Monday, January 8, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: State budget cuts coming

 


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BY LISA KASHINSKY AND KELLY GARRITY

LESS MONEY, MORE PROBLEMS — Gov. Maura Healey is planning hundreds of millions of dollars in budget cuts, according to eight lawmakers who received calls over the weekend from members of her administration alerting them to the move.

Healey is eyeing about $375 million in cuts as the state runs about $769 million behind tax revenue projections. It was not immediately clear where Healey plans to cut costs, but lawmakers are being told certain earmarks — which provide funding for nonprofits, local projects and more — are being slashed in half.

The governor said just weeks ago that she was not considering cuts to the nearly $56 billion budget, telling the State House News Service in a mid-December interview — before the latest revenue report dropped — that her administration was “going to manage the situation.”

Maura Healey

Gov. Maura Healey waved off concerns about the state's finances in end-of-year interviews. | Lisa Kashinsky/POLITICO

But that appears to have changed , according to the lawmakers who were granted anonymity to speak freely about the pending cuts — referred to as “9C cuts” because of the section of the law that gives the governor the authority to make them. The last 9C cuts were made by then-Gov. Charlie Baker in 2016 .

Healey’s administration did not directly confirm the cuts are coming. But Administration and Finance Secretary Matthew Gorzkowicz said in a statement Sunday the governor had directed him to “evaluate any and all necessary steps” to ensure a balanced budget and that he would “provide more information in short order.”

Gone are the days of soaring revenues during the pandemic that triggered $3 billion in givebacks to taxpayers. The state brought in just under $3.8 billion in December — about $82 million, or 2.1 percent, less than December 2022 and $138 million, or 3.5 percent, below benchmark, according to the latest revenue report. Collections over the first six months of the fiscal year are running ahead of the same period in fiscal 2023. But they’re about three-quarters-of-a-billion dollars, or 4.1 percent, less than the year-to-date benchmark. Revenues have now failed to hit benchmarks for six months straight.

During that same time, Healey signed into law $1 billion in tax cuts and credits. She also sought $250 million in additional funds for the state's shelter system and is poised to return for more, with her administration projecting the emergency assistance program will run $224 million into the red this fiscal year.

The administration wants to cover that cost — and part of the nearly $1 billion tab the shelter program is expected to run up in fiscal 2025 — with $700 million in pandemic-era surplus funds that Baker stashed in a transitional escrow account. But that idea already seems to have gotten pushback from at least one top Democratic lawmaker. “We protect our reserve funds,” Senate Ways and Means Chair Michael Rodrigues told reporters last week.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. This no good, very bad Patriots season is finally, mercifully, over. We’re onto the draft — and maybe the post-Belichick era?!

A fan displays a placard with a likeness of New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick prior to an NFL football game against the New York Jets, Sunday, Jan. 7, 2024, in Foxborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Not everyone wants Bill Belichick gone, apparently. | Steven Senne/AP

TODAY — Healey has no public events. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll attends the inaugurations of Quincy Mayor Tom Koch at 10 a.m. and Melrose Mayor Jennifer Grigoraitis at 7:30 p.m. House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark and Auditor Diana DiZoglio also attend Grigoraitis’ inaugural.

Tips? Scoops? Know of any budget earmarks getting cut? Email us: lkashinsky@politico.com and kgarrity@politico.com .

DATELINE BEACON HILL

DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Another lawmaker is leaving for the Healey administration. State Rep. Josh Cutler, the House chair of the labor and workforce committee, will be the governor’s undersecretary of apprenticeship, work-based learning and policy.

House Speaker Ron Mariano has yet to call a special election to fill Cutler’s seat. But Ken Sweezey , a Hanson Republican who challenged Cutler in 2022, is already jumping in the race. “The 6th Plymouth was a historically Republican district prior to the last decade. This is the year we can return to that legacy,” Sweezey said in a statement announcing his bid.

FROM THE HUB

— “21 North End restaurants accuse Boston, Mayor Michelle Wu of discrimination in new lawsuit,” by Phil Tenser, WCVB: “ The 163-page federal lawsuit, in which the North End Chamber of Commerce joined with 21 restaurants, asks the court to end the city's ban on outdoor dining in the busy neighborhood. It also seeks financial compensation, including a refund of fees charged under a previous edition of the program that allowed outdoor dining in the North End if restaurants paid $7,500 to participate.”

