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In reply to the discussion: Leftist Anti austerity party wins big in Greece [View all]FrodosPet
(5,169 posts)95. Wall Street Stunned As Iceland Dares To Jail Banker Involved In 2008 Crash
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-20/wall-street-stunned-iceland-dares-jail-banker-involved-2008-crash
The impossible is possible. Never say never. Wall Street bankers are staring agog at headlines coming from Europe where, in Iceland, the former chief executive of one of the largest banks in the country which was involved in crashing the economy in 2008 has been sentenced to jail time. As Valuewalk reports, in receiving a one year prison sentence, Sigurjon Arnason officially became the first bank executive to be convicted of manipulating the banks stock price and deceiving investors, creditors and the authorities between Sept. 29 and Oct. 3, 2008, as the banks fortunes unwound, crashing the economy with it. It appears he was as shocked by the verdict as Wall Street-ers are, "this sentence is a big surprise to me as I did nothing wrong." It was likely all for the people's own good...
~ snip ~
In receiving a one year prison sentence, Sigurjon Arnason officially became the first bank executive to be convicted of manipulating the banks stock price and deceiving investors, creditors and the authorities between Sept. 29 and Oct. 3, 2008, as the banks fortunes unwound, crashing the economy with it. Landsbanki was one of three banks that had tallied nearly $75 billion in debt before the final curtain was drawn.
~ snip ~
The Reykjavik District Court had lopped off nine months of Arnasons sentence, saying they were suspended. Other bank executives involved in the situation were convicted: Ivar Gudjonsson, the former director of proprietary trading at the bank, along with Julius Heidarsson, a former broker at the bank. They each received nine-month sentences and six of those nine months were immediately suspended by the court.
~ snip ~
~ snip ~
In receiving a one year prison sentence, Sigurjon Arnason officially became the first bank executive to be convicted of manipulating the banks stock price and deceiving investors, creditors and the authorities between Sept. 29 and Oct. 3, 2008, as the banks fortunes unwound, crashing the economy with it. Landsbanki was one of three banks that had tallied nearly $75 billion in debt before the final curtain was drawn.
~ snip ~
The Reykjavik District Court had lopped off nine months of Arnasons sentence, saying they were suspended. Other bank executives involved in the situation were convicted: Ivar Gudjonsson, the former director of proprietary trading at the bank, along with Julius Heidarsson, a former broker at the bank. They each received nine-month sentences and six of those nine months were immediately suspended by the court.
~ snip ~
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IMO what happens is that the alternatives don't show themselves to be................
socialist_n_TN
Jan 2015
#2
"So, basically, you are recommending the most draconian / austerity option available to them…"
MrMickeysMom
Jan 2015
#24
They perhaps could make the case against predatory lending that has been through the courts...
MrMickeysMom
Jan 2015
#29
Then why wasn't it equally painful for iceland? You seem to want to have it both ways.
ND-Dem
Jan 2015
#49
Completely separate issue. Greece has massive sovereign debt; Iceland did not
whatthehey
Jan 2015
#71
Japan's sovereign debt is about 230% of the GNP, but they're doing reasonably well. They don't
ND-Dem
Jan 2015
#73
And Japan is not seriously suggesting defaulting on that debt like Syriza is
whatthehey
Jan 2015
#80
and you have special pleading for everything. it's all a special case to you; greece's debt is the
ND-Dem
Jan 2015
#85
Japan's government also owns the debt mostly to Japanese people or corporations
muriel_volestrangler
Jan 2015
#91
yours is the only point that's actually salient. the rest is special pleading. greece's problem is
ND-Dem
Jan 2015
#94
You mean no loan sharks will allow themselves to con the people out of their money.
grahamhgreen
Jan 2015
#69
Expropriate the productive and financial assets of the top 1% and place them in the service
KingCharlemagne
Jan 2015
#52
They shouldn't pay it, they should start rounding up the thieves who profited from these policies,
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#87
Yes, I remember it well. A little known Whistle Blowing website at the time, Wikileaks, was the
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#98
Brava! Is society to organize itself to serve the interests of the bourgeoisie and the bankers or
KingCharlemagne
Jan 2015
#97
that's the second option, default, which still means austerity, since they won't be able
geek tragedy
Jan 2015
#10
Yvw, and I agree with you about the IMF .. and the accolades for a mysoginist, brutal *. nt.
polly7
Jan 2015
#18
well, a lot of countries don't even have a Syirza--or, more fatally, pretend they have one
MisterP
Jan 2015
#9
If Syriza wins an outright majority I just hope that they haven't been infiltrated by corporatists..
stillwaiting
Jan 2015
#19
It'll be painful in the short term but probably better for them in the long term.
FLPanhandle
Jan 2015
#21
For years, Greece did or could not collect taxes from their wealthy elites or much of other populate
kelliekat44
Jan 2015
#32
The ones who like to invade so much. The ones doing most of the invading going round.
ND-Dem
Jan 2015
#57
It's a con. They lend money they know can't be paid back so they can control the country. People are
grahamhgreen
Jan 2015
#70
Great now maybe they can do what Iceland did, arrest all their crooked bankers and politicians who
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#25
Good. That's one of the payoffs of a parliamentary system that we lack.
Tierra_y_Libertad
Jan 2015
#27
Goldman Sachs and all their henchmen that RUINED the Greek economy are not going to be happy. Time
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#28
Several of the 'leaders' who were more or less installed, in fact I think one was actually installed
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#48
China and Russia will loan them money. They will leave the Eurozone to get it.
roamer65
Jan 2015
#44
A victory for the people! We are facing a global income inequality crisis. This problem is not just
liberal_at_heart
Jan 2015
#59
"Our" intelligence agencies will probably have more work to do there now that's for sure. nt
stillwaiting
Jan 2015
#79
They should do it the American Way and bail out the banks and corporations, not the people.
Tierra_y_Libertad
Jan 2015
#88
No government in Greece ever had the interests of the working man as the priority. Now there is.
Fred Sanders
Jan 2015
#100