousand bankers away. The current admin prosecuted one Ponzi schemer.

Now that is truly sad!

n2doc

(47,953 posts)
21. Here's a good detailed report on the 1 unfortunate bankster….
Mon May 18, 2015, 07:30 PM
May 2015
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/04/magazine/only-one-top-banker-jail-financial-crisis.html?ref=magazine&_r=0

Why Only One Top Banker Went to Jail for the Financial Crisis

On the evening of Jan. 27, Kareem Serageldin walked out of his Times Square apartment with his brother and an old Yale roommate and took off on the four-hour drive to Philipsburg, a small town smack in the middle of Pennsylvania. Despite once earning nearly $7 million a year as an executive at Credit Suisse, Serageldin, who is 41, had always lived fairly modestly. A previous apartment, overlooking Victoria Station in London, struck his friends as a grown-up dorm room; Serageldin lived with bachelor-pad furniture and little of it — his central piece was a night stand overflowing with economics books, prospectuses and earnings reports. In the years since, his apartments served as places where he would log five or six hours of sleep before going back to work, creating and trading complex financial instruments. One friend called him an “investment-banking monk.”

Serageldin’s life was about to become more ascetic. Two months earlier, he sat in a Lower Manhattan courtroom adjusting and readjusting his tie as he waited for a judge to deliver his prison sentence. During the worst of the financial crisis, according to prosecutors, Serageldin had approved the concealment of hundreds of millions in losses in Credit Suisse’s mortgage-backed securities portfolio. But on that November morning, the judge seemed almost torn. Serageldin lied about the value of his bank’s securities — that was a crime, of course — but other bankers behaved far worse. Serageldin’s former employer, for one, had revised its past financial statements to account for $2.7 billion that should have been reported. Lehman Brothers, AIG, Citigroup, Countrywide and many others had also admitted that they were in much worse shape than they initially allowed. Merrill Lynch, in particular, announced a loss of nearly $8 billion three weeks after claiming it was $4.5 billion. Serageldin’s conduct was, in the judge’s words, “a small piece of an overall evil climate within the bank and with many other banks.” Nevertheless, after a brief pause, he eased down his gavel and sentenced Serageldin, an Egyptian-born trader who grew up in the barren pinelands of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, to 30 months in jail. Serageldin would begin serving his time at Moshannon Valley Correctional Center, in Philipsburg, where he would earn the distinction of being the only Wall Street executive sent to jail for his part in the financial crisis…


the rest at the link
 

Scuba

(53,475 posts)
28. Not Holder's fault. Neither Jamie nor Lloyd ordered any indictments.
Tue May 19, 2015, 05:46 AM
May 2015

Holder can only do what his bosses tell him to do.

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