Recovery Begins When Addiction Ends: an Open Letter to Jamie Dimon

Sent to Jamie Dimon via The Alternative Banking Working Group, Occupy Wall Street.  (One of the members of Occupy Hartford is part of that working group.)

Dear Jamie Dimon: 

We, the Alternative Banking Working Group of Occupy Wall Street, are staging an intervention on your behalf. Unlike many in the financial industry and press, we will not be deceived by attempts at misdirection and we are not intimidated by complexity. Your days of gambling with taxpayers’ money and pressuring the regulators to let business go on as usual are over. It’s not good for you, it’s not good for us, and it’s not good for our country.

It’s been a good ride, and we’ve been impressed with how long you have managed to keep it up. The incredible complexity of the financial system helped, of course, just as it helped obscure countless other crimes and frauds. 

It’s truly a work of art how you and your enablers have created a system that nobody fully understands. It’s the perfect cover for your continuing addiction to risk, power, and money, and it keeps everyone confused just long enough, well past any statute of limitation for criminal prosecution. 

Now your addiction is out of control. Rather than quitting while you and JPMorgan Chase were ahead (if you ever were), you’ve been driven to inhale every last dollar, no matter the risks involved for you and for all of us. What has really worked for you personally, and has allowed you to remain credible for so long, is your intense denial as to the underlying question of what year it is

You seem to live in a time warp where it is still 2004, the housing market is booming, along with the associated securities market, and you and your friends are printing money with no downside in sight. But it turns out that ’04 model was a bit of a lemon — or, to borrow your words, “poorly conceived, poorly vetted, and poorly executed.” 

Here is some sobering news: You are, in fact, living in 2012, leading an enormous, too-big-to-fail bank, which is being continuously bailed out by the Fed’s unlimited loans at 0% interest, on the taxpayers’ dime. In a reasonable world, under these conditions, JPMorgan Chase would be a utility bank focused on the public good, and you would be merely its custodian. You would not be incentivized to take crazy risks to chase yield. Your job would be incredibly boring and your bank only very mildly profitable.

But, sadly, the addiction is still doing the talking. So we’re here to say “no more.” It’s time to put down that fifth drink and walk away from the baccarat table, because no matter how many martinis you have and no matter how much money you lose, you’re still a glorified accountant, not a secret agent. And that’s fine. There’s nothing that JPMorgan Chase, and the world economy for that matter, needs more than a very good accountant.

Perhaps you will protest that you don’t need this intervention. In fact, over the past few days you have repeatedly acknowledged your sloppiness, stupidity, and bad judgment. And though that sounds compelling and humble, as we know you expect it to, you haven’t gone far enough to demonstrate that you understand just how deeply in trouble you are. And don’t claim stupidity – “stupid” isn’t a word associated with Jamie Dimon. You need to admit that you are powerless over your addiction and that your bank has become unmanageable.

Here is what we ask of you: 

First, stop gambling with our money and our futures. Stop lobbying for deregulation — we are way past that now. Stop lying to us all by doing silly things like pushing proprietary trading into the treasury office and renaming it, or by pretending that there are no losses when there very clearly are, to the tune of $2,000,000,000 and growing. And, please, stop trying to convince us that nobody at JPMorgan Chase saw this coming. Ina Drew was offering to resign in April but you kept telling the world that nothing serious was amiss, a lie which could get you serious jail time. 

Second, admit that your bank is too big to take risks that neither you nor anyone in your bank understands or is able to handle, and that the only thing that will stop you from misbehaving is strong, enforced, and uncompromised regulation. 

Third, resign as Director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It is inappropriate, and dangerous to us, for you to oversee the banking system or the economy when you have proven incompetent at overseeing your own bank — particularly since the Federal Reserve is investigating your bank and your behavior.

