The U.S. Justice System Must Focus on Elite Criminality

Two very important articles published in recent days serve to once again highlight America’s metastasizing elite criminality problem. A problem which our justice system simply refuses to address. This corrupt two-tier justice system is something I’ve been focused on from the very beginning of my writings, and I continue to see it as a civilization-level threat for this country if not aggressively addressed and confronted in the very near future.

The two articles in question focus on different aspects of untouchable elite culture in America. The first relates to the continued fraud pervasive in America’s largest financial institution, while the second covers a thirty year history of predatory sexual behavior by one of Hollywood’s biggest moguls, Harvey Weinstein. In both cases, countless people have known and reported on repeated abuses perpetrated by both the institution and the man, yet the U.S. justice system and the vast majority of “elite” culture happily help shield them from justice. Predators are predators, and elite predators are far more dangerous to society that your average street crook, so why does our justice situation deal with it in the exact opposite way?

Let’s start with the blockbuster article published in The Nation by the always informative David Dayen. The article is titled, How America’s Biggest Bank Paid Its Fine for the 2008 Mortgage Crisis—With Phony Mortgages!

Here’s just brief excerpt:

JPMorgan’s share of the settlement was $5.3 billion, but only $1.1 billion had to be paid in cash; the other $4.2 billion was to come in the form of financial relief for homeowners in danger of losing their homes to foreclosure. The settlement called for JPMorgan to reduce the amounts owed, modify the loan terms, and take other steps to help distressed Americans keep their homes. A separate 2013 settlement against the bank for deceiving mortgage investors included another $4 billion in consumer relief.

A Nation investigation can now reveal how JPMorgan met part of its $8.2 billion settlement burden: by using other people’s money.

Here’s how the alleged scam worked. JPMorgan moved to forgive the mortgages of tens of thousands of homeowners; the feds, in turn, credited these canceled loans against the penalties due under the 2012 and 2013 settlements. But here’s the rub: In many instances, JPMorgan was forgiving loans on properties it no longer owned.

The alleged fraud is described in internal JPMorgan documents, public records, testimony from homeowners and investors burned in the scam, and other evidence presented in a blockbuster lawsuit against JPMorgan, now being heard in US District Court in New York City.

Sounds hard to believe, but it’s true. Not only that, but as we’ve come to expect from the “rule of law” in America, it somehow never applies to that group of people with the greatest ability to financially destroy people and their lives. Bankers. For example, here’s some more from the same piece:

Federal appointees have been complicit in this as well. E-mails show that the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight, charged by the government with ensuring the banks’ compliance with the two federal settlements, gave JPMorgan the green light to mass-forgive its loans. This served two purposes for the bank: It could take settlement credit for forgiving the loans, and it could also hide these loans—which JPMorgan had allegedly been handling improperly—from the settlements’ testing regimes.

“No one in Washington seems to understand why Americans think that different rules apply to Wall Street, and why they’re so mad about that,” said former congressman Miller. “This is why.”

Most of the loans that JPMorgan released—and received settlement credit for—were all but worthless. Homeowners had abandoned the homes years earlier, expecting JPMorgan to foreclose, only to have the bank forgive the loan after the fact. That forgiveness transferred responsibility for paying back taxes and making repairs back to the homeowner. It was like a recurring horror story in which “zombie foreclosures” were resurrected from the dead to wreak havoc on people’s financial lives.

Federal officials knew about the problems and did nothing. In July 2014, the City of Milwaukee wrote to Joseph Smith, the federal oversight monitor, alerting him that “thousands of homeowners” were engulfed in legal nightmares because of the confusion that banks had sown about who really owned their mortgages. In a deposition for the lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase, Smith admitted that he did not recall responding to the City of Milwaukee’s letter.

Few would expect Jeff Sessions’s Justice Department to pursue such a case, but what this sorry episode most highlights is the pathetic disciplining of Wall Street during the Obama administration.

JPMorgan’s litany of acknowledged criminal abuses over the past decade reads like a rap sheet, extending well beyond mortgage fraud to encompass practically every part of the bank’s business. But instead of holding JPMorgan’s executives responsible for what looks like a criminal racket, Obama’s Justice Department negotiated weak settlement after weak settlement. Adding insult to injury, JPMorgan then wriggled out of paying its full penalties by using other people’s money.

