Corruption, accountability and political ignorance

An article in yesterday’s Irish Times by Peter Murtagh relates the story of Seán, a man who, in normal circumstances, wouldn’t say boo to a goose but was now gripped by naked rage because of his financial loss as a result of the banking collapse.

Seán, who voted Fianna Fail all his life, had some colourful language for Fianna Fail, Bertie Ahern and Anglo Irish Bank.

According to Murtagh the principal reason for Seán’s anger was the lack of accountability for the banking fiasco.

This is a misinterpretation of Seán’s anger. Seán is not the slightest bit interested in accountability, his anger stems entirely from the fact that he personally lost money.

If his money hadn’t been invested in Anglo Irish Bank, if it was still secure in some other scheme he wouldn’t have featured in Peter Murtagh’s article.

In other words, he would still be, as Murtagh describes him – a nice quiet man, a gentleman. He would still vote Fianna Fail at the next election as he has done all his life and the financial devastation inflicted on Ireland and its people would only be of passing interest to him as he looked forward to his retirement.

If Seán was genuinely interested in accountability, rather than his own selfish interests, he would not have blindly and consistently voted for the most corrupt political party in the history of the state.

It was only when the disease of corruption infected him personally that he suddenly realized that somebody should be made accountable.

It is this extremely narrow outlook that lies at the root of most of Ireland’s problems. People like Seán do not vote in the national interest, they vote strictly for their own interests and it is this political ignorance that creates the perfect environment for corrupt politicians to buy votes in order to obtain power.

At the end of the article Murtagh suggests that perhaps things are changing.

Maybe the anger of all the Seáns out there will translate into our “betters” being held to account by the Garda, the DPP and the corporate enforcer.

Like Seán, Murtagh is living in a very narrow world completely unaware of the reality of what Ireland has become.

Every single action by the Government and State authorities since the economy collapsed and exposed Ireland as a corrupt state has been to protect and maintain that corrupt system while at the same time trying to convince the international community that we are a normal democratic country.

The Garda, DPP, Corporate Enforcer, and all other so called regulatory agencies are a major part of the problem and the problem will not be resolved until all of these agencies are radically reformed or replaced altogether.

But nothing, absolutely nothing will change until the present corrupt political system is completely destroyed and replaced with a genuine, accountable, democratic system.

That’s how radical we need to be and quoting meaningless sentiments from a Bob Dylan song, as Murtagh does, will certainly make no difference to the forces of corruption that have infested every level of Irish society.

Copy to:
Peter Murtagh

White collar crime – denial and punishment

Bernard Madoff has been given the maximum prison sentence of 150 years for masterminding a massive fraud that robbed investors of $65bn (£40bn).

Here’s a list of words in sequence as they appeared in an Irish newspaper reporting Madoff’s case.

Crooked…sentenced…swindling…a massive “Ponzi” pyramid scheme…duped thousands of investors…behind bars…prosecutors…fraudster…fraud… perjury…false reporting…fraud…crimes…fraud…wrong…criminal…fraud…fraud…pretence…scam.

Compare this list with the following list of words taken from another Irish newspaper reporting efforts by former National Irish Bank (NIB) boss Jim Lacey to avoid even the minimum consequences for his part in a massive ten year scam that saw countless millions robbed from the State and directly from customer’s accounts.

Improper practices…tax evasion scandal…falsified documents…hot money.

Ah yes the old reliable ‘improper practices’ it’s the term most favoured by politicians, government officials and journalists when reporting/commenting on major crimes within the Irish financial sector.

In most counties it is also common to witness white collar criminals (the term is still not officially recognized in Ireland) express regret and apologise for their crimes. Here’s what Madoff had to say.

I’m sorry I know that doesn’t help…apologised for the “legacy of shame” he had brought on his family and the industry…I’m responsible for a great deal of suffering and pain, I understand that.

As we know ‘errant’ Irish bankers do not do apologies, they don’t do accountability and they certainly do not do time.

Lacey, denying everything, blamed bank managers who weren’t up to the job or were out playing golf. He blamed Revenue for not testing the bank’s systems. He blamed internal and external auditors and he blamed the Central Bank. Everybody is to blame, maybe even the customer, but not Mr. Lacey.

And then there’s the proceeds/profit/loot gained from financial skullduggery.

