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Showing posts with label JAMIE DIMON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JAMIE DIMON. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Jamie Dimon Lands in the Cross Hairs of Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown

 

Jamie Dimon Lands in the Cross Hairs of Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: February 8, 2022 ~

Senator Sherrod Brown

Senator Sherrod Brown

As Wall Street On Parade, two trial lawyersthe U.S. Department of Justice, the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and one of the bank’s former lawyers have suggested, the largest bank in the United States, JPMorgan Chase, has enshrined crime as a business model.

The man ultimately responsible for this business model is Jamie Dimon, the bank’s Chairman and CEO since December 31, 2006. Since 2014, JPMorgan Chase has the unprecedented distinction of admitting to five felony counts brought by the U.S. Department of Justice. In each case, it was given a deferred prosecution agreement and put on probation. (See a sampling of its Rap Sheet here.)

Now Dimon and the bank have come into the cross hairs of Senator Sherrod Brown, Chairman of the powerful Senate Banking Committee that oversees the megabanks on Wall Street.

Yesterday, Brown and five of his Democratic colleagues on the Senate Banking Committee sent Dimon a letter demanding answers regarding the bank’s credit card collection practices. The letter opens with this:

“We are deeply troubled by recent reports that JPMorgan Chase (‘Chase’) – the nation’s largest bank with over $3.2 trillion in assets – has renewed its predatory practice of robo-signing purported evidence of credit card debt to sue customers during the pandemic. We were concerned to hear that this practice has resumed after the January 1, 2020 expiration of Chase’s consent order with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (‘CFPB’ or Bureau). We request that Chase provide detailed information regarding the bank’s credit card debt collection practices. Chase should not utilize robo-signing in pursuing these debt collection suits, or any other debt.

“At the height of the robo-signing scandal following the 2008 financial crisis, the CFPB found that Chase wrongfully sued thousands of customers for debt they did not owe. As you know, ‘robo-signing’ is the practice where important documents are reviewed and signed by individuals with little to no knowledge about the case and proper procedures are not followed. From 2009 to 2013, the CFPB estimated that the error rate in robo-signing cases in which Chase obtained a judgement against consumers reached approximately 9 percent. In 2015, the CFPB issued a consent order prohibiting Chase from engaging in robo-signing and certain debt collections practices that were in violation of the Consumer Financial Protection Act. The consent order established that Chase’s practices harmed consumers by ‘subject[ing] certain consumers to collections activity for accounts that were not theirs, in amounts that were incorrect or uncollectable.’ Robo-signing enabled Chase to obtain judgments and collect from consumers based on ‘documents that were falsely sworn and that at times contained inaccurate amounts.’ The purpose of the consent order was ‘to ensure [Chase] do[es] not revive these practices.’ ”

The robo-signing reports come courtesy of a January 5 article written by Patrick Rucker and jointly published by Pro-Publica and The Capital Forum. That article revealed that “Today, just as it did before running afoul of the CFPB, Chase is mass-producing affidavits from the same San Antonio office where low-level employees generated hundreds of thousands of affidavits in the past, according to defense attorneys and court documents. Those affidavits are often the main piece of evidence that Chase uses to win its case while detailed customer records — and any errors they may contain — remain out of sight.”

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO, JPMorgan Chase

The article goes on to explain that after Dimon publicly bemoaned wealth inequality in the United States, his bank brought thousands of consumer debt lawsuits last year after filing very few when it was under the CFPB’s consent order. The article’s author, Rucker, notes further that: “Those sued by Chase, then and now, might spot errors if the company provided full records in its court filings, consumer advocates say. Instead, Chase typically submits copies of a few credit card statements along with a two-page affidavit attesting that the bank’s records were accurate and complete.”

Taking the word of a five-count felon bank with a long history under Dimon of serial law-breaking is not something courts should be doing. The Rap Sheet we linked to above should be introduced into evidence to open the eyes of the judges that are presiding over these cases.

Senator Brown and his colleagues have given Dimon until February 21st to answer a list of questions in this matter. If the Senate Banking Committee wants to serve the public interest, it will call Dimon to testify under oath as to why it is the only U.S. bank with five felony counts notched in its belt and why it continues to thumb its nose at the law.

If the Senate Banking Committee limits its investigation to JPMorgan Chase’s consumer debt practices, it will be replicating the mistake made by the SEC when it ignored years of Harry Markopolos pounding on its door with evidence that Bernie Madoff was running a massive criminal enterprise.