Because this in an intervention, you’re going to need to get used to a lot of new folks who will challenge the bad decisions that have become habit for you. The SEC should be facilitating the first step by getting you into a full in-patient rehab program, where the Fed, the FDIC, and every other regulator who has an interest in your bank’s good health can help you make a searching and fearless moral inventory of your bank and its choices. Although the “revolving door” connecting Wall Street to the Beltway has turned our regulatory agencies into the Keystone Kops of the 21st century, your crisis should serve as a wake-up call and put an end to their denial as well. 

When you reach your twelfth step, you can help the regulators write tougher regulations based on the knowledge you acquired during your efforts to undermine them. 

After all, if you can’t manage the risk, then nobody can. And you’ve taken the first step by admitting that you can’t. Now take the other eleven.

Best regards,

The Alternative Banking Working Group

Fall Clean-up/Drop-Off at Turning Point Park – CL&P Action Committee

PRESS ADVISORY, 11-9-11,
contact: Cassandra Donnelly at moffiedonnelly@gmail.com or JoAnne Bauer, 860-233-7852
WHO: Occupy Hartford’s Strategy/Action Subcommittee announces:
WHAT: Fall Clean-up/Drop-Off at Turning Point Park
WHEN: Anytime before Saturday, November 12, noon
WHERE: Turning Point Park, Broad at Asylum Sts, Hartford, CT
Although the majority of autmn leaves have not fallen yet in CT, we have experienced trees and power lines felled by Storm Alfred.
To assist in clean-up and as part of an Action Campaign highting failed standard practices of CL&P, Occupy Hartford is announcing that all residents of Greater Hartford can bring up to 5 felled tree branches to Turning Point Park by this Saturday at noon. At Turning Point, residents will be able to use autumn-colored construction paper to “decorate” their branches with questions and comments for CL&P and with large numbers identifying how many days they had no power while waiting for CL&P to do its job. There will be a Media/Photo Opportunity as we load up a truck of branches and limbs to deliver to CL&P the products of their neglect.  
BACKGROUND
In the wake of Storm Alfred and massive power outages for almost 900,000 CT households, politicians and media in both small towns and big cities are asking some tough questions about CL&P’s standard business practices.  Members of Occupy Hartford see these practices of CL &P as exemplifying what is wrong with “business as usual” in America.  As part of a continuing campaign, Occupy Hartford is aligning with union members to call for new minimum employment numbers and more dollars for linemen, less for CEOs. 
SEE ALSO:
Big Paydays in a Merger (NY Times)
[Thomas May is Nstar's chief and Charles Shivery of Northeast Utilities]
When is a merger of equals really a takeover? One easy way to tell is when the top brass get rich and undeserved paydays. There’s probably no better live example than the just-delayed sale of a Massachusetts electric utility, Nstar. Its top five executives could feast on as much as $50 million in severance and change-of-control payments despite labeling their deal one of mutual control for both sets of shareholders. As regulators investigate the union more deeply, investors may want to do the same.
It’s no surprise Nstar wanted to describe selling out to a rival, Northeast Utilities — the company behind Connecticut’s recent crippling power outages — as a merger instead of a takeover. Given their huge local monopolies, electric companies are highly regulated and politicized creatures. Nstar has 1.4 million captive customers in the greater Boston area.
These concerns explain why the companies used a variation on the verb “merge” 29 times when announcing the all-stock deal. Each company will contribute seven directors to the board. Nstar’s chief executive, Thomas J. May, retains the same role in the combined company, while his counterpart at Northeast, Charles Shivery, will become chairman.
But while all this makes it sound like a merger, it’s not. The terms of the transaction give Nstar’s existing owners shares equal to around 44 percent of the new entity. That constitutes a change of control, according to Nstar’s proxy documents, thereby causing accelerated payouts of unvested equity and other benefits for named executive officers.
For May alone, this comes to $8.3 million. What’s more, the deal includes so-called double-trigger agreements that pay out as much as $50 million if the five senior employees are terminated after two years. In the context of executive pay gone wild, this may not sound like an aberration. The oil driller Nabors recently paid $100 million in severance to its chairman, Eugene Isenberg, merely to surrender the title of chief executive.
But equity investors normally receive a premium when handing control to a buyer. Nstar’s deal was struck at parity. That effectively means Nstar’s executives will exploit a change-of-control premium that their shareholders were denied.
For info, contact:  Cassandra Donnelly at moffiedonnelly@gmail.com or JoAnne Bauer, 860-233-7852

