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Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Money, Banking, Finance, and Insurance (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: Defaulting banks - where will it stop? (/thread-133.html) |
Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Jan Klimkowski - 07-11-2008 Attempting to read the tealeaves - always a precarious & imprecise art - suggests major elite in-fighting is currently taking place. The $10 trillion figure mentioned at the end of this AFP article is coming up in a lot of online chatter about specific claims of insider, criminal, looting with the money "hidden" from the reach of international regulators. If $10 trillion really has been stolen, then the imposition of what Naomi Klein describes as Shock Therapy must be imminent. Quote:France, Germany Lead Bid To Write New Tax Havens Blacklist http://www.nasdaq.com/aspxcontent/NewsStory.aspx?cpath=20081021\ACQDJON200810210821DOWJONESDJONLINE000332.htm&&mypage=newsheadlines&title=France,%20Germany%20Lead%20Bid%20To%20Write%20New%20Tax%20Havens%20Blacklist Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Jan Klimkowski - 07-11-2008 Couldn't happen to a nicer company... ![]() Quote:Moody's Cuts Rio Tinto's Rating Outlook on Lower Metal Prices http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&refer=australia&sid=aV4eSr.q0Io8 Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Magda Hassan - 07-11-2008 Yes, you're right Jan. It couldn't happen to a better company . However, Moody's is one of the entrail readers who gave AAA rating to the mortgage backed securities aka toxic junk now floating around polluting the economy and costing ordinary workers billions. Does anyone trust them to tell night from day? Could they organise a piss up in a brewery?span.jajahWrapper { font-size:1em; color:#B11196; text-decoration:underline; } a.jajahLink { color:#000000; text-decoration:none; } span.jajahInLink:hover { background-color:#B11196; } Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Jan Klimkowski - 07-11-2008 Obama's economic team. In post #107 of this thread, Michael Hudson speculates that Rubin & co may be in the process of inflicting the same Shock Therapy on the US that Rubin personally inflicted on Russia in the 90s... Quote:Obama appoints advisers including Buffetthttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/uselection2008/3394087/Obama-appoints-advisers-including-Buffett.html Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - David Guyatt - 08-11-2008 Jan Klimkowski Wrote:The $10 trillion figure mentioned at the end of this AFP article is coming up in a lot of online chatter about specific claims of insider, criminal, looting with the money "hidden" from the reach of international regulators. If $10 trillion really has been stolen, then the imposition of what Naomi Klein describes as Shock Therapy must be imminent. I am not surprised by this figure of $10 trillion. Black money from the drugs trade, arms trade and all other criminal activities has been filtering into offshore accounts for decades. That money is then put back to work in legitimate business enterprises. The key to this was outlined by Michele Sindona when in prison and slightly before his death when he was interviewed by Nick Tosches for his book "Power On Earth". I very much suspect this is how Hedge funds have accrued so much clout to play and manipulate the markets. Also, from Joel's website the following statement: http://www.isgp.eu/dutroux_and_nebula/Beyond_Dutroux_part_two_Nebula.htm Quote:"To comprehend this nebula, it is necessary to abandon traditional financial or political logic; this is not merely a question of nation, political party, or of ordinary economics... Our conclusion would be that at least over the last twenty years, the economic powers, some of which mafia types, have allied themselves with political forces and organized criminal structures, and reached the 4th stage of money laundering, namely, Absolute Power. It has been specified to us that at the present moment these characters control 50% of the world economy."Note the date of this report was 14 years ago... Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Linda Minor - 08-11-2008 David Guyatt Wrote:I am not surprised by this figure of $10 trillion. Black money from the drugs trade, arms trade and all other criminal activities has been filtering into offshore accounts for decades. That money is then put back to work in legitimate business enterprises. Here's something I wrote about ten years ago, which I found on my computer: In 1964 Sindona founded Euromarket Money Brokers (commonly known as Moneyrex) to deal in debt brokerage and in buying and selling of spot and future currencies. Sindona described what Moneyrex did as follows: "We had ten Telex machines, twenty telephones. . . . Say Barclays Bank of California needed $100 million. We go to the Telex, the telephone. We call Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, Bank of Tokyo, Chase Manhattan. We quote a rate of interest that Barclays is willing to pay, say eleven and a quarter percent. They say OK, and they transfer $100 million automatically. To our account then is automatically credited one-eighth of one percent of $100 million, or maybe one-sixteenth, one thirty-second of one percent, depending on the fickleness of the market. We never took risks, there was no speculation with Moneyrex--just commissions, brokerage fees."1 Since as early as 1959 when Sindona started Banca Privata, he had been acquainted with David M. Kennedy, the president and chairman of the Board of Continental Illinois Bank. Kennedy, a Mormon from Utah, who worked for the Federal Reserve in Washington, D.C. for 16 years before going to Chicago, became Secretary of the Treasury during the Nixon administration.2 The two men in 1968 attempted to found an Italian investment bank that would "rival the great British banks in the field of international commerce." 3 The other partners in the venture were Hambros Bank and Lehman Brothers of New York, an investment banking partnership which later became Shearson, Lehman. The attempt failed, Sindona claimed, because of sabotage by Enrico Cuccia, director of Mediobanca, the largest investment bank in Italy. Sindona believed Cuccia spread rumors to the press that Sindona was operating on behalf of the Mafia. According to Penny Lernoux, Sindona did have origins "in Sicily, which took over from Marseilles as the world's heroin center when the French Connection was broken in the early 1970s."4 Chuck Giancana, brother of Chicago mobster Sam Giancana, stated in his book Double-Cross, that "millions of dollars flowed to Continental Illinois, a bank then heavily invested in Finibank, a Swiss bank owned in part by the Vatican and controlled by financier Michele Sindona."5 Other money was couriered by Catholic priests to Mexico and placed in Central American banks, most commonly in Panama, from which the funds were diverted to Milan and then to the Vatican Bank in Rome, from which they could be transferred to banks and companies controlled by Sindona. Sindona was associated with Paul Marcinkus, secretary of the Vatican bank, who as a Chicago priest, had been used in the 1940's and early 50's by Sam Giancana as a courier to funnel money from the diocese to the Vatican, and who later was accused of international money laundering and involvement in the murder of Pope John Paul I. Chuck Giancana also reported that his brother had assisted the CIA in laundering its money through the same channels, in exchange for contributions to Catholic charities. In January 1969 an allegation appeared in Le Figaro of Paris claiming that through Sindona, "the Bank of America had come to serve 'Frank Sinatra and the powerful financial interests of certain Siciliens d'Amerique who seemed to gather around the singer.'"6 In August 1973, after Sindona purchased Loews' stock in Franklin National Bank in New York, an article by Dan Cordtz appeared in Fortune stating that there was no documentary basis for the rumors connecting Sindona to the Mafia. Nevertheless, in 1973, Sindona approached Bank of America, which: had been founded by Amodeo Gianini, an Italian immigrant to San Francisco. Now, at the suggestion of the head of the Bank of America's Italian subsidiary, Banca d'America e d'Italia, Sindona proposed to Giannini's daughter, Claire, that the Bank of America refresh its Italian roots. This refreshment, of course, should take the form of Michele Sindona's acquisition of 10, perhaps 15, percent of the bank's stock. The founder's daughter responded to the notion with charmed approval, and Sindona undertook a formal presentation to the bank's administration, headed by Tom Clausen. While Sindona's talks with Clausen progressed, David Kennedy informally approached the Federal Reserve on Sindona's behalf. He reported to Sindona that no one in Washington would deny his Bank of America plans as long as he simultaneously sold his interest in Franklin.7 Franklin Bank was declared insolvent on October 8, 1974. In July 1978 the FDIC, as Receiver for the bank, filed suit against Lawrence Tisch, Loews Corporation and Lawton General Corp., a subsidiary, claiming: (1) that Mr. Tisch misused his position as a director of FNB and its parent, Franklin New York Corporation (FNYC) and "inside information" to obtain a premium for defendants, the Company and Lawton, on the sale of 1,000,000 shares of FNYC common stock to Fasco International Holding, S.A. (Fasco), a company then controlled by Michele Sindona; (2) that Mr. Tisch misused his position as a director of FNB and FNYC to "facilitate" various steps whereby Sindona and his associates were placed in positions of management control of FNB and, particularly, its international business, as a result of which Sindona caused FNB to suffer substantial damages; and (3) that Mr. Tisch and the defendant