The larger lessons here command special attention in the Trump era. Negotiating weak settlements that don’t force mega-banks to even pay their fines, much less put executives in prison, turns the concept of accountability into a mirthless farce. Telegraphing to executives that they will emerge unscathed after committing crimes not only invites further crimes; it makes another financial crisis more likely. The widespread belief that the United States has a two-tiered system of justice—that the game is rigged for the rich and the powerful—also enabled the rise of Trump. We cannot expect Americans to trust a system that lets Wall Street fraudsters roam free while millions of hard-working taxpayers get the shaft.

Of course, this is just the latest when it comes to JP Morgan. I highlighted the firm’s rap sheet in last month’s post, Which is Fraudulent – Bitcoin or JP Morgan?

How many JP Morgan executives have gone to jail?

Now onto Harvey Weinstein, a guy whose cretinous behavior has been the biggest non-secret in Hollywood for decades. Just like with banker crooks, he mere settles cases and continues to walk around, freely hunting the next defenseless victim.

The New York Times article published yesterday exposing some of this grotesque man’s history was extraordinary and I suggest everyone read it. Here’s just a little from the piece, Harvey Weinstein Paid Off Sexual Harassment Cases for Years:

Two decades ago, the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein invited Ashley Judd to the Peninsula Beverly Hills hotel for what the young actress expected to be a business breakfast meeting. Instead, he had her sent up to his room, where he appeared in a bathrobe and asked if he could give her a massage or she could watch him shower, she recalled in an interview.

“How do I get out of the room as fast as possible without alienating Harvey Weinstein?” Ms. Judd said she remembers thinking.

In 2014, Mr. Weinstein invited Emily Nestor, who had worked just one day as a temporary employee, to the same hotel and made another offer: If she accepted his sexual advances, he would boost her career, according to accounts she provided to colleagues who sent them to Weinstein Company executives. The following year, once again at the Peninsula, a female assistant said Mr. Weinstein badgered her into giving him a massage while he was naked, leaving her “crying and very distraught,” wrote a colleague, Lauren O’Connor, in a searing memo asserting sexual harassment and other misconduct by their boss.

“There is a toxic environment for women at this company,” Ms. O’Connor said in the letter, addressed to several executives at the company run by Mr. Weinstein.

Dozens of Mr. Weinstein’s former and current employees, from assistants to top executives, said they knew of inappropriate conduct while they worked for him. Only a handful said they ever confronted him.

Mr. Weinstein enforced a code of silence; employees of the Weinstein Company have contracts saying they will not criticize it or its leaders in a way that could harm its “business reputation” or “any employee’s personal reputation,” a recent document shows. And most of the women accepting payouts agreed to confidentiality clauses prohibiting them from speaking about the deals or the events that led to them.

In interviews, some of the former employees who said they had troubling experiences with Mr. Weinstein asked a common question: How could allegations repeating the same pattern — young women, a powerful male producer, even some of the same hotels — have accumulated for almost three decades?

“It wasn’t a secret to the inner circle,” said Kathy DeClesis, Bob Weinstein’s assistant in the early 1990s. She supervised a young woman who left the company abruptly after an encounter with Harvey Weinstein and who later received a settlement, according to several former employees.

In March 2015, Mr. Weinstein had invited Ambra Battilana, an Italian model and aspiring actress, to his TriBeCa office on a Friday evening to discuss her career. Within hours, she called the police. Ms. Battilana told them that Mr. Weinstein had grabbed her breasts after asking if they were real and put his hands up her skirt, the police report says.

The claims were taken up by the New York Police Department’s Special Victims Squad and splashed across the pages of tabloids, along with reports that the woman had worked with investigators to secretly record a confession from Mr. Weinstein. The Manhattan district attorney’s office later declined to bring charges.

As disturbing as all that is, it might be the tip of the iceberg. Here’s some additional info from an article published today by The Daily Beast, Hollywood’s Loud Silence on Harvey Weinstein:

The Times piece later identified the 1997 actress as Rose McGowan, who starred in the 1996 film Scream, which was distributed by Weinstein-owned Dimension Films. In October 2016, McGowan tweeted, “Because my ex sold our movie to my rapist for distribution #WhyWomenDontReport.” It’s not known whom McGowan was referring to, though she dated filmmaker Robert Rodriguez from 2006 to 2009, and their film Planet Terror was distributed by Weinstein in 2007.

In the wake of the blockbuster Times exposé, The Daily Beast reached out to dozens of prominent actors, actresses, and filmmakers—who both have andhave not worked with Weinstein—only to receive many replies of “no comment” and plenty of radio silence.