Occupy Hartford stands in Solidarity with Occupy Oakland November 2nd

11-1-11 Press Release Occupy Hartford

 

On November 2, from 4-6pm, Occupy Hartford will hold a peace rally at Turning Point Park in solidarity with Scott Olsen, Occupy Oakland and the call for a General Strike in Oakland:

 

Early on October 25th, expecting a police raid at Occupy Oakland in Oscar Grant Plaza, occupiers began to erect barricades along the perimeter and access ways to the plaza. At 4:30am, over 500 police surrounded the plaza. Police fired projectiles and tear gas shells and hand-lobbed at least one flash-bang grenade over the barricades before marching through the camp tearing down tents and pulling down almost everything that stood in the plaza. Over 70 people were arrested during the raid. Later in the day, Alameda County Sheriff’s deputies repeatedly deployed massive amounts of tear gas and fired projectiles into a crowd of marchers throughout the night. Numerous people were injured, some seriously when projectiles were fired at the heads of protesters. On October 26th, occupiers removed fencing and again took Oscar Grant Plaza, holding their daily General Assembly which voted 1484 to 46 for an Oakland general strike on Wednesday, November 2nd.

 

The peace rally is in response to the call for a National Day of Solidarity on November 2 and to demonstrate that our movement is peaceful and cannot be deterred by police force, whether on a local or national level. The public is invited to this event.

 

For information contact:

Wesley Strong

860-916-2761

Occupy Bank of America November 5th

Monday October 24, 2011, Hartford, CT. Occupy Hartford, a local group affiliated with the ongoing Occupy Wall Street protests in New York City, today announced plans for a march and rally against Bank of America in Hartford on November 5, 2011, at 10:00 am.

“We are angry about the role played by Bank of America in the collapse of the economy in 2008. Even after taxpayers bailed them out the first thing on their mind was how to pay billions in bonuses to their executives,” said Rebecca Burton of Manchester, CT. The march will be kicking off from the Occupy Hartford site at the corner of Farmington Avenue and Broad Street at 10:00 am Saturday November 5, 2011 and will pass by several Bank of America branch locations in Hartford en route to a rally site to be determined.

“We picked November 5th as the date for our march and rally because that date was set by Bank Transfer Day, a group on Facebook, as the day when people across the country should move their money from the ‘too big to fail’ banks to smaller, locally-owned banks or credit unions,” said Burton. “We think that’s a great idea and we are urging those with accounts in Bank of America to shift their money to institutions that deserve their trust, not banks that use their assets to hurt our nation, our state, and our capitol city.”

Bank Transfer Day has been endorsed by other Occupy groups across the country, most notably by Occupy Wall Street.

Bank of America, headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, is one of the biggest banks in the country; their many branches and ATMs are a familiar sight to Connecticut residents. “We don’t think convenience should trump using our money to help the economy here in Connecticut,” said Burton. “Bank of America has refused to use the money taxpayers ‘loaned’ them to help small businesses and homeowners here in Connecticut. We think that’s wrong. We hope our protest against this bank’s selfish policies will help in the nationwide campaign to get everybody to move their money out of Bank of America, and the other ‘too big to fail’ banks.”

The march is set to start at 10:00 am on Saturday, November 5, 2011. The public is invited, the march and rally will be safe and legal, and families are urged to attend as well. People are encouraged to make and bring their own signs or banners, or to carry signs Occupy Hartford will be providing.

Occupy Hartford can be reached on Facebook at: “Occupy Hartford CT” or on its dedicated website: www.occupyhartfordct.com. Resources to aid in moving your money from Bank of America or other “too big to fail” banks can be found at: www.moveyourmoneyproject.org/

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For more information please contact:

Rebecca Burton
860-371-5509
rosewood924@gmail.com

Garret Schenck
774-563-9846