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Monday, January 24, 2022

JPMorgan’s Board Made Jamie Dimon a Billionaire as the Bank Rigged Markets, Laundered Money, and Admitted to Five Felony Counts


JPMorgan’s Board Made Jamie Dimon a Billionaire as the Bank Rigged Markets, Laundered Money, and Admitted to Five Felony Counts

 By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 21, 2022 ~

Jamie Dimon Being Sworn In at House Financial Services Committee Hearing, May 27, 2021

Jamie Dimon Being Sworn In at House Financial Services Committee Hearing, May 27, 2021

Yesterday’s headline making the rounds was that JPMorgan Chase’s Board had given its Chairman and CEO, Jamie Dimon, a pay raise to $34.5 million for 2021 that was 10 percent more than 2020.

That headline provides an instructive lesson in what passes for breaking news today at mainstream media outlets when it comes to Wall Street’s megabanks. The majority of Americans aren’t outraged and demanding that Congress reform Wall Street because mainstream media has overtly decided to keep the public in the dark.

The real breaking news is that despite JPMorgan Chase admitting to five criminal felony counts brought by the U.S. Department of Justice over the past 7 years for rigging markets and laundering money for Bernie Madoff, the financial criminal of the century, the Board of JPMorgan Chase has not sacked Dimon, the man who sat at the helm during this unprecedented crime spree. Instead of sacking Dimon, the Board of the largest federally-insured, taxpayer-backstopped bank in the United States has made Dimon a billionaire.

The Board of JPMorgan Chase seems to have adopted a compensation model based on “the more felony counts, the bigger the paycheck.” Consider the following: On September 29, 2020, the Justice Department charged JPMorgan Chase with two felony counts, to which it admitted, and fined the bank $920 million of shareholders’ money to settle its fourth and fifth felony counts since 2014. One felony count was for rigging the precious metals markets while the other was for rigging the U.S. Treasury market – the market that allows the federal government to pay its bills.

Rigging the U.S. Treasury market used to be a big deal with splashy headlines. But on September 29, 2020 the Justice Department didn’t even hold its usual press conference to announce the charges against JPMorgan Chase and not one newspaper thought to mention that these were the fourth and fifth felony counts during the tenure of Dimon. Nor did any newspaper mention that the bank had admitted to all five criminal counts while being repeatedly put on probation by the Justice Department but continuing its crime spree. (See JPMorgan Chase’s unprecedented rap sheet under Dimon here.)

Now here’s where you need to pay close attention. Just 10 months after the bank admitted to its fourth and fifth felony counts, the Board of JPMorgan Chase gave Dimon a bonus of 1.5 million stock options, which had a value of $50 million on paper, according to a specialist cited at Bloomberg News. In its filing with the SEC announcing the stock award, the Board wrote this:

“This special award reflects the Board’s desire for Mr. Dimon to continue to lead the Firm for a further significant number of years. In making the special award, the Board considered the importance of Mr. Dimon’s continuing, long-term stewardship of the Firm, leadership continuity, and management succession planning amidst a highly competitive landscape for executive leadership talent.”

If JPMorgan Chase had a properly functioning Board, and the Justice Department had a properly functioning criminal division, Dimon would have been forced out in 2013 when the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released a 300-page report detailing how the bank had lied to its regulators as it used depositors’ money from its federally-insured bank to gamble in derivatives in London and lose $6.2 billion. The FBI investigated that matter and yet the Justice Department brought no criminal charges.

The JPMorgan Board had its second opportunity to fire Dimon when the bank admitted to its first two felony counts in 2014 for its outrageous handling of the business bank account of Ponzi-schemer Bernie Madoff.

The Board had its third chance to fire Dimon the very next year when the bank pleaded guilty to its role in a bank cartel (actually called “The Cartel”) that rigged the foreign currency market.

Based on the bank’s fourth and fifth felony counts in 2020 and the $50 million bonus to Dimon from the Board 10 months later to keep Dimon at the helm for “a significant number of years,” it’s pretty clear that criminal activity is perceived by the Board of JPMorgan Chase as an accepted business model as long as the stock price keeps going up. (The outside Board members at JPMorgan Chase receive an annual stock award of $250,000 on top of other fees. In 2020, five members of JPMorgan Chase’s Board received over $400,000 in total annual compensation.)

The words “independent director” appears 73 times in the most recent proxy statement that JPMorgan Chase filed with the SEC. The bank calls all non-management members of its Board of Directors “independent,” writing in its proxy statement year after year that they “had only immaterial relationships with JPMorgan Chase and accordingly were independent directors.”

In October of 2020, we took a close look at those “immaterial” relationships some of the Board members had with the Bank. You can decide for yourself if this is a Board that you would feel comfortable calling “independent.”






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