LYNCH BUCKS BRIDGE PLAN — Rep. Stephen Lynch doesn’t appear to be on board with Boston’s plan to rebuild the Long Island bridge and reopen recovery services there, saying that “warehousing people on an island ... [is] not ideal.” He suggested during an interview on NBC10 Boston’s “At Issue” that the money it would take to rebuild the bridge would be better spent on “redo[ing] a major hospital."

FROM HARVARD YARD

‘HOW HARVARD’S BOARD BROKE UP WITH CLAUDINE GAY’ — The New York Times’ Maureen Farrell and Rob Copeland share a stunning account of how Harvard Corporation members’ support for Claudine Gay crumbled after initially backing her to stay on as president — and how Gay knew her tenure was over days before she formally resigned on Jan. 2.

Top Massachusetts Democrats who have passed through Harvard’s hallowed halls were silent in the immediate aftermath of Gay’s announcement that she would step down. But they’re starting to speak now.

Gay “made mistakes,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren said on WCVB’s “On the Record.” But even as the former Harvard Law professor said she disagreed with what Gay said about genocide, she blamed “billionaires and the right-wing extremists” who don’t “care about our academic institutions and how to make them stronger,” or about antisemitism, for driving Gay’s downfall .

— “Harvard professors aghast that Claudine Gay resigned without transparent review of plagiarism accusations,” by Hilary Burns and Mike Damiano, The Boston Globe.

— “Corporate compensation for Harvard’s new interim president stands out among Ivy League peers,” by Elizabeth Koh, The Boston Globe.

FROM THE DELEGATION

LET’S MAKE A DEAL — Congressional leaders have struck a deal on government spending levels that could avert a partial government shutdown in less than two weeks, though it still has quite a ways to go.

Also possible this week: a border and immigration deal that could unlock more aid for Israel and Ukraine. But it’s unclear if the money the Biden administration is seeking — and that Gov. Maura Healey really wants — for shelter and services for migrants will make it in, our colleague Burgess Everett reports .

“Everyone realizes that we need to take action on Israel, we need to take action on Ukraine and we need to do something on the border. It’s become out of control. We’ve lost control of the border,” Lynch said on NBC10, sounding optimism that a deal could clear both chambers — depending on what’s in it.

But Warren sounded less optimistic on WCVB: “There’s always progress, but none of this counts until you make it across the finish line.”

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

— “Winter weather in Massachusetts sparks concerns for unaccompanied homeless adults,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “Cold weather arrives as one provider told the Herald that they have seen more unaccompanied, unhoused adults seeking shelter compared to last year. It comes at a time when most of state government is focused on housing migrants arriving in Massachusetts.”

— “Northampton makes case for joining fossil-fuel free pilot,” by Alexander MacDougall, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The pilot program, established by the state’s Department of Energy Resources (DOER), late last month officially accepted seven municipalities into its program: Acton, Aquinnah, Brookline, Cambridge, Concord, Lincoln and Lexington. … Newton and Arlington, were also accepted on a conditional basis. … With West Tisbury’s withdrawal, only nine of the 10 available slots for the program are filled, and Northampton is one of two substitute candidates hoping to occupy the last slot. The other candidate is the city of Somerville.”

FOLLOW YOUR OWN RULES — The New England First Amendment Coalition is calling out the Massachusetts Trial Court system for not posting online all of the information about criminal cases that’s required by law, the Boston Herald’s Flint McColgan writes.

2024 WATCH

BALLOT BATTLE — The state's Ballot Law Commission is mulling whether to take up a challenge seeking to bar former President Donald Trump from the ballot under the so-called insurrection clause of the 14th Amendment. Shannon Liss-Riordan is helping spearhead the challenge . But Warren, who backed Liss-Riordan for attorney general in 2022, said on WCVB that while it's "pretty clear that Donald Trump participated in an insurrection" she'd rather "see this resolved at the ballot box, because I don't want there to be any question about the legitimacy of it."

GRANITE STATE OF MIND — Liz Cheney is urging New Hampshire voters to reject Trump at the ballot box in just over two weeks. The former Wyoming congresswoman and vocal opponent of Trump continues to flirt with a third-party presidential bid as she looks for ways to block him from returning to the White House.

NOT QUITE BUSINESS AS USUAL — The Democratic National Committee scolded New Hampshire Democrats for holding delegate-selection caucuses on Saturday for the state’s “meaningless” unsanctioned presidential primary, we scooped, as the fallout from Democrats’ inability to agree on a nominating calendar this cycle continues. But New Hampshire Democratic Party Chair Ray Buckley brushed the criticism aside, saying it’s “nothing new” and “we persist.”