Mrs. Madoff agreed to give up almost all of her property except for $2.5m (€1.7m) set aside by the Government as part of a $171bn (€122bn) forfeiture order against her husband by the judge.

She will relinquish her interest in the couple’s penthouse in New York and other homes worth an estimated $22m. She will also give up a $39,000 piano; $2.6m of jewellery; silverware worth $50,000; bed linen worth $18,000; 35 sets of her husband’s cufflinks; a $36,000 sable coat and a $12,500 mink.

She and her children are also under suspicion of complicity in the fraud.

Compare this to the family of the corrupt Haughey who were allowed to keep his millions.

Some; if not most of this money, is the proceeds of Haughey’s nefarious activities but there’s as much chance of a Haughey being investigated for complicity as there is of Lacey ending up in jail.

Should we name the Ansbacher account holders?

So asked Prime Time in September 1999. Of course the names were released… three years later. I recently put the entire Ansbacher report back online, after seven years of it being unavailable. I also posted the list of all account holders.

What is interesting about this, is the voxpop at the start. There was anger, there was a demand for accountability. It pretty much never happened. Indeed one of the Ansbacher account holders, Clayton Love Jnr, only this year made full settlement of €1.4m with the Revenue. There was no jailing or prosecutions.

Accountability? You must be joking.

Fianna Fáil delenda est.

Angry Fianna Fail denies any wrongdoing

It was reported in the Irish Examiner last Monday that Fianna Fail took donations either side of the 2007 general election which were above the declaration threshold and should have been notified to the Standards in Public Office Commission (SIPO) – but were not.

I decided to submit a formal complaint to the Standards in Public Office Commission regarding this matter.

As a first step I rang Fianna Fail HQ to obtain the name of the person responsible for the alleged offence as the law requires that an individual be identified in all complaints.

Predictably, after a lot of waffle, I was told that my question was unanswerable at this time.

Some hours later I received a call from a very angry David Burke, Fianna Fail director of finance.

Mr. Burke was not pleased and demanded to know what I was up to; he demanded to know the basis on which I was making my complaint.

When I said I was basing it on the article in the Irish Examiner he nearly had a fit – you’re basing it on something a journalist wrote? The word ‘journalist’ was spat out with venom. He then proceeded to state his party’s position.

“We’ve issued a statement that we are in full compliance with all the legislation as set down by SIPO. You are allowed (how kind) to make whatever representation you want to SIPO but I can assure you that we are fully compliant with all the legislative requirements. The article was inaccurate in certain respects and will be clarified with SIPO over the coming month.”

During the conversation I mentioned that I didn’t have much confidence in SIPO as a regulatory body which, bizarrely, made Mr. Burke even angrier claiming I was inferring that his party had done something illegal.

I was at a complete loss; I mean, how could I or indeed anybody ever think that Fianna Fail might do something illegal?

Mr. Burke made it clear to me that he was an expert on the law regarding this matter:

“I know the legislation inside out, I live and breathe it. With all due respect you have not read the legislation to the level of detail that I know the legislation, I can assure you of that.”

Then he said something which I thought very curious:

“SIPO will make contact with us, we will then clarify our position which I can assure you is in full compliance with the law, SIPO will then subsequently confirm our position.”

It must be very comforting for Fianna Fail knowing in advance that SIPO will confirm their position although, to be fair, I could be misinterpreting Mr. Burke’s meaning.

In any case, I submitted my formal complaint to SIPO yesterday.

HIQA independence in question

TWO families who triggered the independent review of services at the Mid-Western Regional Hospital in Ennis are furious no one has been held accountable…The Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) found it was unable to blame anyone because of a lack of clarity around local accountability and the authority to make decisions (Irish Examiner).

Once again a so called independent investigation into death within the HSE has been unable to hold anyone to account. I don’t think anybody really expected anything better. After so many other whitewash reports why would anyone think this one would be any different?

We’ve had the usual waffle from bureaucrats and politicians who have employed the usual cynical strategies to protect their backs.

A particularly nasty but common strategy is to supply the report to the victims just hours before its publication. This means they have no time to read it in detail and as we’re heading into a long weekend it will be old news by next Tuesday.

Mary Harney had promised to supply the report to the families of the victims before publication; she did so, at 11.30 on the morning of publication. It’s difficult to get more ruthlessly cynical than that.

