Pfc. Bradley Manning's trial moves
ahead- slowly. He has agreed to plead guilty to various charges of
releasing classified information, while not accepting a guilty plea
for charges such as espionage or aiding and abetting “the enemy”.
The information he released revealed criminal and unethical activity
by personnel within the Department of Defense and the State
Department, as well as criminal activity by private military
contractors. No evidence has surfaced that Manning profited in any
way from his actions, or that he was motivated by any prospect of
personal gain. Rather, he felt compelled to act to reveal evidence
that he had access to of outrageous activity of the part of people
working for the US Government. Some of the activities revealed were
simply routine diplomacy, i.e. duplicitous acts and statements by
diplomats of the US and countries it deals with, and the revelations
may have caused some embarrassment all around. However, more central
to the activities unveiled were torture, murder, incitement to
torture, and official cover-ups of criminal acts. For his actions
Manning was held in solitary confinement without charges for a year
and a half and he remains in custody today, with no possibility of
bail. While his living conditions have improved significantly after
a public outcry over his treatment, which a number of psychiatrists
have said amounted to torture, he now faces formal charges which
could lead to life imprisonment, if not the death penalty that some
members of Congress and other media luminaries have called for. The
formal charges were only lodged in late February of 2012, nineteen
months after his arrest. To the best of our knowledge, there has
still been no prosecution of any of the perpetrators of the crimes
that were disclosed, and there seems little desire on the part of the
Department of Justice to investigate.
Against that backdrop, the news has
emerged that HSBC, one of the world's largest banks, has agreed to
pay a large fine, described by different sources as either $1.25
billion or $1.9 billion, for illegal banking activities over a three
or four year period in which the bank laundered money on behalf of
Mexican drug cartels and Al Qaeda Given that the US is in a
permanent War on Drugs and another permanent War On Terrorism, this
would seem to qualify as aiding and abetting the enemy, if anything
can ever be considered as such.
Loretta Lynch, US attorney for the
Eastern District of New York, issued the following statement:
Loretta Lynch: We are here today to announce the filing of criminal charges against HSBC Bank, both its U.S. entity, HSBC U.S., and the parent HSBC group, for its sustained and systemic failure to guard against the corruption of our financial system by drug traffickers and other criminals and for evading U.S. sanctions law. HSBC, as you know, is one of the largest financial institutions in the world, with affiliates and personnel spanning the globe. Yet during the relevant time periods, they failed to comply with the legal requirements incumbent on all U.S. financial institutions to have in place compliance mechanisms and safeguards to guard against being used for money laundering.
HSBC has admitted its guilt to the four-count information filed today, which sets forth two violations of the Bank Secrecy Act, a violation of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, and violation of the Trading with the Enemy Act. As part of its resolution of these charges, HSBC has agreed to forfeit $1.256 billion, the largest forfeiture amount ever by a financial institution for a compliance failure.
The Justice Department has allowed the
bank to avoid prosecution. Old habits die hard. None of the top
officials of the bank will face charges, much less be seized and
thrown into solitary confinement. If you want to see more detail on
this case, see the entire Matt Taibbi article here.
It seems that Pfc. Manning's worst
crime was to not make enough money through his whistle-blowing
disclosures to buy his way out of jail. With the government
strapped for cash these days, $1 billion clearly buys a lot of
immunity. Who knows, perhaps a few million would have been enough to
swing our laissez faire Department of Justice. Maybe, with a little
more cash, Manning, like HSBC Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver, could
have just apologized for his actions, handed over whatever profits
he'd made through his actions, and promised to do better in the
future.
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