Iceland does what the US won’t: 26 top bankers sent to prison for role in financial crisis

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Zeph

TMMAC Addict
Jan 22, 2015
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32,126
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Reykjavík, Iceland – In stark contrast to the record low number of prosecutions of CEO’s and high-level financial executives in the U.S., Iceland has just sentenced 26 bankers to a combined 74 years in prison.

The majority of those convicted have been sentenced to prison terms of two to five years. The maximum penalty in Iceland for financial crimes is six years, although hearings are currently underway to consider extending the maximum beyond six years.


The prosecutions are the result of Iceland’s banksters manipulating the Icelandic financial markets after Iceland deregulated their finance sector in 2001. Eventually, an accumulation of foreign debt resulted in a meltdown of the entire banking sector in 2008.

According to Iceland Magazine:

In two separate rulings last week, the Supreme Court of Iceland and the Reykjavík District Court sentenced three top managers of Landsbankinn and two top managers of Kaupþing, along with one prominent investor, to prison for crimes committed in the lead-up to the financial collapse of 2008. With these rulings the number of bankers and financiers who have been sentenced to prison for crimes relating to the financial collapse has reached 26, and a combined prison time of 74 years.
Massive debts were incurred in the name of the Icelandic public, to allow the country to continue to function, which are still being repaid to the IMF and other nations eight years later by the citizens of Iceland. In contrast to the U.S., Iceland has chosen to hold the criminals that manipulated their financial system accountable under the law.

In the U.S., not a single banking executive was charged with crimes related to the 2008 financial crisis, even though the U.S. itself precipitated the crisis. Icelandic President, Olafur Ragnar Grimmson summed it up best in his response when asked how his country recovered from the global financial crisis.

“We were wise enough not to follow the traditional prevailing orthodoxies of the Western financial world in the last 30 years. We introduced currency controls, we let the banks fail, we provided support for the people and didn’t introduce austerity measures like you’re seeing in Europe.”
While Iceland has prosecuted those that caused their financial crisis, America has done the opposite. In 2008, after Congress bailed out the failing American banks to the tune of $700 billion dollars, courtesy of the American taxpayer, many of the executives of institutions that received TARP bailout funds ended up getting large bonuses!

The prosecution of the Icelandic banksters represents an accountability that does not exist in the United States of America. It seems clear that the financial “Masters of the Universe” are the ones that truly control the political apparatus in the U.S., making it obvious there is no one who is going to hold them accountable for manipulating and crashing the financial markets.
 

tang

top korean roofer
Oct 21, 2015
9,398
12,402
Y can't US do the same!!? And who agreed to bail these fuckers out? I don't remember voting FOR shit like this.
 

canofsticks

I'm just here for the rumham
Aug 4, 2015
1,101
2,527
All I can hear in my head is Bill Burr going off about this and how badass Iceland is for doing it
 

Sweets

All Around Dumbass
Feb 9, 2015
8,797
10,065
Y can't US do the same!!? And who agreed to bail these fuckers out? I don't remember voting FOR shit like this.
The thing is you have to vote against it, corporate parties serve corporate interests.
 

HEATH VON DOOM

Remember the 5th of November
Oct 21, 2015
17,281
24,721
Meanwhile they have moved all the money they made to offshore accounts and as soon as they are out of prison they will be rich and iceland will still be fucked. In the grand scheme of things arresting them will probably just empower others to do the same when they see how lenient the pu ishment really is. Its a catch 22 for everyone involved. The only people that get fucked in a financial crisis are the middle class.

Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk
 
Feb 28, 2015
2,564
5,763
Until we have some serious campaign finance reform and do away with PACs, lobbyists and the fact that the wealthiest 200 families in the US make up over 50% of campaign contributions, absolutely nothing will change. It will always go in favor of those who have the most and will leave the rest of us to deal with the bullshit system they've created (and that we foolishly keep playing into.)
 

mysticmac

First 1025
Oct 18, 2015
15,110
17,812
Y can't US do the same!!? And who agreed to bail these fuckers out? I don't remember voting FOR shit like this.
Honestly, I think we need a banking system, so I can see bailing out the banks in the situation we were in. I mean, we should have had better regulation in place and better practices, but we already didn't and were f'ed, so I can see the bailout going out. Plus, the banks had to pay back that money.

I don't see why people responsible were not charged with crimes though. That's BS.
 

sparkuri

Pulse On The Finger Of The Community
First 100
Jan 16, 2015
34,639
46,712
That tiny little country of fire n ice has unparalleled amounts of win P4P.
 

lookoutawhale

Mammal of the Sea
Jan 20, 2015
4,404
7,300
They need to do the same thing for the people on Wall street that think they are bulletproof.

They paid off the government with money but took not liability in the collapse.

Rip people off for millions of dollars nothing happens. A guy sells a few joints and goes to jail.
 

sparkuri

Pulse On The Finger Of The Community
First 100
Jan 16, 2015
34,639
46,712
They need to do the same thing for the people on Wall street that think they are bulletproof.

They paid off the government with money but took not liability in the collapse.

Rip people off for millions of dollars nothing happens. A guy sells a few joints and goes to jail.
I wouldn't say nothing happens.
They usually get pretty kush jobs in the White House.
 

Wild

Zi Nazi
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
85,195
123,571
Meanwhile they have moved all the money they made to offshore accounts and as soon as they are out of prison they will be rich and iceland will still be fucked. In the grand scheme of things arresting them will probably just empower others to do the same when they see how lenient the pu ishment really is. Its a catch 22 for everyone involved. The only people that get fucked in a financial crisis are the middle class.

Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk
Wonder if the Iceland's Govt can seize their assets?
 

HEATH VON DOOM

Remember the 5th of November
Oct 21, 2015
17,281
24,721
Wonder if the Iceland's Govt can seize their assets?
People with money hide it from the US government all the time. I doubt the all powerfull Icelandic government has any power to seize shit. Move money to a offshore account in a money friendly country and do your 5 years.
 

Splinty

Shake 'em off
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
44,116
91,096
The USA has the greatest economic engine that has ever existed. And this isn't just lip service. We have an incredibly diverse economy and there are many core fundamentals that exist in this country regarding big conomy that do not exist anywhere else in the world and will not exist elsewhere in the next few decades.


And we seem completely dedicated to absolutely running the into the ground via bad foreign policy And bad domestic social policy.
 
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Splinty

Shake 'em off
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
44,116
91,096
Honestly, I think we need a banking system, so I can see bailing out the banks in the situation we were in. I mean, we should have had better regulation in place and better practices, but we already didn't and were f'ed, so I can see the bailout going out. Plus, the banks had to pay back that money.

I don't see why people responsible were not charged with crimes though. That's BS.

Exactly. The deregulation that allowed us to be put in that place in the first place should have never happened. But it did. A and at that point our hand was forced.

I don't think most people realize how intricately intertwined the investment banks had become with all other facets and the economy.

Why was the warranty on the computer I bought from Best Buy at risk because an investment bank was selling investments in subprime mortgage products? I don't think many people even realize that kind of domino effect and how bad it would have been if the entire credit market has seized up.
 
Feb 28, 2015
2,564
5,763
And this is why I'm going to start putting my money in coffee cans and burying it on my folks' property in the mountains. So there.