This is in stark contrast to how the State favours the Catholic Church. The Dublin Archdiocese Commission of Investigation into clerical sex abuse is due for publication in May or June but Archbishop Martin and others have already been given a copy of the report so that they can prepare their response to what is said to be an absolutely shocking litany of abuse (Irish Examiner).

A solicitor for one of the families involved in the Ennis hospital misdiagnosis scandal said that the report seemed to have a political agenda connected to the downgrading of hospitals.

This was put to the chief executive officer of HIQA, Dr. Tracey Cooper, on the Six One News (1st report, 4th item) yesterday, she replied:

“As an independent authority we’re established to take work independently from the rest of the system. What’s driven the findings of the investigation is that it isn’t about political agenda’s; it isn’t about territorialism of local hospitals.

It is about the fact that international evidence is very clear that patients that require emergency care, specialist care have to be treated in care by people who see sufficient volumes of patients with those types of conditions to keep their skills up to date.”

This statement could have been taken straight out of Mary Harney’s files so close is it to government (political) policy regarding the downgrading of hospitals.

The merits of this policy have been widely debated throughout the media but why is this so called independent authority that was supposed to be investigating the deaths of two patients by misdiagnosis, parroting Government policy as a justification for its conclusions?

Is HIQA independent? I don’t think so.

Copy to:
HIQA

Very strange goings on at Irish Nationwide Building Society

Very strange goings on at Irish Nationwide Building Society (Irish Independent).

Apparently, Noel Harrington a branch manager in Limerick, was asked to step aside while an independent inquiry was conducted into the way he handled his own loans and those of a property developer with borrowings of €36 million.

Yet, Mr. Harrington faces no allegations, is on full pay and is not regarded by his employer as being under suspicion.

The independent inquiry into non allegations that Mr. Harrington’s employers have no suspicions about apparently concerns a substantial €1.2 million difference in a redemption fee, in other words, €1.2 million has gone astray somewhere.

And who is conducting this ‘independent’ inquiry, is it someone inside the Society? Is this not a matter for the Financial Regulator or the Garda Fraud Squad or did the Financial Regulator tell the Society – go away and hire a private investigator, we have enough on our plate already.

Hurley: A government lapdog

I’m delighted to see that the cowardly and dishonest ramblings of John Hurley, governor of the Central Bank, to the Joint Committee on Economic Regulatory Affairs last week have been exposed.

John McManus, writing in the Irish Times, effectively concluded that Hurley was/is nothing more than a lapdog for a government that didn’t want to know about the very dangerous bubble that was building, a bubble that was bound to burst with dire consequences.

No accountability, no justice, no hope.

On 11th December last Bernard Madoff was arrested by police on allegations of major fraud. Yesterday, (three months later) he was taken away to jail in handcuffs from a court of law and will receive a jail sentence in June of up to 150 years. He is likely to spend the rest of his life in jail. While waiting for his trial Madoff was kept under house arrest.

On 18th December last Sean Fitzpatrick, then chairman of Anglo Irish Bank, resigned when it was revealed that he had engaged in some very suspect financial transactions. No investigation by the police took place and no arrests were made.

Mr Fitzpatrick is still walking around and can even head off to sunny climes when the Irish weather gets him down, despite the suspicious nature of the transactions. The Financial Regulator and the Government appear to have made an immediate judgement that Fitzpatrick had done nothing illegal. Surely that is for a properly resourced fraud squad to decide?

As Madoff rots in jail the Office of the Director of Corporate Enforcement is still considering his options on the Fitzpatrick case. Judging from past experience we can expect, at some point in the distant future, that a High Court inspector will be appointed to investigate.

That investigation will take anything up to six years before the matter returns to the ODCE who will then consider, for an unspecified period, his next move.

He may refer the matter to the DPP, but that is highly unusual but even if he does the DPP will also ponder his options for at least three or four years.

The most likely choice for the ODCE will be to try and get Fitzpatrick barred from acting as company director; this is the absolute minimum punishment for corporate crime.

It’s difficult to say how many years this will take as the ODCE has never successfully completed a major case. He has been on the National Irish Bank case since 1998, the Bailey brothers for about six years and Jim Flavin of DCC is still only at the High Court inspector stage. Very conservatively, we are looking at ten to fifteen years before even minimum justice is imposed.

