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GEITHNER TOLD TO QUIT AFTER EMAILS REVEAL INVOLVEMENT IN AIG COVER-UP |
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Paul Joseph Watson Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s denial that he played any
role in the AIG cover-up is contradicted by emails which confirm that both Geithner and the New York Federal Reserve were
both intimately involved in keeping details about payments to banks including Goldman Sachs from the public. Geithner told lawmakers today that he had no involvement in withholding information about the bailout of AIG, much to the chagrin of House Oversight Committee
Ranking Member Darrell Issa, who wasn’t buying it for a second. “He has asserted complete
ignorance of the Fed’s efforts to cover up the bailout details,” said Issa, R-Calif. “Many Americans, including
members of this Committee, have a hard time believing that Secretary Geithner entered an absolute cone of silence on the day
that his nomination was announced.” John Mica of Florida went further, calling for Geithner to
quit as a result of the scandal. “Why shouldn’t we ask for your resignation?” Mica asked
Geithner. “We’re not getting the whole story, we’re getting the blame story. You’re either incompetent
on the job or you knew what was taking place and you tried to conceal it, and I think that’s grounds for your review.” Mica characterized Geithner’s denials as “lame excuses” as the Treasury Secretary became
visibly angry. In November and December 2008, The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, headed up by
Geithner, instructed the bailed out AIG to hide from the public details regarding payments the insurance giant made to banks,
including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Societe Generale SA. Using Fed secured taxpayer bailout money, AIG paid
several banks 100 percent of the face value of credit-default swaps, as other financial institutions were negotiating deep
discounts for the unregulated paper assets that do not have to be backed by cash. The decision to pay the banks in
full may have cost AIG, and therefore taxpayers, at least $13 billion over the odds. The “backdoor bailout”
of the banks, as it has been dubbed was exposed in March 2009 after the SEC challenged AIG’s filing, however, e-mails
obtained by Representative Darrell Issa, ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, reignited
the situation after they conclusively exposed a collusion between AIG and the Fed to deceive the public. |
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