corporations owed a fiduciary duty to FNYC and FNB which was breached by alleged failure to make proper investigation of Sindona.8 In 1980 Sindona was sentenced to 25 years in a U.S. federal prison for fraud, misappropriation of funds and perjury in connection with the draining of funds from Franklin National Bank.9 In 1982 he was indicted with 75 Italian Mafiosi in a heroin conspiracy and was extradited to Italy in 1986 for trial on charges of ordering the murder of the Italian judge involved in liquidating Sindona's assets. He died in jail of cyanide poisoning four days after his conviction. Before he died he was interviewed by Nick Tosces for the book mentioned above, which sets out Sindona's descriptions of various means of laundering money and of the potential for destroying a country's monetary system. The following is an intriguing section of the book: . . .[T]he central bank of Hungary, acting on behalf of the Soviet government, placed an order through Moneyrex to sell [the grain contracts] short $20 billion. Sindona realized that Moscow, having closely followed the decline and instability of the dollar since the Smithsonian Agreement of August 1971, was betting that a greater, sudden decline was imminent--a decline that could be abetted by the massive short-sale order it was now placing. If Moscow succeeded, it should realize both a purely speculative profit and an indirect profit on the grain contracts, which had been stipulated in terms of more valuable dollars. . . . Sindona's reports of the Soviet plot were not acted upon by Nixon's economic advisors. In fact, as if orchestrated by the Kremlin itself, Secretary of the Treasury John Connally devalued the dollar by 10 percent on February 12.10 Thus in a few weeks' time, the Soviet Union realized a $4 billion profit: $2 billion in the selling short of the $20 billion (which had been bought largely by the Bundesbank) and $2 billion in the 10-percent devaluation of their grain-deal dollars. * * * It was also in late 1972 that Moneyrex had been approached by representatives of an international consortium looking to sell short in the equivalent of $6 billion in lire. At the time, the lira was veering toward a fall under strong speculative pressures; and Sindona saw that the proposed short sale would likely have catastrophic results. "They did not so much want to make money," he recalled. "They wanted to destroy the lira. They told me that there was $300 million in it for me. After giving the matter some thought, Sindona decided to call his friend Prime Minister Andreotti and to explain the situation. He told Andreotti that there was a way for the hunter to be captured by the game, and Andreotti told him to go forward as he saw fit. "I did not accept the consortium's order, and it was given to others. At the same time, I contacted a number of foreign banks and told them in confidence that the prime minister had authorized me to seek temporary support for the lira. Many of them agreed to cover the short sale. After about 400 billion lire had been sold short, the consortium abandoned its venture. The lira was being defended too strongly." Later in June 1973, Prime Minister Andreotti--who once had privately commented to Sindona, "I can't even draw a drink of water without first asking the communists"--resigned from office. Two days later, the lira plummeted. In discussing the plot to destroy the lira, Sindona seemed reluctant to reveal the identity of the consortium. "It sounds bad," he told me, waving his hand. "I already have enough enemies." Finally, he waved his hand in the opposite direction. "They were Jews," he said. "The people who handled the money and did the talking were from Geneva, but the money was from Israel." He shrugged, then he looked away. "Many strange things I learned, many very strange things."11 1 Ibid., p. 72. 2 Nick Tosches, Power on Earth: Michele Sindona's Explosive Story, 1986. 3 Tosces, p. 104. 4 Penny Lernoux, In Banks We Trust. 5 Sam and Chuck Giancana, Double-Cross: The Explosive, Inside Story of the Mobster Who Controlled America, Warner Books, 1992. 6 Tosces, p. 107. 7 Tosces, p. 145. 8 SEC 10-K filing for Loews Corporation, 1978. 9 David E. Scheim, Contract on America: The Mafia Murder of President John F. Kennedy, 1988. 10 Incidentally, in The Case Against the Vatican, the author reports that there was evidence from _____ indicating that John Connally had been paid off by ______, who was involved in schemes with Sindona. Incidentally, John Connally's Houston office was in Walter Mischer's building at 2727 North Loop East. Pete Brewton has also connected Connally in a business deal with Jim Bath, who was acting as trustee for Sheikh Kalid bin Mahfouz, and another Saudi, Gaith Pharoan, who was indicted in the BCCI scandal [p. 222]. In 1976 they bought into Main Bank of Houston, formerly owned by Bob Lanier. Connally sold his investment in 1980, and in 1981 Capital Bank's holding company, Mercantile Texas Corporation (later MCorp) bought Main Bank from Sheikh Khalid. Main Bank was situated on Block 271 in downtown Houston, just across Travis Street from the Houston Natural Gas Building. 