Conclusion:

America – Police, arrest, courts, jail – all within three months.

Ireland – No police, no arrests, no courts – No accountability, no justice, no hope.

Copy to:
ODCE

Government website provides some light relief

Thanks to John McDermott for the link to this website which he rightly describes as a howl.

Set up in May last year the site is (allegedly) a cross-departmental approach by the Irish Government to raise awareness of bribery and corruption.

The first joke is the list of government departments involved in this campaign. All of them are, to some degree, responsible for creating the banana republic of Ireland.

Here are some other jokes to bring a smile.

The idea is to raise awareness. What Irish citizen is unaware of the widespread corruption that infects our land? What’s needed is an awareness of action. If the Government started jailing white collar criminals instead of television licence dodgers they might gain some credibility.

“Since the enactment of the Prevention of Corruption(Amendment) Act, 2001, the law on corruption in Ireland has been strengthened.”

Obviously, the banker’s are unaware of this.

“Ireland is very committed to ensuring that bribes to officials either at home or abroad are treated as criminal offences.”

White collar criminals are exempt.

“Since the enactment of the Prevention of Corruption(Amendment) Act, 2001, the law on corruption in Ireland has been strengthened.”

Note the year, 2001. To my knowledge nobody has been charged or jailed for corruption since.

“Accordingly, the relevant Irish Government Departments and bodies have initiated a comprehensive programme to ensure that implementation is being progressed.”

They have? Must be a State secret. ‘Being progressed’ are the magic words here, could be decades.

“The Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (DETE) has compiled a brochure entitled OECD-Anti-Bribery Initiative’, which sets out the main elements and provisions of the OECD Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign officials.”

Wow, a brochure? I hope it’s as glossy and shiny as all those thousands of brochures churned out by the now totally discredited Financial Regulator.

“Plans are in place to circulate this publication to employees of the relevant sections of the Department of Enterprise.”

I don’t know about you but I’m beginning to feel faint from the excitement. I just know I’ll suffer a complete collapse if this plan is actually carried out, it would be too much.

“Prison sentences have been handed down in several countries and individuals and companies that committed foreign bribery have been penalised with fines of up to US$28 million.”

Great; action at last. Oh no, that’s US dollars, it’s another country. And in reality, as far as so called Irish regulatory agencies are concerned – another universe.

Copy to:
The Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Dermot Ahern TD

Groundhog Day (again)

From an Irish point of view there is absolutely nothing new about the recent scandals involving Anglo Irish and other banks. Theft and fraud within the Irish financial sector has long being an integral part of Irish culture.

Such activity is common because the State itself officially accepts such behavior as the norm and, over the years, has developed a whole raft of mechanisms and strategies to protect those in the financial sector who regularly engage in criminal activity.

We only have to look back at any one of the many scandals of the past thirty years or so to confirm the truth of the situation.

In this case I’ve chosen the Ansbacher scandal because, like the Anglo Irish Bank scandal, it involves secret names and a golden circle.

It will be obvious after reading the following quotes, opinions and comments that nothing has or is about to change in corrupt Ireland.

((My comments are in brackets, emphasis mine).

On the 27th September 1999 the then Tanaiste, Mary Harney, gave the following excuse for not publishing the Ansbacher names.

“If the Government were to break the law and publish the names, everybody on the list would walk free and prosecutions would not be brought.”

(During the Ansbacher scandal Harney constantly made the case for secrecy because, she claimed that she was absolutely determined that prosecutions would follow, that justice would be done).

When the Ansbacher report was finally published in 2002, five years after the scandal was first uncovered, Mary Harney’s party colleague and Minister for Justice Michael McDowell cautioned against public expectations that a rash of arrests and prosecutions would follow.

(This is thinly coded message for the crooks – Don’t worry, our strategy of putting things on the very long finger worked, you’re all off the hook).

(Nobody was ever prosecuted for the Ansbacher criminality. Those involved did secret deals with Revenue and a few were banned from acting as company directors. The exact same strategy is being adopted by the present Government to protect the bankers).

Mary Harney (Still in office) must have had a moment of Déjà vu as she listened to Brian Cowen.

“Be assured that the suggestions being made quite frankly by political opponents that I’m in some way not very much in favour of bringing this into the public domain as soon as possible consistent with the proper investigation of this which wouldn’t put anything at risk or compromise any future prosecutions that would be deemed to be appropriate.”

