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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bancos. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta bancos. Mostrar todas las entradas

20 enero, 2016

Nos Dieron El #Dinero y Les Entregamos El #Planeta / Los #Bancos

esclavosdelsistema11.blogspot,com

¿Realmente somo libres? Alimentos. Agua. Tierra. Los mismos elementos que necesitamos para sobrevivir son propiedad de corporaciones. No hay comida para nosotros en los árboles. No hay agua dulce en los ríos. No hay terreno para construir una casa. Si tratas de tomar lo que la tierra da estarás encerrado. Así que obedecemos sus reglas.
Para nosotros nuestro camino es único pero juntos no somos más que combustible. El combustible de los poderes de la elite. La élite que se esconde detrás de los logos de las empresas. Este es su mundo. Y su más

08 mayo, 2013

Money Laundering and The Drug Trade: The Role of the Banks

By Dylan Murphy
Mexico is in the grip of a murderous drug war that has killed over 150,000 people since 2006. It is one of the most violent countries on earth. This drug war is a product of the transnational drug trade which is worth up to $400 billion a year and accounts for about 8% of all international trade.
The American government maintains that there is no alternative but to vigorously prosecute their zero tolerance policy of arresting drug users and their dealers. This has led to the incarceration of over 500,000 Americans. Meanwhile the flood of illegal drugs into America continues unabated.
One thing the American government has not done is to prosecute the largest banks in the world for supporting the drug cartels by washing billions of dollars of their blood stained money. As Narco sphere journalist Bill Conroy has observed banks are ”where the money is” in the global drug war.
HSBC, Western Union, Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase&Co, Citigroup, Wachovia amongst many others have allegedly failed to comply with American anti-money laundering (AML) laws.
The Mexican drug cartels have caught the headlines again and again due to their murderous activities. The war between the different drug cartels and the war between the cartels and government security forces has spilled the blood of tens of thousands of innocent people. The drug cartels would find it much harder to profit from their murderous activity if they didn’t have too big to fail banks willing to wash their dirty money.
In March 2010 Wachovia cut a deal with the US government which involved the bank being given fines of $160 million under a ”deferred prosecution” agreement. This was due to Wachovia’s heavy involvement in money laundering moving up to $378.4 billion over several years. Not one banker was prosecuted for illegal involvement in the drugs trade. Meanwhile small time drug dealers and users go to prison.
If any member of the public is caught in possession of a few grammes of coke or heroin you can bet your bottom dollar they will be going down to serve some hard time. However, if you are a bankster caught laundering billions of dollars for some of the most murderous people on the planet you get off with a slap on the wrist in the form of some puny fine and a deferred prosecution deal.
Charles A. Intriago, president of the Miami-based Association of Certified Financial Crime Specialists has observed, “… If you’re an individual, and get caught, you get hammered.
“But if you’re a big bank, and you’re caught moving money for a terrorist or drug dealer, you don’t have to worry. You just fork over a monetary penalty, and then raise your fees to make up for it.
“Until we see bankers walking off in handcuffs to face charges in these cases, nothing is going to change,” Intriago adds. “These monetary penalties are just a cost of doing business to them, like paying for a new corporate jet.”
This failure on the behalf of the US government to really crack down on the finances of the drug cartels extends to British banks as well. In July 2012 the US Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs issued a 339 page report detailing an amazing catalogue of ”criminal ” behaviour by London based HSBC. This includes washing over $881 for the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel and for the Norte del Valle Cartel in Colombia. Besides this, HSBC affiliated banks such as HBUS repeatedly broke American AML laws by their long standing and severe AML deficiencies which allowed Saudi banks such as Al Rajhi to finance terrorist groups that included Al-Qaeda. HBUS the American affiliate of HSBC supplied Al Rajhi bank with nearly $1 billion in US dollars.
Jack Blum an attorney and former Senate investigator has commented, “They violated every goddamn law in the book. They took every imaginable form of illegal and illicit business.”
HSBC affiliate HBUS was repeatedly instructed to improve its anti-money laundering program. In 2003 the Federal Reserve Bank of New York took enforcement action that called upon HBUS to improve its anti-money laundering program. In September 2010 the Office of Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) sent a,”blistering supervisory letter” to HBUS listing numerous AML problems at the bank.
In October 2010 this was followed up with the OCC issuing a cease and desist order requiring HBUS to improve its AML program a second time. Senator Carl Levin chairman of the Senate investigation into HSBC has commented that ,”HSBC’s Chief Compliance Officer and other senior executives in London knew what was going on, but allowed the deceptive conduct to continue.”
Let us look at just a couple of the devastating findings in the Senate report. The main focus of the report is the multiple failures of HSBC to comply with AML laws and regulations:
”The identified problems included a once massive backlog of over 17,000 alertsidentifying possible suspicious activity that had yet to be reviewed; ineffective methods foridentifying suspicious activity; a failure to file timely Suspicious Activity Reports with U.S. law enforcement; … a 3-year failure by HBUS [a HSBC affiliate] , from mid-2006 to mid-2009, to conduct any AML monitoring of $15 billion in bulk cash transactions … a failure to monitor $60 trillion in annual wire transfer activity bycustomers …inadequate andunqualified AML staffing; inadequate AML resources; and AML leadership problems. Sincemany of these criticisms targeted severe, widespread,and long standing AML deficiencies,…..”