Elite criminals are the most dangerous criminals on earth, but our justice system treats them like well-meaning philosopher kings who deserve endless breaks in the face of rampant unethical and often evil behavior. It should be completely obvious to everyone that the only reason elite crooks get treated with kid gloves is because they’re rich and powerful. The end result of this dereliction of justice is those entrusted with protecting the public have willingly created an entrenched, untouchable, distributed, criminal class which spans across and leads all major industries in America.

As I tweeted earlier today:

If we don’t get a grip on this now and begin to marshal our resources against the most dangerous criminals in America — those from the highest echelons of U.S. society — the country will continue to unravel and in an increasingly dangerous and chaotic fashion.

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In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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22 thoughts on “The U.S. Justice System Must Focus on Elite Criminality”

  1. Epstein paid three women $5.5 million to end underage-sex lawsuits
    Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017
    WEST PALM BEACH

    Ending years of speculation about how much Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey Epstein paid young women who claimed he used them as sex toys, court documents filed last week show he shelled out $5.5 million to settle lawsuits with three of more than two dozen teens who sued him.

    Responding to requests from Epstein’s attorneys in a complex lawsuit that was spawned by the sex scandal, attorney Bradley Edwards said the politically-connected 64-year-old convicted sex offender paid more than $1 million to each of the three women Edwards represented.

    RELATED: Complete Palm Beach Daily News coverage of the Epstein case

    Identified in court papers only by their initials or pseudonyms because of the nature of the allegations and their youthful ages, L.M. was paid $1 million, E.W. $2 million and Jane Doe $2.5 million, Edwards said of the settlements he negotiated with Epstein to end the lawsuits.

    Jack Goldberger, one of Epstein’s criminal defense attorneys, on Tuesday declined comment on the revelations, citing confidentiality agreements that were part of the settlements. For the same reason, he declined to say whether Epstein paid similar amounts to settle roughly two dozen lawsuits filed by other young women filed against Epstein, claiming he paid them for sex when some were as young as 14 years old.

    Only after federal prosecutors agreed to drop their investigation of Epstein, did he agreed to plead guilty to two prostitution charges in Palm Beach County Circuit Court. In federal court records, prosecutors claim one of the key reasons they agreed to drop their case was Epstein’s agreement to settle lawsuits filed against him by dozens of his underage victims.

    http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime–law/exclusive-epstein-paid-three-women-million-end-underage-sex-lawsuits/8GEJk4YYa2X4ffig4HAqyJ/

    Reply
  2. You are absolutely correct. And particularly with the financial crimes. it does not seem to matter that banks and the financial industry in general routinely commit criminal acts. This goes back to at least the Clinton administration. Example: when thousands of investors lost money, the US attorney’s office went after the small brokers, but ignored the evidence that Bear Stearns knowingly, improperly cleared the trades so as to conceal the true market for the shares from the public, thereby enabling the fraud.

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  3. Satan rarely casts out Satan. In my home town, a 50+ man illegal drugs cartel and satanic coven was operating, physicians, dentists, attorneys, public servants including law enforcement and FBI, and even businessmen, and there wasn’t anywhere the lo cal good people could turn to get rid of the drugs. Had to call on God and appeal to their conscience. Many of them didn’t have one. Leave them to God and just do more good.

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    • Your point is good. The problem is the proliferation of evil in the corridors of power. They perform heinous acts which, if made public, would ruin them. This keeps them loyal to each other.

      Unfortunately, I am not sure God is dealing with this. It only seems to get worse as time passes. But yet, you may be right, in that they have created such a mess of the world, it may simply collapse around them and bring them all down in a heap.

      Let us hope, because there is no way to tackle them when they control the law enforcement agencies, the judiciary and the legislatures. Sad.

  4. As for the justice sytem and much else, the Dialogue is controlled by the inside powers, as Michael Jones of Culture Wars points out. Said controllers will not be prosecuted.

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  5. Abe Lincoln once said that “When the law only applies to some people and not everyone equally, then all law is at an end.” Welcome to the end.

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  6. Back before ww1 a few bankers got together and wrote a bill that brought back a central bank to USA. In 1913 the FED, a privet owned bank collecting interest on our money came into existence. This bank was owned by a few rich and powerful bankers and it was illegal for the citizens to even know who they are. In 1913 income tax started too. So the citizens could pay the high interest rates to the bankers. In 1917 Morgan started asking around about how many newspapers it was needed to control the opinion of the populace. The answer came back as 25. This was recorded back in 1917 in a journal by a honest politician. Then Morgan proceeded with some friends to buy up all twenty five newspapers and replaced the editor in all 25 papers. Of course after collecting interest on our money for 4 years these bankers now had the funds for such en devours.

