What part of this example is so hard to understand? Nothing really. it is just that the criminals elsewhere are using a little cash to stay out of jail all while still in control of the money. This money has also been spent freely to ensure useful idiots are actually elected.
I stated simply in 2008 that all those whose name appears on a failed AAA bond needed to be charged with treason. No more and no less. Could i make it any clearer? Do you realize all those in the security business outside the gilded circle survived handily? They all knew better and do recall that i spent twenty productive years as a securities professional selling securities and i certainly know better than to allow what happened.
There is no real mystery to the business. What is the issue is personal greed and its management. I suspect that every three generations we need a hanging party to help renew the faith...
Iceland Jail Top Bankers For 46 Years, Europe ‘Outraged’
I stated simply in 2008 that all those whose name appears on a failed AAA bond needed to be charged with treason. No more and no less. Could i make it any clearer? Do you realize all those in the security business outside the gilded circle survived handily? They all knew better and do recall that i spent twenty productive years as a securities professional selling securities and i certainly know better than to allow what happened.
There is no real mystery to the business. What is the issue is personal greed and its management. I suspect that every three generations we need a hanging party to help renew the faith...
Iceland Jail Top Bankers For 46 Years, Europe ‘Outraged’
Iceland has differed from the rest of Europe and
the US by allowing bankers to be prosecuted as criminals, rather than
treating them as a protected species.
Iceland has found nine top bankers guilty and sentenced them to decades in jail for crimes related to the 2008 economic crash.
On Thursday Iceland’s Supreme Court returned a guilty verdict for all nine defendants in the Kaupthing market manipulation case, after a long running court trial which began in April last year.
Kaupthing was a big international bank headquartered in Reykjavik, Iceland. It expanded internationally for years, but collapsed in 2008 under huge debts, crippling the small nation’s economy.
By demanding that bankers be subject to the same laws as the rest of society, Iceland opted for a very different strategy in the wake of the financial crisis to rest of Europe and the US, where banks were fined nominal amounts, and directors and chief executives escaped punishment altogether.
While the US and UK governments provided bail outs and government
stakes for their big banks with tax-payers’ money – essentially giving
bankers the green light to continue behaving in the same way – Iceland
adopted a different approach, declaring it would let the banks go bust,
weed out and punish the criminal element at the top of the banks, and
protect the savings of the people.
\Former director of the bank, Hreiðar Már Sigurðsson, who was found
guilty and jailed last year, was also given a six-month extension to his
sentence on Thursday.
According to Iceland Monitor, the bankers are found guilty of crimes relating
to deceitfully financing share purchases – the bank lent money for the
purchase of the shares while using its own shares as collateral for the
loans.
They are also found guilty of creating a misleading demand for Kaupthing shares by means of deception and pretence.
The Icelandic Approach
These guilty verdicts are just the latest in Iceland’s unprecedented
clampdown since the economic crash. Authorities have been pursuing bank
bosses, chief executives, civil servants and corporate looters for
crimes ranging from insider trading to fraud, money laundering,
misleading markets, breach of duties and lying to officials.
Meanwhile the economy that collapsed so spectacularly has rebounded
after letting its banks go bust, imposing capital controls and
protecting its own citizens rather than the elite bank bosses
responsible for the mess.
This determination to hold people to account for actions that caused
intense financial misery contrasts strongly with the U.K., the rest of
Europe and the US. Yes, fines were imposed on the 20 biggest banks for
transgressions such as market manipulation, money-laundering and
mis-selling mortgages, but these costs fall on shareholders and, by
hampering the banks’ ability to lend, they also punish the rest of
society.
Meanwhile the guilty senior bankers, thanks to government bail outs,
carry on making enormous profits and collecting their obscene bonuses as
though nothing happened.
Last year, the International Monetary Fund declared that Iceland had
achieved economic recovery “without compromising its welfare model” or
unduly punishing its citizens for crimes committed by its bankers.
Iceland is right to jail it’s bankers – and the US and Europe
is wrong to merely slap a few wrists and give the green light to future
outrages.
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