Susanne
Posel,
Contributor
Activist Post
Activist Post
In June of 2012, Eric Bloom, former
chief executive, and Charles Mosely, head trader of Sentinel
Management Group (SMG) were indicted for
stealing $500 million in customer secured funds. Both Mosely and Bloom were
accused of “exposing” customer segregated funds “to a portfolio of highly risky
derivatives.”
These customer funds were used to
“back up personal investments” which were part of “collateral for a loan from
Bank of New York Mellon” (BNYM). This loan derived from stolen customer monies
was “used to purchase millions of dollars worth of high-risk, illiquid
securities, including collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, for a trading
portfolio that benefited Sentinel’s officers, including Mosley, Bloom and
certain Bloom family members.”
Fast forward to August 9th of 2012,
and the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals (CCA) rules that
BNYM can be moved to first in line of creditors over the customers that had
their funds stolen by SMG.
When a banking customer deposits
their money into their bank account, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and Securities Investor Protection
Corporation (SPIC) are in place to protect the customer from fraud or theft.
The ruling from the CCA means that these regulatory systems will not insure
customer funds, investments, or depositors and retirees who hold accounts in
banks. In fact, the banking institution is now legally allowed to use those
customer funds deposited as collateral, payment on debts for loans made, or free
use on the stock market to purchase investments as the bank sees
fit.
Fred Grede, SMG trustee, explained that
brokers are no longer required to keep customer money separate from their own.
“It does not bode well for the protection of customer
funds.”
Since the ruling gives banks the
right to co-mingle customer funds with their own, no crime can be committed for
the use of customer deposited monies.
According to
, former lawyer for the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York and Cleveland:
Basically, there is a new 7th
Circuit opinion saying that there is no reason to impose a constructive trust on
a lender’s takings of customers’ funds from client commodity firms that were
used (inappropriately) to secure the firms’ borrowings, as long as the lender
can say that it did not know WITH CERTAINTY that customers’ funds were being
repledged. Negligence and misappropriation (vs. knowing criminal intent) are now
a sufficient excuse for letting the lender keep the money and go to the head of
the line for distributions in bankruptcies of the client commodity
firms.
When a customer deposits money into
a bank, the bank essentially issues a
to have those funds available when
the customer returns to withdraw the deposited amount. When the same customer
withdraws funds from their account (whether checking or savings) the customer
assumes that the bank has enough funds to cover their withdrawal; including the
presumption that their monies are separate from the bank’s
assets.
Now, those funds are up for grabs by
the bank at their discretion without explanation to the customer – nor is the
bank obligated to recoup the customer should they “lose” those funds due to bad
loans, bankruptcy or stock market loss.
In Texas, Pamela Cobb, manager of
Bank of America (BoA), stole an
estimated $2 million from customer funds for personal use. Cobb had been taking
customer segregated funds since 2002.
Customers have complained of
fraudulent charges placed on their accounts that BoA cannot explain. When the
customer brings these charges to the in-house fraud department, they are given
the run-around until they acquiesce.
Other customers have had their
private possessions stolen right out of their safe deposit box held at BoA. The safe
deposit box was drilled into and the contents shipped to the BoA corporate
holding center in South Carolina.
In 1992 to 2003, Citibank called
their theft of
customer funds “account sweeping” wherein they stole more than $14 million from
customers nationally. Using computerized credit card processes to remove
positive and negative balances from customers, the scheme included double
payments or funds paid out on returned purchases that were then attributed back
to the customer.
At Chase bank, an
anonymous employee opened an account under a customer name (targeting an
Alzheimer’s sufferer), complete with a personal debit card. An estimated $300
per day was withdrawn on the fraudulent account. When family representing the
victim alerted Chase, they brushed them off with an internal investigation claim
– even as the family sought legal action.
Banking fraud against the elderly
has risen of late, since banks realize they can steal massive amounts of cash
from their aging customers with little to no repercussions.
The recent ruling on SMG has given
the banking industry the legal backing they have been lacking when stealing from
their customers.
Our financial institutions have been
planning for a financial collapse wherein the US government will not offer
assistance. The resolution
plans required by the Federal Reserve Bank, described schemes to have the
major domestic banks remain afloat by selling off assets, finding alternative
sources of funding, reducing risky measures that make a quick buck. These
strategies were to be perfected with “no assumption of extraordinary support
from the public sector.”
The mega-banks, through Wall Street,
are also acquiring firearms, ammunition and control over private mercenary
corporations like DynCorp and
"Blackwater" as authorized by the Department of Defense (DoD) directive 3025.18.
DynCorp is a military-based private
mercenary contractor that provides (among other services) intelligence training
and support, international security, contingency plans and operations.
Ninety-six percent of their funding is based on annual revenues from the US
federal government. The international branch of DynCorp has operated as a
“police force” even assisting local law enforcement during Hurricane
Katrina.
Named as investors for the amassing
of gun and ammunition manufacturers are Citibank, BoA, Barclays and Deutsche
Bank who are pouring money into Cerebus and Veritas Equity who have taken over
private corporations involved in the controlling riot
situations.
The Federal Reserve Bank, one of the
heads of banking cartels, has their own police force which operates as a
protective security for the Fed against the American public. As part of the
Federal Reserve Act signed in 1913, the designation of a Federal Law Enforcement
– special police officers that are exclusively regulated by authority of the Fed
(whether in uniform or plain clothes. These specialized police officers (who
train with Special Response Teams) can work in tandem with local law enforcement
or US federal agencies. These officers are heavily armed with semi-automatic
pistols, sub machine guns and assault rifles as well as body
armor.
Recently, when withdrawing cash from
an ATM, the daily allotted amount has decreased with some banks, thereby forcing
the customer to go into the branch and extract the difference with a teller. At
this point, according
to anonymous informants, the customer is taken into a backroom to be
questioned as to why they want the cash, what they are purchasing with the cash,
why they are not choosing to use a debit card or another form of digital trade
to make the purchase. These questions are not only intrusive, they are
illegal.
Some anonymous sources have said
that banking representatives who conduct the integrations are directed to keep a
record of customer responses on an online application that will be sent to the
FBI in conjunction with PATRIOT Act mandates on tracking banking
activity.
Customer funds are no longer secure,
no longer backed by the FDIC or other insurance corporations, and banks are
legally allowed to co-mingled customer money with other funds of the bank. The
only safe place for your money is with you.
Now is the time to close your bank
account.
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Susanne Posel is the Chief Editor of
Occupy Corporatism. Our alternative
news site is dedicated to reporting the news as it actually happens; not as it
is spun by the corporately funded mainstream media. You can find us on our Facebook
page.
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