Healey, a Biden surrogate, appeared at caucuses for Biden delegates in Manchester and Concord to promote his allies’ effort to write him in on the Democratic primary ballot after the president passed on participating in the contest over the calendar spat.

It is “imperative that we do everything that we can to have the strongest showing for Joe Biden on Jan. 23, to send a signal not just to the great people of New Hampshire but to the people across this country about what needs to happen,” Healey said in Manchester (h/t ABC News' Kelsey Walsh .

MEANWHILE, IN PENNSYLVANIA — Attorney General Andrea Campbell attended Biden’s speech marking the anniversary of Jan. 6, 2021, in which he cast Trump as a threat to democracy. Campbell said in a statement: “I do not want to wake up on Wednesday, November 6, 2024 to a world in which Massachusetts must jump into action to protect our residents from a new radical, extremist administration." More from Mass. lawmakers on the anniversary.

CHRISTIE’S CONTRAST — Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has spent months accusing former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley of changing her message based on her audience, as her rise in New Hampshire diminishes his chances in the state in which he’s staking his campaign. Now he’s taking that argument to the airwaves in a new ad , part of his seven-figure pre-primary advertising push.

MEANWHILE, IN MAINE — Christie won’t be on the ballot in Maine after he declined to appeal a court’s ruling that he didn’t submit enough signatures, per the Portland Press Herald .

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

CONGRATS — to Dorchester's own Ayo Edebiri on her Golden Globes win .

TRANSITIONS — Amelia Aubourg is now chief communications officer for MassDOT.

— Caitlin Golden is now chief policy and strategy officer for the Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance.

— Kathleen PatrĂ³n is now chief of staff to state Sen. Julian Cyr. His former chief of staff, Liz Ganz , is now VP for government affairs and public policy at the Association for Behavioral Healthcare.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Alexis Orzeck . Happy belated to Sandy Lish of The Castle Group, who celebrated Sunday.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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SOUTH CAROLINA & NIKKI HALEY


CORPORATE MEDIA VULTURES AREN'T DOING THEIR JOB! 


NIKKI HALEY is a DIRTY ENERGY KOCH SOCK PUPPET and no one is scrutnizing her HISTORY. 

Where are her TAX RETURNS? 

Who is asking about her WEALTH? 

Who is questioning that NIKKI HALEY raised taxes as Governor? 

NIKKI HALEY's environmental record? 

 


A poster who lives in SOUTH CAROLINA that has had more than its fair share of environmental issues that have been ignored or were unregulated by state government.
There's far more information available than this, but wrapping oneself in religious zealotry does not excuse the Republican governance failures of South Carolina.
Billionaire Kraft's paper mill causes pollution crisis in South Carolina
By Tim Mclaughlin
August 17, 20211:08 AM EDTUpdated 2 years ago
excerpt:
BOSTON, Aug 17 (Reuters) - A South Carolina paper mill, whose foul smell has triggered more than 30,000 complaints, has become one of the dirtiest polluters in the United States since being acquired by an investment group led by Robert Kraft, the billionaire owner of the New England Patriots football team.
The complaints over large releases of hydrogen sulfide, a gas that smells like rotten eggs and causes headaches and even death in concentrated doses, from the New-Indy paper mill in Catawba, South Carolina, have resulted in federal and state orders to reduce its emissions. Three federal civil lawsuits have been filed against the company, alleging the odor is harming families.
However, no regulatory action has been taken against the mill for releasing soot, or small particulates, at levels exceeding mills run by larger rivals and by the country’s largest oil refineries.
Environmental Information for South Carolina
SOUTH CAROLINA SPENT $9 BILLION TO DIG A HOLE IN THE GROUND AND THEN FILL IT BACK IN
Cost is often raised as a critical objection to combating climate change. But South Carolina shows what's possible.
SOUTH CAROLINA ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES NEWS MONITORING
Billionaire Kraft's paper mill causes pollution crisis in South Carolina
REUTERS.COM
Billionaire Kraft's paper mill causes pollution crisis in South Carolina




Mainstream Media Is Avoiding the Big Story on Jeffrey Epstein and Sealed Court Documents

 
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Mainstream Media Is Avoiding the Big Story on Jeffrey Epstein and Sealed Court Documents

JPMorgan Chase and Jeffrey EpsteinBy Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 3, 2024 ~

Over the past week, more than a dozen of the biggest mainstream news outlets have published articles about the possibility of scandalous news breaking this week from the unsealing of documents in a federal court case involving the sex trafficker of minors, Jeffrey Epstein.