11 Tosces, pp. 139-140. Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - David Guyatt - 08-11-2008 Thanks for this Linda. Sindona has always intrigued me. My copy of the Tosches book is now in storage and is not easily available, or I would go get it and copy the relevant section I had in mind. The general thrust was the abuse of the futures and options market and how these are used to invisibly launder vast sums of money via multiple entities domiciled in multiple jurisdictions. As I recall, it was way beyond the ability of national agencies to police the laundering system and the only chance was the formation of multinational agencies that could legally operate throughout the many jurisdictions - and so far as I know, this has never really happened effectively. The net result is that deep political forces -- organized crime, big business, politics etc., are able to accrue a stranglehold on the financial markets because of the vast oceans of money they have at their disposal. If 14 years ago this was estimated by the Belgian police to amount to 50% of the world economy, today it must be incredible. Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Linda Minor - 08-11-2008 David Guyatt Wrote:Thanks for this Linda. Sindona has always intrigued me. I did another search on my external hard-drive and turned up an excerpt from research I wrote up in 1997. Unfortunately, the footnote numbers get deleted, but I pasted the footnotes from that section below the text: What the George Bush chapter depicts is how one branch of the fondi took root in the fertile soil of Texas. There are more chapters to be written. Funds for investment in railroads, lumber companies, oil exploration—all the industries developed in Houston after 1836—came from somewhere other than Texas, which had no means of raising capital at the time. Capital was created by the issuance of bonds, which were sold in other locations—New York, Boston or Europe. But the fondi saw a means of acquiring power quickly by laundering profits earned from trading in slaves, liquor and opium through a new system of investment trusts developed in Philadelphia and continued in Hanover, Morris County, New Jersey—home of the Prudential Company. An examination of the first insurance fund in America, founded even before the 1776 revolution, can be very instructive. The very first life insurance company in America—the Presbyterian Ministers’ Fund--began about 1761 in Philadelphia. The date roughly corresponds with the date the first life insurance policies were written by the Equitable Assurance Society of London. The American company was a corporation dominated by Presbyterian clergymen to provide protection for their families after their demise. The insurance contracts were reinforced by bonds drawn by Benjamin Chew, Esq., one of the first of the “Philadelphia lawyers.” After a few decades of not very successful operation, the fund’s management came to include the Bevan family of Quakers who have been trustees in Barclays Bank for centuries. In fact, the American Bevan family began with Matthew L. Bevan, born in Pennsylvania in 1777 to a Quaker family. He became a Presbyterian in 1849, joining a church in Philadelphia pastored by Dr. Jacob Janeway, a Fund board member. Although Bevan was a shipping merchant for the firm of Bevan and Humphreys—largely engaged in cotton handling—his contacts with Barings Bank of Liverpool and with Nicolas Biddle’s son may have helped to get him named as president of the Presbyterian Ministers Fund, carrying with it a directorship on the board of the Insurance Company of North America (ICNA)--1822-41. A subsidiary of this insurance company was North America Land Company, one of the trustees of which was John Barclay, whose family in England were partners with the Bevans. Another Philadelphia associate was Robert Ralston, shipping merchant in the China trade, director of the ICNA, and a founder and director of the Second Bank of the U.S. and of the Philadelphia Exchange. Ralston was therefore acquainted with fellow church member, Matthew L. Bevan, Presbyterian Corporation president in 1844, who liquidated the assets of the Second Bank of the U.S. It is clear from the author’s tone of writing that he did not care for these 18th century Philadelphians. As he says: It is to be remembered that Philadelphia was then a city of Democrats. By the term “Democrats” we mean Democrats as opposed to Whigs. They were not exactly Jacksonian Democrats. They were silk-stocking Democrats. The group included such men as A.J. Dallas, John Winthrop Sargeant, and Charles J. Ingersoll. The real Jacksonian Democrats were the folk out on the frontiers—not very elegant gentlemen and ladies in every case, but people who thought for themselves and spoke out about it.