The report catalogues in great detail the failings of HSBC affiliates HBUS in America and HMEX in Mexico:
”from 2007 through 2008, HBMX was the single largest exporter ofU.S. dollars to HBUS, shipping $7 billion in cash to HBUS over two years, outstripping larger Mexican banks and other HSBC affiliates. Mexican and U.S. authorities expressed repeated concern that HBMX’s bulk cash shipments could reach that volume only if they included illegal drug proceeds. The concern was that drug traffickers unable to deposit large amounts of cash in U.S. banks due to AML controls were transporting U.S. dollars to Mexico, arranging for bulk deposits there, and then using Mexican financial institutions to insert the cash back into the U.S. financial system. … high profile clients involved in drug trafficking; millions of dollars in suspicious bulk travelers cheque transactions; inadequate staffing and resources; and a huge backlog of accounts marked for closure due to suspicious activity, but whose closures were delayed.”
In the Senate hearing on 17 July 2012 Carl Levin Chairman of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs explained how HMEX helped the Mexican drug cartels:
”Because our tough AML laws in the United States have made it hard for drug cartels to find a U.S. bank willing to accept huge unexplained deposits of cash, they now smuggle U.S. dollars across the border into Mexico and look for a Mexican bank or casa de cambio willing to take the cash. Some of those casas de cambios had accounts at HBMX. HBMX, in turn, took all the physical dollars it got and transported them by armored car or aircraft back across the border to HBUS for deposit into its U.S. banknotes account, completing the laundering cycle.”
Senator Levin went on to note how:
”Over two years, from 2007 to 2008, HBMX shipped $7 billion in physical U.S. dollars to HBUS. That was more than any other Mexican bank, even one twice HBMX’s size. When law enforcement and bank regulators in Mexico and the United States got wind of the banknotes transactions, they warned HBMX and HBUS that such large dollar volumes were red flags for drug proceeds moving through the HSBC network.”
In December 2012 the Department of Justice cut a deal with HSBC which imposed a record $1.9 billion dollar fine. It may sound a lot to ordinary folks but it is a tiny fraction of its annual profits which in 2011 totalled $22 billion. Assistant Attorney General Lanny Bauer announced the settlement at a press conference on 11 December 2012. His comments reveal why the US government decided to go soft on such criminal behaviour and show quite clearly how there is one law for the richest 1% and one law for the rest of us. Lenny Bauer said:
”Had the U.S. authorities decided to press criminal charges, HSBC would almost certainly have lost its banking license in the U.S., the future of the institution would have been under threat and the entire banking system would have been destabilized.”
Think about that statement for a moment. A bank that has quite clearly been caught out helping murderous drug criminals, terrorist groups, third world dictatorships and all sorts of criminal characters is to be let off with a slap on the wrist. No criminal prosecutions or even a mention of criminal behaviour due to the fears that to do so would put the world economy in jeopardy. So there you have it. Banksters who engage in such behaviour that is regarded as criminal by the vast majority of people on the planet are not only too big to fail they are also too big to jail.
After the Department of Justice announcement of the deferred prosecution HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver said,”We accept responsibility for our past mistakes. We have said we are profoundly sorry for them, and we do so again.”
Such statements will provide little solace to the families of the 150,000 people estimated by US Secretary of Defence Leon Panetta to have been killed in Mexico’s drug war. Nor will it help the hundreds of thousands of Mexican citizens who have been forced to flee their homes and escape the violence by going to the United Sates or moving to other parts of Mexico.
Senator Elizabeth Warren appearing at a meeting of the Senate Banking Committee in February expressed frustration with officials from the US Treasury Department and US Federal Reserve over the issue of why criminal charges were not pressed on HSBC or any of its officials. The officials were evasive when she tried to draw them on the issue of what it takes for a bank to have its licence withdrawn:
”HSBC paid a fine, but no one individual went to trial, no individual was banned from banking, and there was no hearing to consider shutting down HSBC’s activities here in the United States. So, what I’d like is, you’re the experts on money laundering. I’d like an opinion: What does it take — how many billions do you have to launder for drug lords and how many economic sanctions do you have to violate — before someone will consider shutting down a financial institution like this?”
Senator Warren finished the session by commenting on the glaring double standards within the US justice system:
“You know, if you’re caught with an ounce of cocaine, the chances are good you’re going to go to jail. If it happens repeatedly, you may go to jail for the rest of your life. But evidently, if you launder nearly a billion dollars for drug cartels and violate our international sanctions, your company pays a fine and you go home and sleep in your own bed at night, every single individual associated with this. I think that’s fundamentally wrong.”
On 4 March 2013 HSBC announced profits of $20.6 billion in 2012 while it paid out a $3 million bonus to its CEO. This outrageous state of affairs beggars belief after HSBC has been clearly caught out engaging in activity on behalf of murderous drug lords, terrorist financing banks and brutal third world dictatorships. Where is the British Government’s condemnation of HSBC? You may be waiting a long time for that considering the fact that Chancellor George Osborne and his fellow ministers are intimately connected to the British banking elite.
Long time observer of the Mexican drug war Bill Conroy comments that the deal cut with HSBC by the Department of Justice, ”should illuminate for all the great pretense of the drug war — no matter how hard US prosecutors, via the mainstream media, attempt to convince us otherwise. …And it should lead us to conclude, if we are honest with ourselves, that the so-called drug war is little more than one immense “drug deal.”