Typically, responsible news outlets wait for the actual news to break before hyping the possibility of it breaking. At 5:59 a.m. this morning, Newsweek updated the story as follows:

“Some on social media are speculating that the public disclosure of more than 150 names associated with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has been delayed.

“Judge Loretta A. Preska signed an order on December 18 for the public release of the identities of more than 150 people mentioned in court documents from a now-settled 2015 civil lawsuit filed by Virginia Giuffre that centered on allegations that Epstein’s associate and former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell facilitated her sexual abuse.

“Several prominent figures, including former President Bill Clinton and Britain’s Prince Andrew are expected to be named. The list will also include sex abuse victims and Epstein’s employees.”

Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, and dozens of other prominent men in politics, finance and law have already been named, repeatedly, in the media as people who socialized or had suspect dealings with Epstein. So this is not a new story.

The real story that mainstream media refuses to investigate is why federal judges in New York have been allowed to secret away in sealed documents the puzzle pieces to how Epstein’s network of powerful men were able to run a sex trafficking ring for two decades with the “active participation” of the largest federally-insured bank in the United States, JPMorgan Chase; and right under the nose of its Chairman, CEO and media darling, Jamie Dimon.

This is the Big Story that has been left to wilt on the vine by the likes of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and their peers.

The answers to this Big Story will not be found in the documents slated to be unsealed by Judge Loretta Preska in the Virginia Giuffre case. They have been sealed and locked up tight in Judge Jed Rakoff’s courtroom after he oversaw multiple Epstein-related lawsuits brought against JPMorgan Chase in late 2022 and 2023.

One case, Jane Doe v JPMorgan Chase, was a class action on behalf of Epstein’s sex assault and sex trafficked victims. Judge Rakoff approved its settlement for $290 million despite objections from 17 Attorneys General and the settlement’s unconscionable terms that included releasing claims for “harm, injury, abuse, exploitation, or trafficking by Jeffrey Epstein or by any person who is in any way connected to or otherwise associated with Jeffrey Epstein, as well as any right to recovery on account thereof.” Claimants were also required to sign the release form before they learned if they would get a dime from the settlement.

Attorneys for the victims were not left in any such doubt. The settlement terms provided them with $87 million in legal fees and $2.5 million in expenses.

Releasing claims against “Any person who is in any way connected to or otherwise associated with Jeffrey Epstein” conveniently includes a number of billionaires referred by Epstein to JPMorgan Chase as clients. There are also literally hundreds of high-profile individuals that were listed in Epstein’s little black book that could be considered “connected” to him.

Many of the individuals listed in Epstein’s little black book – a total of 1,571 – have had important banking relationships with JPMorgan Chase. In a court filing on July 26 of last year by the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands, which has since settled its Epstein-related case against JPMorgan Chase for $75 million, it listed the following individuals as people Epstein referred as clients to the bank: Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates; Google co-founder and billionaire Sergey Brin; the Sultan of Dubai, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem; media and real estate billionaire Mort Zuckerman; and numerous others.

Epstein’s victims charged in their lawsuit that JPMorgan Chase had, for more than a decade, provided Epstein with cozy banking services, which included sluicing to him millions of dollars in hard cash from his accounts, sometimes as much as $40,000 to $80,000 a month. The bank failed to file the Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) that it is legally required to file with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) for those payments in cash. Epstein’s alleged quid pro quo with the bank included him referring valuable business deals and clients to JPMorgan Chase. These allegations were substantiated by 22 pages of internal bank emails released in the related case brought against the bank by the U.S. Virgin Islands.

third Epstein-related case was brought against JPMorgan Chase in Rakoff’s court by two public pension funds that owned shares of JPMorgan Chase. That lawsuit named Dimon as a defendant as well as current and former members of JPMorgan Chase’s Board of Directors. It was brought by a prominent class action law firm on behalf of shareholders of the bank. The lawsuit’s theory of the case was that specific members of the Board of JPMorgan Chase “put their heads in the sand” and ignored that the bank had become a cash conduit for Jeffrey Epstein’s child sex trafficking ring because they were hoping that their own verifiable business ties to Epstein “would go unnoticed.” (We might add an attendant thesis: that Dimon takes very good care of his Board in return for them taking very good care of him.)