The reader senses the author is implying that around 1820 a group invaded the Presbyterian Corporation for the purpose of looting the fund, and the same people did the same thing to the National Bank, but he is afraid to say so in so many words. But he does furnish a number of clues to connect the managers of this fund to various other life insurance companies. He says there was an “interesting link” with the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York, in that the Rev. James W. Alexander, a Presbyterian minister insured under the fund, was the father of William C. Alexander, the first president of the Equitable, who was appointed by Henry Baldwin Hyde, the founder of the company, at the time he left Mutual Life of New York. The Equitable’s attorney was another son, James W. Alexander, later president of the company. The author was definitely angry at someone, but he seems not to have known who was at fault. He repeatedly compares the founders of the Fund with their successors. The founders were “Dissenters—Nonconformists…men who insisted on the right of private judgment, the right to think and to do for themselves.” Such men, he says, “may easily sell their birthright for a mess of pottage.” He then warns about the dangers of becoming complacent and regimented, and of allowing men without principles to think for us. Barclays’ banking business grew up in the country districts of England, carried on by successful traders who had correspondents in London, choosing to use the descendants of the goldsmith bankers, mainly grouped in Lombard Street and its vicinity. What these associations of traders set up was a clearing house system by which transactions were made possible between the country agents and a London bank without transporting cash. According to a history of Barclays Bank: English merchants abroad [in British colonies] gradually developed into bankers in much the same fashion; so that a century later, the bill [of lading] on London had become, what it still remains, the most valued form of international currency. Thus first the country bankers, and then the merchant bankers abroad, created the famous bill on London, which by the punctuality of payment of their London agents ultimately obtained world-wide repute.
The book explains British banking history, including the rise of joint-stock banking, limited liability and the great banking amalgamations after 1915, but it indicates that there was a “quite peculiar” manner which amalgamation has taken place in the case of Barclays bank, as follows: The nucleus of the combination consisted of two great firms united in 1888; Barclay, Bevan, Tritton & Co., and Ransom, Bouverie & Co.; each of them London agents of a number of country banks; and their first amalgamation of 1896, a most natural one, was a union with some twenty of these country banks, in which the Gurneys of Norwich and Backhouse of Darlington figured most actively. From time to time after 1896 there were many similar unions with local banks, especially in districts where the bank was not previously represented. Finally, after 1915, Barclays joined in the general movement for concentration on a far larger scale, and amalgamated with large centralised banch-banks of a different type. In the end it has become the third in size of our Big Five clearing banks, with deposits of over 300 million pounds, and 1838 bank offices.
A review of the Barclays history book found in The Economist in 1927 summarizes as follows: In the course of the narrative the reader is introduced to a large number of the best known names in English banking: Alexander, Backhouse, Barclay of course, Bevan, Birkbeck, Bolitho, Bosanquet, Bouverie, Buxton, Eaton, Foster, Gosling, Gurneys, Hoare, Leatham, Lucas, Pease, Peckover, Seebohm, Tritton, Tuke, Williams and many others. * * * * It is really astonishing how intimately the English banking families were inter-related. The writer was once shown by an English banker a very elaborate pedigree, some four feet square, on which he made out his descent from Sir John Houblon, the first Governor of the Bank of England. It further appeared from this tangled web of descents and marriages that he was also connected with almost every banking family one had heard of. This intimate and complicated relationship is fully illustrated in the book we are considering. It largely extends our printed record of such connections, and perhaps even more of those religious sympathies on which they were grounded. The Quakers have played a great part in English banking, nowhere more than in the Barclay group; the Huguenots may rank next; but a certain pietistic and mystical form of religious feeling seems to have characterised nearly all the original Barclay bankers.
