Submitted by Tyler Durden: Three years ago, a hard fought landmark FOIA
lawsuit was won by the great Bloomberg reporter, the late Mark Pittman,
in which the Fed was forced to disclose a plethora of previously secret
bailout information, which in turn spurred the movement to "audit the
Fed" and include a variety of largely watered down provisions in the
Frank-Dodd bill. This victory came despite extensive objections by the
Fed and the threat that the case may even escalate to the highly
politicized Supreme Court, which lately has demonstrated conclusively
that not only is justice not blind, but goes to the highest ideological
bidder. Moments ago, Europe just learned that when it comes to secrecy
of its supreme monetary leaders, in this case all originating from
Goldman Sachs and defending data highly sensitive to the same Goldman
Sachs, the European central bank's secrecy is not only matched by that
of the Fed, but even more engrained in the "judicial" system of the
Eurozone, after the European Union General Court in Luxembourg just
announced that the European Central Bank will be allowed to refuse
access to secret files showing how Greece used derivatives to hide its
debt. Why? Simple: recall that it was Goldman Sachs who was the primary "advisor"
on a decade worth of FX swaps-related deals which allowed Greece to
outright lie about both its fiscal deficit and its total debt levels,
and that it was a Goldman alum who became head of the same Greek debt office
just before the country imploded. And certainly the ECB was involved
and knew very all about the Greek behind the scenes shennanigans. And
who happens to be head of the ECB? Why yet another former Goldman
worker, of course. Mario Draghi.
And with yet another ex-Goldmanite taking over the BOE, any hopes of
bank transparency in the UK have just been crushed as well. Goldman is
taking over the world one central bank, and Supreme Court at a time, and
leaving not a trace behind, even as it manages to create ever more debt
out of thin air to keep the population occupied chasing trinkets,
gadgets, and other unneeded stuff, while the real wealth plunder by
Goldman et al enters its terminal phase.From Bloomberg:
The same excuse always and forever: the common man should not know what is truly going on behind the scenes, as the truth would "undermine protection of the public interest" - just leave it to the smart men in tweed suits to fret about the details; it is best if the general ignorant herd remains in the dark, or else its "protection" may be impaired...“Disclosure of those documents would have undermined the protection of the public interest so far as concerns the economic policy of the EU and Greece,” the European Union General Court in Luxembourg said today, rejecting a challenge by Bloomberg News. The news organization initially sought the documents in August 2010.
And just to complete the farce, perhaps the Fed will tell us how its own investigation launched in February of 2010(!) looking at Goldman's behind the scenes involvement in faking the Greek debt numbers for a decade, is going. Recall: "We are looking into a number of questions related to Goldman Sachs and other companies and their derivatives arrangements with Greece," Bernanke said in testimony before the Senate Banking Committee. It is now nearly three years later and still nothing...Today’s ruling by three judges denies European taxpayers, on the hook for the cost of Greece’s 240 billion-euro ($311.5 billion) bailout, the opportunity to see whether EU officials knew of irregularities in Greece’s public accounts before they became public in 2009.
The decision underscores the lack of accountability at the ECB as it expands its powers to become the region’s lender of last resort and chief banking regulator. The central bank, which puts greater limits on its disclosures about its decision making than its British and U.S. equivalents, is under pressure from policy makers including governing council member Erkki Liikanen to boost transparency. ECB President Mario Draghi last month defended the Frankfurt-based bank, telling reporters it was already a “very transparent” institution.
Bloomberg News sought two internal papers drafted for the central bank’s six-member Executive Board. The first document is entitled “The impact on government deficit and debt from off- market swaps: the Greek case.” The second reviews Titlos Plc, a structure that allowed National Bank of Greece SA (ETE), the country’s biggest lender, to borrow from the ECB by creating collateral.
Naturally, we won't hold our breath.
Sadly, little can be added here: Goldman wins again, and justice for the common man is long dead.
Source
Banzai7
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