    The bankers own America, so stop asking for justice because this isn’t your country anymore. It belongs to them. They paid for it with our money.

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  7. Then afterwards Morgan set up a organization to manege and develop crowd psychology tactics to control the populace through the papers. This organization is called the “council on foreign relations” and is located in NYC.

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  8. Like a Ayn Rand novel, I shrugged a long time ago. A quit being a Award winning Heating Designer because in the bankers America being productive to society wont earn enough money to put a roof over my three kids and put them through college so I became a Trader. Now I am waitng for everything to collapse and then I will put on one “Big Short” trade and make my big money.

    Reply
    • Good luck John. In the book, “The Big Short”, those who saw the crash in mortgage backed securities coming had a very hard time cashing in. Jim Ricards predicts a massive freeze up, Ice Nine, he calls it, where all banks, brokerages and asset managers freeze their accounts while the nobs figure out how to steal all the rest of the money.

      I like gold and also crypto. When all else is frozen, crypto may be able to keep some form of economy going while the legacy system collapses.

  9. “Elite criminals are the most dangerous criminals on earth, but our justice system treats them like well-meaning philosopher kings who deserve endless breaks in the face of rampant unethical and often evil behavior.”

    This right out in the open two-tier justice system began in 1990 when Michael Milken was convicted and sentenced to 10 years for massive securities fraud and sent to a country club white collar minimum security prison.

    While there he was allowed to leave the prison every other weekend for “conjugal visits” with his wife at a local hotel. He served a grand total of 22 months and after paying the fines the court ordered him to pay he still netted around $330 million.

    As I said to my father at the time; “Every inherently greedy and dishonest little shithead getting their masters in finance or business at an Ivy League school just got the crime does pay big time green light from the justice department”.

    I was right. But I have to admit that I vastly underestimated just how bad it was going to actually get over the following 20+ years. Bush 1 certainly did his part by eliminating the enforcement arm of the NASD in 1991.

    Skip to today and Milken is now a billionaire who has spent millions to make himself look like a “well meaning” “Philanthropist”. When in reality he has continued to be what he has always been, a lying, cheating, thief.

    None of this is going to change until there is a complete and total burn down of the current system allowing for a Phoenix to rise from the ashes.

    That’s at least 10 years off.

    Reply
    • From what I’ve read, Milken was not guilty of the laws at the time, but there was significant twisting of laws to convict him. Supposedly the NY banks were behind his prosecution, because his business, being in Philadelphia, was a threat to the organized crime of the NY banks. And once he was in prison, and his company shut down, all the assets were transferred to the NY banks.

  10. I vote for employing Vietnam’s tactics of prosecuting financial criminals, see the Washington Posts article.
    Vietnam’s punishment for corrupt bankers: Death

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  11. DjangoCat – God is possible. We are only a homemaker and if we can get to God and gain His guidance to help our people, then we know it is possible for everyone. We just need to walk and talk with Him and acknowledge Him. He is never religious, never takes us to church, deals only with the truth, and only sees the color of our hearts. We Identify Him as Delamer Duverus, meaning “the giver of truth”. Our mentor heard his voice before us and warned against the Oligarchy many years ago. We could share his writings.

    It was He who knew who was part of the drug cartel, even our own physicians. He never wanted to incarcerate the men, for that would have destroyed the lives of their families and children. He just wanted them to put down what was harming the people. Heavens, none of them needed the money.

    Rocketman – thanks for Abe’s quote. I’m saving that one. This is why we need men of God. He can guide them. None of you understand the forces working in our nation. They are not human and they work together by mind, whereas we are all separate. However, under God’s guidance, He can help.

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  12. The politicians, prosecutors, judges,and top dogs in mainstream media are themselves part of a broad elite class, and so disinclined to be harsh. Having money for good lawyers certainly helps too.

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  13. As to the Harvey Weinstein story. Man am I going to have some fun with my liberal card carrying Democrat friends on this one.

    Yeah, it’s all about women’s rights, ain’t it!

    All of these so called “progressive” politicians and entertainers have known all about this POS for years.

    Bill and Hillary, Obama, the list goes on and on.

    Reply

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