Mainstream media ignored the allegations that members of the JPMorgan Chase Board of Directors had business ties with Epstein and Judge Rakoff wasted no time in dismissing the case on technical grounds. (This was not the first time that a major scandal involving JPMorgan Chase received a news blackout by mainstream media.)

The other Big Story is why after 18 years of police and FBI investigations of Epstein and his wide sex trafficking ring, the U.S. Department of Justice has brought criminal charges against only two people: Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.

There is also no indication, at present, that the Justice Department is preparing to bring a criminal case against JPMorgan Chase, despite its recidivist history of felony charges (including two felony counts for money laundering) and a former FBI agent’s statement on how the bank “impeded” a criminal investigation of Epstein. (See: New Court Documents Suggest the Justice Department Under Four Presidents Covered Up Jeffrey Epstein’s Money Laundering at JPMorgan Chase.)


https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/01/mainstream-media-is-avoiding-the-big-story-on-jeffrey-epstein-and-sealed-court-documents/



JPMorgan and Jeffrey Epstein Explained: Twisted Banking Taps into Sex Fiend’s Network

 

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JPMorgan and Jeffrey Epstein Explained: Twisted Banking Taps into Sex Fiend’s Network

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 8, 2024 ~

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase

According to the complaint filed by lawyers for Jeffrey Epstein’s victims against the biggest bank in America, JPMorgan Chase, Epstein was running a “sex-themed cult.” According to a deposition of a JPMorgan banker, the only money-generating business that Epstein had was tending to his “network.” According to witness testimony, fulfilling the sexual fantasies of some men in Epstein’s “network,” was how he obtained six opulent homes and hundreds of millions of dollars in wealth.

Epstein’s cult and network needed one essential ingredient to thrive: a financial institution willing to look the other way at vast sums of hard cash being withdrawn monthly and suspicious transfers of money between Epstein and his accomplices. Epstein found that for at least fifteen years at JPMorgan Chase according to documents and internal emails obtained in discovery in separate lawsuits against the bank in November and December of 2022 by Epstein’s victims and the Attorney General for the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein owned a private, secluded island compound.

Lawyers for Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficked victims are now, however, waving shiny objects to keep the media’s focus on the unsealing of stale documents in a case that was filed in 2015 and settled in 2017, rather than the explosive documents that remain under seal in the JPMorgan-Epstein cases.

The stale documents are part of a defamation case brought by Virginia Giuffre, an Epstein victim, against one of Epstein’s recruiters of underage girls, Ghislaine Maxwell, over her public statements that Giuffre was lying about the sex ring. Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence after being found guilty in a jury trial on December 29, 2021 for her role in Epstein’s sex trafficking. Epstein was found dead in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. The New York City medical examiner ruled his death a suicide.

Following a Second Circuit appeals court ruling on August 9, 2019 that found that the lower district court had failed to conduct a “particularized review” before sealing the documents in the Giuffre case, District Court Judge Loretta Preska finally ruled this past December that the documents should be unsealed and released in early January. Preska’s action came after years of litigation to obtain the documents by the Miami Herald – with Epstein’s hometown papers such as the New York Times and Wall Street Journal curiously absent from this quest for public transparency.

This shiny object tactic which has produced the same regurgitated headlines across mainstream media for more than a week, reminds us of the distraction technique used by the Killdeer shorebird, which feigns a broken wing and draws further attention to itself by whooping loudly in order to lead predators in the wrong direction — away from what it hopes to protect in its nest.

In the Epstein matter, the valuable treasure is not in the nest of documents in Preska’s court but in the “nearly 1 million pages and over 82,000 documents” that reside in Judge Jed Rakoff’s court – a Judge who has achieved an uncanny ability to corner the market on cases connecting Epstein to the twisted sexual proclivities of billionaires on Wall Street and their accommodating bankers at JPMorgan Chase.

The same lawyers for Epstein’s victims are involved in both the Giuffre case in Judge Preska’s court and the Epstein-JPMorgan Chase cases in Judge Rakoff’s court: David Boies and Sigrid McCawley of Boies Schiller & Flexner LLP.

David Boies has a not so pristine history of championing sexually-assaulted women. He previously represented now convicted rapist, Harvey Weinstein, and reportedly used strong-arm tactics on Weinstein’s behalf. (See Ronan Farrow’s investigative report in The New Yorker, Harvey Weinstein’s Army of Spies.)

