THE DOT - if this turns orange or red be alert

Monday, February 23, 2009

Dear president you got to walk the talk - just writing cheques does not do the trick

Thain needs to be imprisoned for a week than answers might come quickly but that is true for some wall street executives - no excuse for there behaviour wasting bil. of taxpayer money but Lewis ain't no better.
Why is Fuld still outside after clear fraud, which is also true for some other bankrupt companies like Countrywide and Bear Stearns. Paulson and Bernanke said a year ago the situation was contained and with losses of 50-100 bil under control - why does no one hold them responsible even Geithner was involved as he as New York FED was responsible for screening the Investment banks.
The whole system is rotten and I do not see any 'change' and what I just mentioned were the US names the same is true allover the world almost.
I think the world needs a special prison for financial terrorists they have done much more damage than any religious ever could.

Thain Refuses to Answer Cuomo's Bonus Questions

New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo filed a motion Monday asking former Merrill Lynch Chief Executive John Thain to provide more information about bonuses paid out on the eve of the bank's merger with Bank of America last year.

Cuomo's office alleges that Thain is not answering the questions under instructions from Bank of America [BAC 4.12 0.33 (+8.71%) ], and as a result, the bank is interfering with its investigation of the bonus payments.

In a deposition last week, Thain refused to answer questions about how the bonuses were determined for certain individuals, citing instructions from Bank of America attorneys.

The filing in New York State Supreme Court follows a deposition of Thain on Feb. 19. Cuomo last week subpoenaed Bank of America Chairman and Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis.

Two weeks ago, Cuomo accused Merrill Lynch of "secretly" accelerating bonus payments last year and giving at least $1 million to each of nearly 700 employees, even as the brokerage was
amassing billions of dollars in losses.

The bonuses stirred controversy because Merrill's bigger than expected loss prompted Bank of America to seek more government bailout money to complete the acquisition. The government agreed to give Bank of America an additional $20 billion in January to absorb Merrill, which Bank of America agreed to buy last September amid the credit crisis.

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