Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk |
"Riddles" Surround 36th Dead Banker of The Year |
Post Reply |
Author | |
onefluover
Admin Group Joined: April 21 2013 Location: Death Valleyish Status: Offline Points: 20151 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
Posted: December 09 2014 at 6:37am |
"Riddles" Surround 36th Dead Banker Of The Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2014 22:05 -0500 Citigroup Deutsche Bank Goldman Sachs goldman sachsHong KongIran Real estate Wall Street Journal 52-year-old Belgian Geert Tack - a private banker for ING who managed portfolios for wealthy individuals - was described as 'impeccable', 'sporty', 'cared-for', and 'successful' and so as Vermist reports, after disappearing a month ago, the appearance of his body off the coast of Ostend is surrpunded by riddles... Tack disappeared on November 5th... Impeccable. Sporty. Cared for. Successful. Just some qualifications that are attributed to the 52-year-old from the Belgian Geert Tack Haaltert. Geert Tack worked as a private banker for ING and managed portfolios of wealthy clients. The Belgian had a lot of respect in the financial world and was known as an up and top professional. His sudden disappearance was also smashed like a bomb. "If Tack himself was having trouble he has managed to keep it well hidden", say colleagues. Nobody then could have guessed that the man would not return on Wednesday, November 5th to his wife in their villa Vondelen. and was found dead this weekend off the coast of Ostend... On December 3, the body was found on the coast of Ostend and removed from the water. The prosecutor confirmed today that it is Geert Tack, but it is still awaiting further results of the autopsy for the exact cause of death. The results of toxicological testing are not yet known. The examiner states that the body showed no outward signs of violence. As Vermist comments, he was well-liked and successful but the situation of his disappearance remain odd to say the least... What makes the matter is that the extra mysterious circumstances under which he disappeared are rather peculiar. Tack had a few weeks earlier his car drove into each other and if the garage then take away a replacement car. Oddly enough, he made it much later, shortly before he disappeared, use. The car, a Renault Espace, has been found in Knokke, but Tack missing to date each track. Also - Why he had in the weeks before the disappearance sometimes so difficult to get to sleep? Why he did that Wednesday morning his laptop and cell phone at home? Although a desperate act can not be excluded, there are also people who take into account that the missing part of a preconceived plan. From his position Tack had the opportunity to be there - whether or not forced by third parties - to run off with money from his clients. It is a hypothesis that being seriously investigated by the federal police, but where colleagues want to know anything. "Something like that would never do," said one of them certainly. "Geert is a blameless man." This is the 36th Dead Banker of the year (via Beforeitsnews): 1) David Bird, 55, long-time reporter for the Wall Street Journal working at the Dow Jones news room 2) Tim Dickenson, a U.K.-based communications director at Swiss Re AG 3) William Broeksmit, 58, former senior manager for Deutsche Bank 4) Ryan Henry Crane, age 37, JP Morgan 5) Li Junjie, 33, Hong Kong JP Morgan 6) Gabriel Magee, 39, age JP Morgan employee 7) Mike Dueker, 50, who had worked for Russell Investments 8) Richard Talley, 57, was the founder and CEO of American Title (real estate titles) 9) James Stuart Jr. 70, Former National Bank of Commerce CEO was found dead in Scottsdale, Ariz 10) Jason Alan Salais, 34 year old IT Specialist at JPMorgan since 2008 11) Autumn Radtke, 28, CEO of First Meta, a Singapore-based virtual currency trading platform 12) Eddie Reilly, 47, investment banker, Vertical Group, New York 13) Kenneth Ballando, 28, investment banker, Levy Capital, New york 14) Joseph A. Giampapa, 55, corporate bankruptcy lawyer, JP Morgan Chase 15) Jan Peter Schmittmann, 57, voormalig topbestuurder ANB/AMRO, Laren, Nederland 16) Juergen Frick, 48, CEO Bank Frick & Co AG, Liechtenstein 17) Benoît Philippens, 37, directeur BNP Parisbas Fortis Bank, Ans, België. 