Mad_Aussie
24-02-2012, 01:05 PM
If this turns out to be true, then this is probably the largest financial fraud in the history of the world.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/oAK5xzEYq7I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
$15 TRILLION is equivalent to the the federal debt of the U.S. Treasury Department. Lord James of Blackheath has spoken in the House of Lords holding evidence of three transactions of 5 Trillion each and a transaction of 750,000 metric tonnes of gold and has called for an investigation.
I think there are three possible conclusions that may come from it. I think there may have been a massive piece of money laundering committed by a major government which ought to know better and that it has effectively undermined the integrity of the British bank the Royal Bank of Scotland, in doing so. The second alternative is that a major American department has an agency that has gone rogue on it because it has been wound up and has created a structure out of which they are seeking to get at least 50 billion Euros as a payoff. And the third possibility is that this is an extraordinarily elaborate fraud which has not been carried out but which has been prepared in order to provide a threat to one government or more if they don't pay them off. So there are three possibilities and this all needs a very urgent review.
My Lords, it starts in April and May of 2009, with the alleged transfer to the United Kingdom, to HSBC of a sum of 5 trillion dollars and seven days later, in comes another 5 trillion dollars to HSBC, and then 3 weeks later another 5 trillion. 5 trillion in each case. Sorry. A total of 15 trillion dollars is alleged to have been passed into the hands of HSBC for onward transit to the Royal Bank of Scotland and we need to look at where this came from and what the history of this money is. And I have been trying to sort out the sequence by which this money has been created and from where it has come from for a long time.
Transcript : http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201212/ldhansrd/text/120216-0002.htm#12021643000172
Supposed richest man in world (google search for his name turns up ghosts, strangely), involved in transfer of 15 trillion from NY Federal Reserve, through the International Monetary Fund, to UK banks (HSBC, RBS and others), who are using the 'money' to perform nightly trades on the European stock markets.
The money was backed by a supposed 750,000 tonnes of gold (only 170,000 tonnes of gold in the world, so this is preposterous), and signed off on by the IMF / NY Reserve. Since the money more than likely doesn't exist, the huge amount is being used by the UK banks to earn interest through the aforementioned overnight trades on markets.
The trades themselves earn around 1 - 2% interest PER NIGHT usually, so 15 trillion of ghost money is earning these banks a possible 300 billion each night.
The only piece of documentation I've dug up so far is this : http://etleboro.com/documents/copy-title.pdf
It's a $1 billion transfer by the guy Lord Blackheath was talking about.
Since I doubt we're going to see this in the mainstream media any time soon, I thought some of the economic buffs here would find it interesting.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/oAK5xzEYq7I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
$15 TRILLION is equivalent to the the federal debt of the U.S. Treasury Department. Lord James of Blackheath has spoken in the House of Lords holding evidence of three transactions of 5 Trillion each and a transaction of 750,000 metric tonnes of gold and has called for an investigation.
I think there are three possible conclusions that may come from it. I think there may have been a massive piece of money laundering committed by a major government which ought to know better and that it has effectively undermined the integrity of the British bank the Royal Bank of Scotland, in doing so. The second alternative is that a major American department has an agency that has gone rogue on it because it has been wound up and has created a structure out of which they are seeking to get at least 50 billion Euros as a payoff. And the third possibility is that this is an extraordinarily elaborate fraud which has not been carried out but which has been prepared in order to provide a threat to one government or more if they don't pay them off. So there are three possibilities and this all needs a very urgent review.
My Lords, it starts in April and May of 2009, with the alleged transfer to the United Kingdom, to HSBC of a sum of 5 trillion dollars and seven days later, in comes another 5 trillion dollars to HSBC, and then 3 weeks later another 5 trillion. 5 trillion in each case. Sorry. A total of 15 trillion dollars is alleged to have been passed into the hands of HSBC for onward transit to the Royal Bank of Scotland and we need to look at where this came from and what the history of this money is. And I have been trying to sort out the sequence by which this money has been created and from where it has come from for a long time.
Transcript : http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201212/ldhansrd/text/120216-0002.htm#12021643000172
Supposed richest man in world (google search for his name turns up ghosts, strangely), involved in transfer of 15 trillion from NY Federal Reserve, through the International Monetary Fund, to UK banks (HSBC, RBS and others), who are using the 'money' to perform nightly trades on the European stock markets.
The money was backed by a supposed 750,000 tonnes of gold (only 170,000 tonnes of gold in the world, so this is preposterous), and signed off on by the IMF / NY Reserve. Since the money more than likely doesn't exist, the huge amount is being used by the UK banks to earn interest through the aforementioned overnight trades on markets.
The trades themselves earn around 1 - 2% interest PER NIGHT usually, so 15 trillion of ghost money is earning these banks a possible 300 billion each night.
The only piece of documentation I've dug up so far is this : http://etleboro.com/documents/copy-title.pdf
It's a $1 billion transfer by the guy Lord Blackheath was talking about.
Since I doubt we're going to see this in the mainstream media any time soon, I thought some of the economic buffs here would find it interesting.