JPMorgan Chase is the largest federally-insured bank in the United States and a global trading behemoth. It already had a criminal history worthy of a New York organized crime family before the Epstein-related cases were filed against it. The bank’s breathtaking rap sheet, however, did not deter Judge Rakoff from allowing a protective order to be entered in the Epstein-JPMorgan cases. The protective order blocks from being disclosed to the public “any information of a personal or intimate nature regarding any individual.” This is a preposterous assault on the public’s right to the facts in a sexual assault and sex trafficking case involving minors, the powerful billionaire clients of JPMorgan Chase, and the sickening failure to prosecute by the U.S. Department of Justice from 2007 to 2019, despite mountains of criminal evidence provided to it by the Palm Beach County Police Department in Florida and the FBI during that span of time.

The protective order signed by Judge Rakoff also includes this: “This protective order shall survive the termination of the litigation.” The Epstein victims’ case against JPMorgan Chase was settled for $290 million last year with the victims’ attorneys getting a stunning $87 million of that in legal fees. The U.S. Virgin Islands’ case was also settled last year by JPMorgan Chase, for $75 million.

The protective orders were entered in both cases in the early days of the litigation – before any meaningful discovery had occurred – and then prevailed as critically-important discovery material was produced and sealed. That would suggest that the “particularized review” of documents before sealing them that the Second Circuit appellate court demanded in 2019 in the Giuffre case, is ripe for challenge in the Epstein-JPMorgan Chase cases.

The Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, asserted in his deposition conducted on May 26 of last year that: “I don’t recall knowing anything about Jeffrey Epstein until the stories broke sometime in 2019. And I was surprised that I didn’t even — had never even heard of the guy, pretty much, and how involved he was with so many people.”

JPMorgan Chase has conceded that Epstein had accounts with the bank from 1998 to 2013. But according to Dimon’s narrative in his deposition, Dimon lived a cloistered existence in a corner office on the 48th floor of 270 Park Avenue where even the top executives who directly reported to him and worked only “a couple hundred feet” away from his office, never shared with Dimon their knowledge of and meetings over the bank’s concerns about Epstein’s massive withdrawals of hard cash, his prior history as a jailed sex offender in Florida, or his appearance on the front page of the New York Post in 2011 with the giant, all caps bold headline: “PRINCE AND PERV,” featuring a photo of Prince Andrew and Epstein, and the commentary: “Randy Andy with NYC sex creep.”

Somehow, the fact that Epstein was referring to JPMorgan Chase some of the richest men in the world and most politically-connected also escaped the man sitting at the helm of the bank in that corner office. According to the lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase by the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands, Epstein referred the following individuals to the bank as clients: the sixth richest man in the world, Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates; the ninth richest man in the world, Google co-founder and billionaire Sergey Brin; the Sultan of Dubai, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem; media and real estate billionaire Mort Zuckerman; former U.S. Treasury Secretary and former Harvard President Larry Summers, and numerous others.

Dimon’s proclaimed ignorance of the existence of Epstein or his red-carpet treatment inside the bank lost even more credibility when Boies introduced an email during Dimon’s deposition that directly referred to a 2010 Epstein meeting with Dimon. The exchange went as follows:

Boies: “On February 26, 2010, Lesley Groff writes Mr. Epstein on the subject of, Jes [Staley] and Jamie. ‘Shall I have Lynn prepare heavy snacks for your evening appointments with [redacted], Jes Staley and Jamie Dimon? Or is this to be a nice, sit-down dinner at 9 p.m.?’ And Mr. Epstein replies, ‘Snacks.’ ”

Dimon responds: “I have never had an appointment with Jeff Epstein. I’ve never met Jeff Epstein. I never knew Jeff Epstein. I never went to Jeff Epstein’s house. I never had a meal with Jeff Epstein. I have no idea what they’re referring to here.”

It would seem that a simple means existed to determine the veracity of Dimon’s claim to have never met with Epstein at his Manhattan mansion: schedule a deposition with Lesley Groff, Epstein’s right-hand assistant in New York, and inquire as to whether the meeting she referenced in her email to Epstein had indeed occurred on the night of February 26, 2010, or any other date. Curiously, the court docket does not indicate that Lesley Groff was ever deposed by the plaintiffs’ lawyers.

What is not in question, however, is that plenty of other JPMorgan Chase bankers were beating a path to the door of Epstein’s Manhattan mansion. According to a document filed by the bank’s attorneys (see pages three, four and five) on August 25 of last year, 15 of its executives or bankers visited Epstein’s Manhattan mansion – a key location of the sex trafficking and sexual assaults according to victims.