21 noviembre, 2012

Vargas Llosa, intelectual orgánico de los banqueros

Aquí presentamos las opiniones del reconocido investigador ruso, Daniel Estulin, sobre Vargas Llosa, nosotros las compartimos.
“Para terminar, un par de cosas anecdóticas. Me han dicho varios miembros de la Comisión Trilateral que, a propósito son lectores asiduos de la página, que tanto Trinidad Jiménez como Joaquín Almunia son “dos degenerados certificados con una neurona entre ellos.” Otro Trilateralista es el escritor Mario Vargas Llosa. Aunque no es español de nacimiento, goza de buena fama en España mientras trabaja para los intereses del Gobierno Mundial Único. En mi vida he comprado ningún libro suyo y por supuesto, nunca lo haré.”
“A nivel personal, mi desprecio hacia este degenerado Vargas Llosa es bien conocido. Animo a los lectores interesados a que profundicen en los vínculos de Vargas Llosa con el poder y sociedad privadas y sus socios pervertidos.”
  
Raúl Vallejo 

Cuando opina sobre política ecuatoriana, Mario Vargas Llosa desbarra. Demuestra que habla no solo movido por sus prejuicios ideológicos sino que, contra la honestidad académica, es incapaz de sostener su opinión con datos fácticos. El lunes 19, en la XLVI Asamblea Anual de la Federación Latinoamericana de Bancos (Felaban), en Lima, Vargas Llosa dijo esta sarta de lugares comunes: “En estos mismos días, en un país vecino, un gobernante cangrejo de esos que se empeñan en hacer retroceder a su país, se propone apoderarse sibilinamente del sistema bancario mediante medidas que lo pondrían de rodillas y a merced de los caprichos gubernamentales”. En la misma asamblea, el presidente de Felaban, Óscar Rivera —el mismo que contrató a Vargas Llosa para su conferencia— señaló que América Latina ha tenido tasas de crecimiento anual del 3% en promedio entre el año 2000 y 2012. Lo que Varguitas no conoce, o no quiere conocer porque él ya se definió como un portavoz de la derecha mundial y se olvidó por completo de la conversación en La Catedral, es que Ecuador, en 2011, con una tasa del 7,8% del PIB fue la tercera economía del continente en crecimiento. Tampoco conoce que, de 2006 a 2011, la tasa de desempleo del país cayó del 8% al 5%, que el subempleo también cayó del 57% al 44%, y que la ocupación plena subió del 35% al 51%. Ni él quiere enterarse, ya que ahora es un predicador de la religión del dios mercado, que la pobreza cayó en picada de 37,6% al 28,6% en el mismo período.Obviamente, ni los banqueros ni su vocero dicen que la inversión social y productiva se catapultó entre esos años: en educación, de $ 1.088 a $ 3.376; en salud, de $ 504 a $ 1.601; en transporte y comunicaciones de $ 570 a $ 1.464. El prepotente Varguitas desconoce que la brecha entre el costo de la canasta básica y el ingreso familiar cayó del 33% al 7%. Los datos de la realidad económica y social del Ecuador de hoy rebaten fulminantemente las opiniones ficcionales que Varguitas predica como el nuevo evangelizador de los banqueros y su guerra del fin del mundo. Obviamente, la contratación de Vargas Llosa, premio Nobel de Literatura 2010, para que inaugure una reunión de banqueros no es una cuestión inocente. La banca que opera en Ecuador sabe que lo que diga una figura de fama mundial tiene repercusión mediática. La prensa mercantil del país se convirtió enseguida en el altoparlante de lo dicho por Varguitas. Esa prensa de mentalidad colonizada no se pregunta ni cuestiona en calidad de qué, Varguitas se entremete en la política y en la economía del Ecuador. La ciudadanía, curada de espanto después del salvataje bancario de 1999 que nos llevó a la pérdida de la moneda nacional, ya no cree ni en la politiquería de los banqueros ni en quien los defiende. Vargas Llosa, ahora intelectual orgánico de los banqueros, omite el drama de quienes fueron perjudicados por el salvataje bancario de 1999. Los que tuvieron que migrar, los que perdieron los ahorros de toda la vida, los que vieron su dinero convertido en certificados de depósitos que, además, los mismos bancos les cambiaban con descuentos; los testigos de cómo el Estado socializó la quiebra de los bancos; en definitiva, los ecuatorianos, a quienes desconoce Vargas Llosa, que ahora queremos la socialización de las ganancias.