Here are some more quotes from the Ansbacher scandal to confirm that strategies employed by government to protect the corrupt are still the same.

“The Fine Gael motion calls on the Government to ensure that names of all persons who held Ansbacher accounts are made public via a Dail committee.”

(The Opposition made the same suggestion regarding the Anglo Irish Bank names and the Government has rejected it, just like they did in 1999).

The Ansbacher report was finally published in 2002.

“The Director of Public Prosecutions James Hamilton is also considering a copy of the report. Responding to queries yesterday he pointed out that if any criminal offence disclosed by the report requires further investigation for the purpose of prosecution, this will be a matter for gardai, the Revenue Commissioners, the Director of Corporate Enforcement or the Central Bank.”

(As I mentioned, no prosecutions were ever brought).

“The Ansbacher report is not just a damning indictment of those wealthy and powerful individuals who evaded their due taxes, broke company law and engaged in criminal conspiracies from the 1970s to the 1990s, it reflects the failure of Irish regulatory authorities and professional bodies to uphold the standards required of them in the interest of the common good. There is a great deal to be ashamed of in the report and many lessons to be learned. New and rigorous standards must be applied by the authorities.”

(No lessons have been learned because the same corrupt administration is still in place)

“In a series of interviews at the weekend, the Minister for Justice, Mr. McDowell, hoped for a change in Irish attitudes so that people who engaged in multi-million pound tax fraud were not regarded as heroes in their local yacht clubs while those who fiddled their social welfare payments were sent to jail”

(Just recently, we heard Ulick McEvaddy refer to the Anglo Irish ‘names’ as heroes. He’s not the only one who thinks this way).

“Nobody believes it will be easy to successfully prosecute some of the extremely wealthy individuals involved. But, if a determined attempt is not made, the consequences will do lasting damage to our democracy. The belief that there is one law for the rich and another for the poor will grow and flourish.”

(Only the corrupt or the very ignorant would claim that there isn’t, in fact, one law for the rich and another for the poor).

“The Government will face strong opposition demands today for assurances that prosecutions will follow arising from the publication of the Ansbacher report.”

The public must be shown that such behaviour will not be tolerated. The most obvious and public penalty is a jail sentence for the guilty.”

(Nobody went to jail; corruption in the business and political sectors is still rampant).

The following is a statement from the Paul Appleby, Director of Corporate Enforcement, on 6th July 2002, in response to the publication of the Ansbacher report.

It is worth reproducing in full to give an indication of what action we can expect from this toothless tiger regarding the Anglo Irish Bank scandal

6TH JULY 2002

I am determined that action will follow.

Speaking at a press briefing in Dublin on Saturday morning, Mr. Paul Appleby, Director of Corporate Enforcement, said:

“The company, now known as Ansbacher (Cayman) Ltd., secretly operated in this jurisdiction for over twenty years and conducted business which, the Inspectors have found, amounts to evidence tending to show that it contravened prevailing banking, tax, company and other legislation. When its activities came to light in 1997, the nation was shocked that such activity had occurred and had remained effectively hidden from official authorities for so long.

In a sense, these revelations infected our collective psyche in subsequent years, creating suspicions that it was possible to evade legal or other obligations without effective sanction and thereby undermining respect for the rule of law and damaging public confidence in the State’s institutions.

The conclusion of the Ansbacher inquiry and the publication of this Report represent, in my view, the first phase in purging these doubts and regaining lost ground. In defining publicly for the first time the company’s Irish business, the High Court Inspectors (past and present) have done a remarkable public service.

Indeed, the Companies Act 1990, and particularly the company investigation provisions of that Act, have again proved their worth and highlighted the importance of these legal provisions in investigating circumstances suggesting unlawful corporate conduct.

As this important phase of fact-finding investigation concludes, the relevant State Authorities, including my Office, will now examine what remedies are available to address the findings in the Inspectors’ Report.

My staff and I have commenced identifying the matters which fall within our statutory remit. Every line of potentially valuable inquiry will be examined thoroughly, and I am determined that appropriate action will follow. I am mindful, however, of the Inspectors’ comment (at page 18 of their Report) that they foresee some difficulty in bringing prosecutions arising from the matters investigated by them.