According to the writers of Dope, Inc., the clearinghouse for the banks involved in the drug trade is the Assicurazioni Generali of Venice, whose major stockholders are the S.G. Warburg merchant bank of London and the Paris Banque de Pris et des Pays-Bas. The Warburg chairman, Lord Eric Roll of Ipsden became chairman of Kissinger Associates in 1984, replacing its founder, Lord Carrington, who had also been a director of Hambro’s Bank, when it financed Michele Sindona’s entry into the United States, as well as a director of Barclays Bank—which is, incidentally, the principal financier for the gold and diamond mining in Africa. As stated in Dope, Inc., these men are representatives of the ancient fondi who have collaborated for centuries. What is new and ominous is that the men who perform the dirty work of the fondi have moved out of shadows of Caribbean offshore banking and Hong Kong smuggling, and into the board rooms of the most powerful American financial institutions, and close to the councils of the United States government itself. For a description of how these bankers launder drug money, all we have to do is read the explanation given to Nick Tosches by Michele Sindona: “Only about 5 percent of all the options traded are executed on behalf of corporations wishing to hedge the currency risks of their international trade. The vast majority of the trading is purely speculative in nature, carried out by banks on behalf of their clients or themselves.
“In the international currency flow of some $60 trillion a year, it is extremely hard to distinguish those transactions carried out simply to realize legal profits from those carried out to launder dirty money. “So,” he [Michele Sindona] went on, “your dirty money has been deposited in Hong Kong or Singapore in the name of your ghost company. Now you buy, say, a yen option at 240 yen per dollar. This option gives you the right, but it does not obligate you, to buy 24 billion yen for $100 million six months from now. The premium for the option is $1 million. “If, during those six months, the yen falls to, say, 260 per dollar, you can buy the 24 billion yen in the spot market for $92 million, or you can sell the option contract. In either case, you make a profit of $7 million. That is, $8 milion less the $1 million premium. “Your counterpart in the deal is officially the bank in Hong Kong or Singapore. But, in reality, that bank is acting only on behalf of the ghost company that deposited the dirty money with them. Your real counterpart is yourself. Therefore, the $7 million profit you earn is not recorded as the bank’s loss, but as the loss of your anonymous bearer-share company. “The deal has turned $7 million in hidden dirty money into a clean profit. You haven’t even really lost the $1 million option premium, because it has been paid to the ghost company that was your counterpart in the deal—that is, to yourself. Your final profit from the transaction is reduced only by the commission you must pay the bank for the fiduciary transaction—here, about $20,000—and by the income tax you must pay to the American government. “In practice, a man who is expert at this system might buy and sell the same option many times during the six-month period, according to the fluctuations of the market. In this way, he could launder hundreds of millions of dollars in a relatively brief time. “All right,” he then said. “But what if, during those six months, the yen rises? What if it goes up to 220 per dollar? “In this case, you allow the option to expire unexercised, and you lose only the cost of the premium, $1 million, and the $20,000 commission to the bank. Bus, again, that $1 million loss is not actually a loss. It is offset by the $1 million in black profits earned by your ghost company as a premium for the option you have granted it. And, as you can deduct the $1 million ‘loss’ from your income, not only do you suffer no real losses, but you also, through this deduction, lower the tax you must pay on the laundered profits from other deals. “In these days of floating exchange rates, there are often rapid fluctuations within a span of hours. Working prudently, a man who knows what he’s doing can realize enormous profits without risk—profits that are not really profits, but dirty money made clean. “The same system can be used with commodities. You buy a futures contract valued at $100 million. Once again, the counterpart of the American bank or broker you use will be, upon your request, the bank in Hong Kong or Singapore where your dirty money has been deposited in the name of your bearer-share company. The Far East bank will receive a notice that the contract proposed by the American bank or broker is to be stipulated for the ghost company. The Far East bank takes no risk, and asks only a very slight margin as a formality—perhaps $1 million. “If the price of the commodity rises 10 percent, you make $10 million in profit. The counterpart company registers a loss in the same amount. Thus you have turned dirty money to clean…. “Whether currency or commodities options are used, the system is invincible. It is”—he looked away, feeling for a phrase—“it is the system at the end of the world.” He smiled wickedly then. “Your government, perhaps, should speak of this to Mr. Colby, the former CIA director, who is now privately employed by the Singapore government.” Whatever one’s opinion of the honesty or criminality of Sindona, his explanation of how money is laundered makes sense. As a matter of fact, Barclays Bank almost admitted as much in a March 9, 1997 article in the London Sunday Telegraph, which reported as follows: Every bank has vast derivative liabilities. Barclays, for example, admitted in its results that it had derivatives worth 922 billion pounds at the end of last year, up more than a quarter on 1995.
