New Revelation that AG Eric Holder Is Protecting JPMorgan Chase NYC From Criminal Investigation
MARK KARLIN, EDITOR OF BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT
Providing additional evidence that the Obama Administration's Department of Justice (DOJ) is protecting "banks too big to fail," Pulitzer Prize winning financial reporter David Cay Johnston has revealed that the DOJ has refused to force JPMorgan Chase to comply with an ongoing investigation into the bank's possible knowledge of Bernard Madoff's fraud scheme of a few years ago.
The information obtained might reveal that the bank chose to financially benefit from criminal activity:
Providing additional evidence that the Obama Administration's Department of Justice (DOJ) is protecting "banks too big to fail," Pulitzer Prize winning financial reporter David Cay Johnston has revealed that the DOJ has refused to force JPMorgan Chase to comply with an ongoing investigation into the bank's possible knowledge of Bernard Madoff's fraud scheme of a few years ago.
The information obtained might reveal that the bank chose to financially benefit from criminal activity:
Bernard Madoff’s principal bank,
JPMorgan Chase, has for years obstructed federal bank examiners trying
to ascertain what it knew about his gigantic Ponzi scheme, an official
document obtained by Newsweek shows.
The Justice Department refused
in September to back up Treasury inspector general staff who wanted a
court order to enforce a subpoena, in effect shielding JPMorgan from
law enforcement, the October 8 document shows.
The Justice Department told the
Treasury Inspector General “that they were denying the request for
enforcement of the subpoena,” which means officials “could not undertake
further actions regarding this matter,” wrote Jason J. Metrick, the
inspector general special-agent-in-charge.
Johnston disclosed the latest damning indication of the DOJ shielding Wall Street banks that dominate US finanes in a Newsweek article.
The DOJ pattern of not exploring potential big bank criminal activity
was admitted to by Attorney General Eric Holder -- as BuzzFlash at
Truthout reported at the time -- as recalled by Johnston:
Last March Attorney General Eric
Holder told a Senate hearing he was afraid to prosecute the Too Big to
Fail Banks, as it could do even more economic damage, in effect
declaring them Too Big to Prosecute.
“The size of some of these
institutions becomes so large that it does become difficult for us to
prosecute them when we are hit with indications that if you do
prosecute, if you do bring a criminal charge, it will have a negative
impact on the national economy -- perhaps even the world economy,"
Holder testified.
Although Madoff has been serving an effective life sentence
in prison since 2009, a special Treasury Department inspector general
with independent powers is still trying to ascertain if JPMorgan Chase
turned a blind eye to Madoff's mega-ponzi scheme that left many
individuals and organizations (including charities) with enormous
losses.
The bottom line of the Obama DOJ's position is that
Americans are left vulnerable to criminal bank activity on a massive
scale because if they were held accountable, Holder believes, the US
economic system would be hurt.
But the 2007-2008 crash showed what such uninvestigated and unprosecuted behavior leads to.
In short, the chief law enforcement officer of the United
States is authorizing our largest banks to engage in criminal behavior
because, he claims, preventing them from doing so might negatively
impact our economy? But hasn't it prima facie been proven again and
again that the likely criminal bank activity undermines our financial
system?
This is so nonsensical, such a defilement of justice and
economic integrity that there must be another answer to Holder's
protection of suspected (and as indicated in civil and other suits)
criminal actions on Wall Street.
The financial masters of the universe call the shots in
DC. Holder and his law firm base, Covington and Burling, represent many
of them -- and Congress and the White House are beholden to them for
campaign cash and revolving door jobs.
(Photo: SEIU International)
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