(Damn, there’s that Michael McDowell message to the corrupt again)

As early as next Monday, I will be seeking the approval of the High Court to gain access to certain of the Inspectors’ papers, in order to allow us to follow up on a number of issues in the Report. We will also be supporting in due course an application for the recovery of the costs of this Inquiry, in order that the taxpayer does not bear further financial loss as a result of the events described in the Report.

In the coming weeks, I will be considering what further action is warranted to remedy or sanction the conduct which is indicated in the Report and is relevant to my responsibilities under the Companies Acts.

I have no doubt that other relevant State Authorities, such as the Central Bank, the Revenue Commissioners and the Director of Public Prosecutions, will closely evaluate their own legal options in the light of the information contained in this Report.”

(They did indeed evaluate their legal options and, as is the norm in Ireland, did nothing).

Here are some comments on the Regulators in the report. (Note: The Central Bank was the so called financial regulator at the time).

“Failures by the Central Bank meant the Ansbacher scheme went undetected for years”

The bank’s failure to test, appraise and gather information “available to it” resulted in the true nature of the activities going undetected for longer than ought to have been the case.”

“The bank had reservations at all times about the loan-book, but took at face value assurances by the scheme’s mastermind, the late Mr. Des Traynor, that the amount of loans extended to Irish residents was being run down.”

(Just as the present so called financial regulator took the word of Anglo Irish Bank lawyers that its controversial €300 million share deal last summer was above board. This is no accident, it has nothing to do with incompetence, it is, effectively, an official policy).

The Tánaiste, Ms Harney, on the failures of the Central Bank.

“It seems extraordinary that we lived in a time where the culture, even amongst State organisations, was one of ‘let’s pretend we don’t know’ because clearly in some cases where organisations knew or should have known they seemed to take the view that they didn’t want to know.”

(The exact same attitude and practices are still dominant in the Irish regulatory system today).

Writing in the Irish Times 8th July 2002 Mark Brennock made the following comments and observations.

The Government must now reassure the scandal-weary public that this can never happen again.”

(Corruption within the financial sector never stopped, never even waned. That situation will continue for so long as Ireland remains a corrupt entity in itself),

“Governments are responsible for the level of regulation, and there was clearly a massive regulatory failure. This systematic evasion went on for over two decades, unhindered by the Central Bank, the Revenue Commissioners, company law regulators or prosecuting authorities.”

(Hardly an hour passes without some politician, journalist or banker telling the Irish people ‘there was clearly a massive regulatory failure’ regarding Anglo Irish Bank. We will continue to hear this into the future until somebody actually establishes a proper regulatory systems that puts people in jail rather than, effectively, facilitating their crimes)

“The Tánaiste yesterday pointed to a new system for regulating the accountancy profession, new legislation to encourage “whistle-blowers” and enhanced powers which have been given to the Revenue Commissioners.”

(None of this was done and politicians are still waffling on about the ‘urgent’ need for such reform as a result of the Anglo Irish scandal).

“The powers of a new financial services authority are detailed in a Bill currently before the Dáil.”

(This ‘new’ financial services authority was finally established in 2003. It was hailed as a powerful and hard hitting agency that would forever rid Ireland of the corrupt vermin that infects the financial sector – it was a complete failure.

Today this failed ‘authority’ is investigating itself for its part in the Anglo Irish Bank scandal. It will clear itself of all charges and continue to implement policy and secrecy laws that, effectively, protect fraudsters).

Then Tanaiste, Mary Harney on the Ansbacher report.

“The report is a watershed in Irish life” for the clarity of the insight it gives us of how a section of the political and business class in this State used to operate. The political task is to demonstrate to a scandal-weary public that it can’t happen again.”

(Harney is still in power and a scandal-weary public is still waiting).

And finally.

The report showed that there was now the capacity in Ireland to “lift the veil of secrecy” over such activity. The Government had already begun the process of ensuring there was a coherent and comprehensive body of law to ensure “that our society is a fair and just place in which to live and do business“.

There is virtually no prospect that our corrupt system will suddenly decide to reform itself and therefore the only hope we have of ridding ourselves of the rampant corruption that infects our political, business and bureaucratic sectors lies with EU intervention.

I fervently hope, for all our sakes; that we see such an intervention before very long.

Copy to:
Financial Regulator
ODCE
Government