El presidente ecuatoriano protesta contra la carta de los bancos y cierra su cuenta en Produbanco

http://andes.info.ec/actualidad/9227.html
El Presidente ecuatoriano, Rafael Correa, solicitó el cierre de su cuenta en Produbanco y anunció que abrirá una en el Banco del Pacífico, cuyo mayor paquete accionario proviene del sector público.
Esta decisión fue comunicada a Produbanco mediante una misiva firmada por el primer mandatario, y una semana después  de que esa entidad financiera mal usara la base de datos de sus clientes para enviar una comunicado en el que decía que hay una manejo político de acciones contra ese sector y un clima de inestabilidad. La misiva tuvo idéntico texto y llegó a los clientes de los bancos Bolivariano, Pichincha, Produbanco y Guayaquil.
El cierre de la cuenta del presidente es un hecho que surge precisamente contra aquella carta, que los banqueros dicen fue “tranquilizadora”, aunque en estos días ha recibido la crítica de personalidades de la Academia, como el especialista en fraude financiero estadounidense William Black.
 Así mismo, en su misiva, el presidente indica que el Gobierno no descansará en recordar al pueblo ecuatoriano lo que sucedió en el año de 1999, cuando se socializaban las pérdidas producto de la irresponsabilidad y complicidad bancaria. “Pero entonces no se enviaba “carta” alguna.”
Aquello parece recordar, en cambio, su congratulación por la reciente aprobación de la Ley Orgánica de la Redistribución de los Ingresos del Gasto Social, que equipara las tributaciones de la banca con las del sector productivo del Ecuador y con lo que el país obtendrá unos 160 millones de dólares por año y financiará en parte un aumento del Bono de Desarrollo Humano de 35 a 50 dólares por mes para 1,9 millones de beneficiarios.
El Mandatario ecuatoriano manifiesta que, ante esas actitudes poco patriotas y nada consecuentes con un país cuyos ciudadanos como depositantes los han hecho ganar grandes sumas de dinero por concepto de utilidades, “sírvanse realizar el inmediato cierre de mi cuenta que durante años tuve en Produbanco, para proceder a aperturar una nueva cuenta en el Banco del Pacífico, propiedad del pueblo ecuatoriano”

03 noviembre, 2012

Money Laundering and Offshore Fraud for the Rich, Economic Austerity for the Poor

http://www.globalresearch.ca/money-laundering-andv-offshore-fraud-for-the-rich-economic-austerity-for-the-poor/5310347
By Julie Lévesque

