Sunday, August 19, 2012

Once again Goldmine Sachs screws the victims


Goldmine Sachs, the notorious Wall St. Bankster, known for finding ever more clever ways to screw people out of their money for its profit, has once more pushed the envelope. As Gretchen Morgensen explains, when Goldmine lost an arbitration case over the Bayou Group Ponzi scheme, it found a precious new way to recover its loss.
Goldman had executed and cleared trades for Bayou, and there were questions about how well Goldman supervised the account. On July 30, Goldman paid $20.7 million to roughly 200 Bayou investors in the United States. Those investors, unsecured creditors in a separate Bayou bankruptcy case, were awarded that amount by a securities arbitration panel in June 2010.

It was one of the few bright spots of the Bayou story, but it didn’t last. The same day Goldman paid the investors, the firm filed its own creditor’s claim for the same amount — $20.7 million — in the Bayou bankruptcy. Goldman contended that paying the award had made it, too, a Bayou creditor. If the court agrees, the investors who won their arbitration case — also unsecured creditors of Bayou — will be out of luck.
Poor little Goldmine Sachs.

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