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Email Trails Show Bankers Behaving Badly

An anonymous reader writes "The New York Times is running a pair of stories about U.S. financial institutions being investigated by the Federal government and courts for alleged systemic and illegal activities that helped bring about the housing crisis and collapse of the world economy in 2008. Emails produced during courtroom discovery reveal that insiders at JP Morgan Chase knew that the bundles of securities they were marketing to investors were rotten with bad loans. And emails show the credit rating agency Standard & Poor's (a division of McGraw-Hill) was determined to stop losing deals to its competitors by being too tough on the banks whose products they were evaluating."

3 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. Get a rope! by hessian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Corruption is corruption.

    Hang them from the trees on Wall Street as a warning to others.

    And stop creating government regulations that give them lots of loopholes to exploit.

  2. What a surprise! by furbyhater · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Now we can see who sits in the cockpit of the "invisible hand". When the people at the top of our complex financial system, with the trust and responsibility placed on them to safeguard the well-being of the whole community, behave in such an anti-social manner they belong behind bars. Overt anti-social behaviour is to be punished, that's the whole point of laws. That these people will get of scot-free or with only small (for them) fines is fresh evidence that the structure of our society needs mending. News at 11'!

    1. Re:What a surprise! by sesshomaru · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "When the people at the top of our complex financial system, with the trust and responsibility placed on them to safeguard the well-being of the whole community, behave in such an anti-social manner they belong behind bars."

      Hey now, it's not like they were downloading a bunch of academic journals or something!

      We need some perspective here.

      --
      "MIT betrayed all of its basic principles."