Offshore banking is the elephant in the global economic room which the political and financial elite is trying to hide from the public view. While imposing austerity measures on hard working citizens, they are well aware that astronomical amounts of money are secretly held in offshore banks, thus lost in taxes. Where is that money from? What is it for?
Drug cartels, fraud, tax evasion and money laundering are common answers to those questions. Despite this reality and even in this era of fiscal austerity, the question world leaders avoid is: why is secret banking still allowed? Are they capable of putting a term to it but unwilling to do it because of the benefits it provides? Clearly.
Every once in a while a robber baron will serve as a scapegoat to give a pale illusion of justice to the common man. Although they deserve to be penalized, the corrupt banking system which allowed them to operate remains inviolate and its flaws are never questioned. Offshore banking is not a parallel banking structure. It is at the heart of the banking system. All major banks have offshore subsidiaries.
R. Allen Stanford is one of the white collar criminals serving time for running a “massive Ponzi scheme camouflaged as a bank [Stanford International Bank (SIB)] that sold some $7 billion in self-styled ‘certificates of deposit’ and $1.2 billion in mutual funds”:
[SIB’s chief financial officer James] Davis told the Justice Department that “his boss had been stealing from investors for decades while paying bribes to regulators and even performing blood oaths never to reveal his secrets.”
And with connections and generous pay-outs to U.S. politicians going back more than a decade, 65% of which went to Democrats including our “change” president, Allen Stanford was plugged-in.
Evidence also suggests he may have gotten an assist covering his tracks from regulators and U.S. secret state agencies, including the CIA [...]
Allen Stanford did business the American way; he swindled depositors and then siphoned-off the proceeds into a spider’s web of offshore accounts.
The indictment charges “it was part of the conspiracy that Stanford ... and others would cause the movement of millions of dollars of fraudulently obtained investors’ funds from and among bank accounts located in the Southern District of Texas and elsewhere in the United States to various bank accounts located outside of the United States ... in order to exercise exclusive control over the investors’ funds.”
Auditors learned that funds were moved through Stanford-controlled accounts to offshore banks, including HSBC in London, Bank Julius Baer in Zurich and eight others; banks which have figured in past money laundering or tax-avoidance scandals. None have been charged with an offense in connection with the affair. (Tom Burghardt Financial Fraud, The Laundering of Drug Money and the CIA, Antifascist Calling… August 4, 2010.)
Out of willful blindness, the troika – the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund – inflicts draconian measures on many Europeans, while letting a “vast offshore industry [operate] out of sight and mind”. The same cannot be said for press freedom and whistleblowers, which are closely monitored:
Greek magazine publisher Costas Vaxevanis faces charges of violating state privacy laws. Potentially he faces two years in prison.
Press freedom and whistleblowing should be inviolate. Not in today’s corrupt money controlled world [...]
A [...] recent Tax Justice Network (TJN) USA report [...] estimates up to $32 trillion of hidden and stolen wealth stashed largely tax-free secretly.
“The Price of Offshore Revisited” reveals what super-rich elites want concealed. Governments let them avoid taxes. Societal costs are huge. Ill-gotten gains are free to make more of them. Only ordinary people pay what they owe. Many pay too much [...]
Hot Doc magazine editor Vaxevanis was arrested for publishing the “Lagarde List.” In 2010, French authorities gave it to Athens. At issue is investigating 2,059 wealthy Greeks with secret HSBC Swiss accounts. (Stephen Lendman, Greek Whistleblower: Billions in Secret Offshore Bank Accounts, October 31, 2012.)
Seeing poverty and inequalities rise dramatically due to budget austerity crafted and ordered by the banking industry, some European nations raise the specter of separatism:
Recent months have seen one example after another of gains for parties advocating the creation of new, small states in Spain, Belgium, Italy, Scotland and elsewhere in Europe.
The growth in support for such tendencies has been fuelled by the savage cuts and austerity measures being imposed by central governments on the instructions of the troika—the European Union, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund—at the behest of the banks and global speculators. But the exploitation of legitimate social grievances does not mean that the political beneficiaries represent the interests of the broad masses who are being exploited. (Chris Marsden, Austerity and Political Balkanization: The Rise of Separatist Agitation in Europe, October 30, 2012.)
F. William Engdahl warns that the same kind of “ austerity measures paved the way to the III Reich” and insists that the banks are “the source of the problem”:
The EU governments have shied away from any resolute action on the banks involved in the dodgy lending in the first place during the financial bubble years. Those banks remain the source of the problem. There is no lending going on to the real economy, and that`s the root cause of the 25 per cent unemployment in Spain and Greece and elsewhere across the EU. Until that problem with the banks is addressed, we’re not going to see economic recovery. To treat it only as a sovereign debt crisis is grabbing the tale of the elephant and calling it a snake. (F. William Engdahl, Germany Enforces Same Austerity that Paved Way to 3rd Reich, October 30, 2012.)
With the recent images of the brutal Spanish police state in mind we have to wonder if following the corrupt banking industry diktats is a very ruinous ride on the highway to totalitarianism.
Global Research offers its readers a list of articles on this important topic.