In the case of Justin Nelson, a Managing Director at the JPMorgan Private Bank, he visited Epstein’s Manhattan mansion 12 times between 2012 and 2017 and made a trip to Epstein’s Zorro Ranch in New Mexico once in January of 2016. (The bank has previously claimed its relationship with Epstein ended in 2013.)

According to current files at the Wall Street self-regulator, FINRA, Nelson is working out of JPMorgan’s Greenwich, Connecticut office – which caters to hedge funds. FINRA records show that Nelson was allowed by the firm to take the General Securities Sales Supervisor examination in August of 2020, suggesting that Nelson is now supervising others.

Part of the bank’s own waiving of shiny objects last year was to sue one of its former top executives, Jes Staley, making him a third-party defendant in an Epstein-related case. The bank and its Big Law firm, WilmerHale, attempted to take the heat off of Dimon by trying to convince the media that Staley was predominantly responsible for the bank keeping Epstein as a client for more than 15 years (and perhaps as long as 28 years). The bank stated in court documents that it wanted to claw back Staley’s $140 million in compensation for his “disloyalty” and “faithless service” to help pay for its legal expenses and settlements. In the end, JPMorgan Chase quietly settled the case with Staley with no public acknowledgement of any money changing hands.

Another tricked up version of sealing documents in Judge Rakoff’s courtroom in the Epstein-JPMorgan cases was to simply make hundreds of pages of key depositions disappear, instead of redacting individual pages with blacked-out sentences so that the public could see the context in which sentences or paragraphs were removed. This would appear to be in direct violation of the Second Circuit’s admonition to engage in “particularized review” prior to sealing documents.

Take, for example, the deposition of Stephen Cutler, the key executive that could have confirmed or refuted Jamie Dimon’s assertion that he had never heard of Epstein until his federal indictment in 2019. Cutler was the General Counsel of JPMorgan Chase. He worked in an office next door to Dimon. He was directly supervised by Dimon. As the former Director of Enforcement of the Securities and Exchange Commission from 2001 to 2005, Cutler should have been acutely aware of the reputational risk that Epstein and his dicey related accounts for victims, procurers, and rich pals posed to the bank – not to mention the withdrawals of tens of thousands of dollars of hard cash each month by Epstein or his surrogates without the bank filing the legally-required Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs).

According to transaction documents obtained in discovery by the U.S. Virgin Islands, JPMorgan Chase handled 9,000 transactions payable to Epstein-related individuals between 2005 and 2019, that had “a combined value of over $2.4 billion.”

In addition, JPMorgan Chase allowed Epstein or his representative to withdraw the following sums in hard cash from his accounts at the bank according to a court filing made by the U.S. Virgin Islands:

“In the year 2003, Epstein was able to withdraw highly suspicious amounts of cash totaling $175,311. In 2004, he withdrew $840,000. In 2005, he withdrew $904,337. In 2006, he withdrew $938,625. In 2007, he withdrew $526,000. In 2008, he withdrew $469,000. In 2009, he withdrew $165,011. In 2010, he withdrew $253,397. In 2011, he withdrew $260,000. In 2012, he withdrew $290,000. In 2013, he withdrew $197,152.”

Adding to the stench around Epstein’s long-term relationship with JPMorgan Chase is the question as to how the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI investigated this case from 2007 to at least 2019 and never discovered that JPMorgan Chase was at the center of handling the financing for this international sex trafficking ring.

A JPMorgan Chase internal email released on the public docket shows that Cutler emailed colleagues on July 20, 2011 acknowledging his awareness of the problematic nature of maintaining Epstein as a client at the bank. Cutler wrote: “This is not an honorable person in any way. He should not be a client.” The next day, Cutler emailed a colleague again, describing Epstein as: “Not a person we should do business with, period.” Nevertheless, Epstein’s accounts with the bank remained open and functional – strongly suggesting that a higher up overruled Cutler.

Since the only people higher up than Cutler would be Dimon or the Board of Directors, what Cutler had to say in his deposition as to whether he shared his concerns about Epstein with Dimon was of paramount importance at getting at the truth and facts in the case.

But just as occurred with Lesley Groff, there is no indication on the court docket that David Boies or anyone else from his law firm took a deposition of Cutler, despite Boies being in possession of an email putting Dimon at the sex trafficker’s mansion in 2010.

Lawyers for the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands did, however, conduct a deposition of Cutler on May 24, 2023 – just two days before the Dimon deposition. There is no indication on the docket that the Boies law firm requested to take part in that deposition, as it had been doing in other depositions with the U.S. Virgin Islands. Peculiarly, the deposition was held at the New York City law offices of Boies Schiller according to the transcript.

