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by plafl
1500 days ago
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He got 2/3 of the shares necessary for gaining control. The Bank of Portugal was the only one who could prosecute money forgery and it was being acquired with forged money. This guy was a hacker. I doubt he would have succeeded nevertheless. In the end the law was changed to apply to him retroactively, which was unconstitutional (and I'm sure it's still unconstitutional on most parts of the world), and that only to give him more sentence time. He would have been removed from the bank, one way or another. |
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Whether it was HSBC’s opium trading
Or JP Morgan Chase’s fraudulent securities offering for a water company that decided to operate as a bank
There are lots of examples of maneuvering towards legal legitimacy
It really just depends on where your ambitions lie and what consequences you are willing to risk.
(note: all those banks are now results of many mergers and hardly represent their oldest branches)