Barclays and its peers say the risk of these vast positions is nominal because they are all matched and hedged. If the financial markets crash the losses from one set of contracts will be offset by the profits on another. Barclays Bank is also involved in a consortium with International Trust Corporation (Itco), which was created by Anglo-American Mining—an arm of the Cecil Rhodes trust—a subsidiary of the Oppenheimer mining group, the Royal Bank of Canada and N.M. Rothschilds of London, to create banks, investment companies, tax shelters and trust funds in the Caribbean. The Assicurazioni Generali has taken over control of the Jefferson Insurance company located in Greensboro, N.C., whose chairman, Nathaniel Samuels (formerly of Kuhn Loeb) was a State Department crony of Henry Kissinger. Samuels was also New York chairman of the Banque Louis-Dreyfus Holding Company in the U.S. and a director of Banque Louis-Dreyfus of Paris. It appears that this insurance company may have been instrumental in providing funds for the purchase of the Esperson Building in Houston by George Butler of the Bank of Texas and Post Oak Bank. But their presence in Houston was not new. In another chapter, the history of these connections will be more fully explored. The question then becomes, if Barclays and similar banks which began as merchant banks, are involved in laundering drug money, who do the drug profits belong to? EIR writers have deduced that the drug trade is being run out of the companies chartered by the colonial governments dating from the time the Venetian bankers took over the British and Dutch oligarchical families. Notes: Alexander Mackie, Facile Princeps: The Story of the Beginning of Life Insurance in America (Lancaster, Pa.: Lancaster Press, 1956), p. 1. Mackie, p. 250. Mackie, p. 272. “History of Barclay’s Bank,” a review of a book compiled by P.W. Matthews, Chief Inspector of the Bankers’ Clearing House (1900-1920), edited by Anthony W. Tuke, Local Director of Barclays Bank (Blades, East and Blades, Ltd., 1926)—as reviewed by H.S. Foxwell in The Economic Journal, September 1927, pp. 411-417. Foxwell at p. 413. Foxwell at pp. 414-15. Dope, Inc., p. 108. Dope, Inc., p. 109. Nick Tosches, Power on Earth (New York: Arbor House, 1986), pp. 94-96. Dope, Inc. p. 108. London Sunday Times Team—Nicholas Fraser, Philip Jacobson, Mark Ottaway and Lewis Chester, Aristotle Onassis (Philadelphia and New York: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1977), p. 40. Fraser et al, p. 54. Fraser et al, p. 99. Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Jan Klimkowski - 08-11-2008 It seems the Fed is genuinely out of money, is levered at 50:1, and is currently engaged in "kiting" - aka counterfeiting or pass the parcel & hope the music doesn't stop when you're holding it.... Karl Denninger's latest analysis: Quote:Yes We Will (Have A Depression) http://market-ticker.org/archives/651-Here-Comes-The-Depression.html Defaulting banks - where will it stop? - Peter Lemkin - 09-11-2008 August talk by Michael Hudson here http://www.kpfa.org/archives/index.php?arch=29257 Title: From Cold War to Class War. Pretty depressing stuff - but he at least has ideas for how to resolve the situation and even [imagine that] tax the rich and get our money back from them...etc. You won't find him on Obama's anything list - only shit-list, if they even know he exists. |