Boies’ lack of curiosity in such a critical area raises red flags – among many other red flags in the terms of the settlement agreement his firm agreed to with lawyers for the bank. (See 17 Attorneys General and Two Claimants File Objections to JPMorgan Chase’s Tricked Up Settlement with Jeffrey Epstein Victims.)

All that appears on the public court docket is 31 pages of the Cutler deposition that runs more than 258 pages. (Page 258 ends in mid sentence, with no ability to know how many dozens or hundreds of pages are missing from the public record.) What we can tell from the public document is this: the deposition starts on page 1 and then jumps to page 45, 46 and 47. At the bottom of page 47, a lawyer for the U.S. Virgin Islands is asking Cutler about going after JPMorgan when he was the head of enforcement at the SEC. Cutler responds that he thinks the matter was about Enron. The lawyer for the U.S. Virgin Islands is in the middle of stating what the SEC alleged the bank to have done with Enron when the deposition jumps from page 47 to page 212. There is nothing in this tiny, 31-page excerpt from the Cutler deposition that shines any helpful light on whether Cutler briefed Jamie Dimon on Epstein’s existence as a client at the bank or invoked attorney-client privilege on the subject.

The SEC had charged JPMorgan with “aiding and abetting” Enron’s securities fraud but let it off the hook with a meager $135 million settlement. Cutler’s name appears first at the bottom of the 2003 complaint.

The Epstein cases are not the first time that Judge Rakoff has been assigned highly sensitive corruption cases involving JPMorgan Chase and signed off on broad protective orders that seal from public view the dirty details. For example, in November of 2021, a former attorney and compliance officer at JPMorgan Chase, Shaquala Williams, charged in a lawsuit in Rakoff’s court that the bank was keeping two sets of books while dodging the requirements of a non-prosecution agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice. Williams also charged that a “high risk” former government official, tied to Jamie Dimon, was being improperly paid by the bank through an “emergency payment method.” Deposition testimony identified at least one of those former government officials that was allegedly receiving improper payments to be Tony Blair, the former Prime Minister of the U.K.

Despite the media frenzy around the newly unsealed documents in the Giuffre case, there is actually little new information. The story has already been copiously covered in the Miami Herald series, Perversion of Justice, in 2016; in Apple TV documentaries in 2020; and in a Netflix documentary in 2022.

The JPMorgan/Jeffrey Epstein story, on the other hand, is a bombshell of a story that only a compromised and/or corrupted corporate media would refuse to intensely investigate and report. Notably, not one of the major corporate media empires in New York (such as the New York Times or Wall Street Journal) have filed a lawsuit requesting the unsealing of the JPMorgan Chase documents according to the court dockets.

As further evidence that a Killdeer-style distraction is going on, although the lawyers have all of these unsealed documents in the Giuffre case at their fingertips and could release them in one batch, they are maximizing media saturation by doling out the documents a little every weekday.

There is the uncomfortable suspicion that the lawyers are hoping the public becomes so sick of this story that everything related to Epstein dies a permanent media death, negating any potential for whistleblower leaks of incriminating JPMorgan documents to get any serious headline attention.

There is also the problematic way in which mainstream media ignored a potentially seismic third lawsuit filed against Jamie Dimon and certain members of the JPMorgan Chase Board of Directors last year. Judge Rakoff wasted no time in dismissing that case on technical grounds. The complaint credibly alleged that some JPMorgan Chase Board Members were in business with Epstein.

Adding to the culpability of JPMorgan’s Board of Directors is the simple fact that they have not fired Dimon, as either Chairman or CEO, despite the unprecedented crime spree that has ensued as he sat at the helm of the bank. Under Dimon, the bank has been charged with an unprecedented five felony counts brought by the U.S. Department of Justice – admitting to all of them.

Raising even more suspicions of the Board’s own culpability is that after the bank’s two most recent admissions to felony charges, Dimon was financially rewarded by the Board. See our report: After JPMorgan Chase Admits to Its 4th and 5th Felony Charge, Its Board Gives a $50 Million Bonus to Its CEO, Jamie Dimon.

It’s all enough to make every American sick over what passes as “justice” in America today. But is it enough to make Americans pick up the phone and call their U.S. Senators and demand a thorough and independent investigation?


https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/01/jpmorgan-and-jeffrey-epstein-explained-twisted-banking-taps-into-sex-feinds-network/





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