18) Lydia…, 52, bankier Bred-Banque-Populaire, Parijs 19) Andrew Jarzyk, 27, bankier, PNC Bank, New York 20) Carlos Six, 61, Hoofd Belastingdienst en lid CREDAF, België 21) Jan Winkelhuijzen, 75, Commissaris en Fiscalist (voormalig Deloitte), Nederland. 22) Richard Rockefeller, 66, achterkleinzoon elitebankier John D. Rockefeller, Amerika 23) Mahafarid Amir Khosravi (Amir Mansour Aria), 45, bankeigenaar, zakenman en derivatenhandelaar, Iran 24) Lewis Katz, 76, zakenman, advocaat en insider in de bancaire wereld, Amerika 25) Julian Knott, Directeur Global Operations Center JP Morgan, 45, Amerika 26) Richard Gravino, IT Specialist JP Morgan, 49, Amerika 27) Thomas James Schenkman, Managing Director Global Infrastructure JP Morgan, 42, Amerika 28) Nicholas Valtz, 39, Managing Director Goldman Sachs, New York, Amerika 29) Therese Brouwer, 50, Managing Director ING, Nederland 30) Tod Robert Edward, 51, Vice President M & T Bank, Amerika 31) Thierry Leyne, 48, investeringsbankier en eigenaar Anatevka S.A., Israël 32) Calogero Gambino, 41, Managing Director Deutsche Bank, Amerika 33) Shawn D. Miller, 42, Managing Director Citigroup, New York, Amerika 34) Melissa Millian, 54, Senior Vice President Mass Mutual, Amerika 35) Thieu Leenen, 64, Relatiemanager ABN/AMRO, Eindhoven, Nederland 36) Geert Tack, 52, Private Banker ING, Haaltert, België http://www.google.com/gwt/x?u=http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-12-07/riddles-surround-36th-dead-banker-year&ei=EAKHVMnRDMb8nQe1n4HQDw&wsc=ib |
|
"And then there were none."
|
|
onefluover
Admin Group Joined: April 21 2013 Location: Death Valleyish Status: Offline Points: 20151 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
An epidemic of sorts? Is this per capita-normal or is something at play here?
|
|
"And then there were none."
|
|
Kay
Adviser Group Joined: October 22 2014 Location: OHIO Status: Offline Points: 7205 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
http://freebeacon.com/issues/treasury-department-seeking-survival-kits-for-bank-employees/
The Department of Treasury is seeking to order survival kits for all of its employees who oversee the federal banking system, according to a new solicitation. The emergency supplies would be for every employee at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), which conducts on-site reviews of banks throughout the country. The survival kit includes everything from water purification tablets to solar blankets. The government is willing to spend up to $200,000 on the kits, according to the solicitation released on Dec. 4. The survival kits must come in a fanny-pack or backpack that can fit all of the items, including a 33-piece personal first aid kit with “decongestant tablets,” a variety of bandages, and medicines. The kits must also include a “reusable solar blanket” 52 by 84 inches long, a 2,400-calorie food bar, “50 water purification tablets,” a “dust mask,” “one-size fits all poncho with hood,” a rechargeable lantern with built-in radio, and an “Air-Aid emergency mask” for protection against airborne viruses. Survival kits will be delivered to every major bank in the United States including Bank of America, American Express Bank, BMO Financial Corp., Capitol One Financial Corporation, Citigroup, Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Company, and Wells Fargo. Items will also be delivered to OCC offices across the country, from Champaign, Ill. to Billings, Mont. The agency also has offices in Sioux City, Iowa; Joplin, Mo.; and Fargo, N.D. The mission of the OCC is to “ensure that national banks and federal savings associations operate in a safe and sound manner, provide fair access to financial services, treat customers fairly, and comply with applicable laws and regulations.” The agency has roughly 3,814 employees, each of which would receive a survival kit. The staff includes “bank examiners” who provide “sustained supervision” of major banks in the United States. “Examiners analyze loan and investment portfolios, funds management, capital, earnings, liquidity, sensitivity to market risk for all national banks and federal thrifts, and compliance with consumer banking laws for national banks and thrifts with less than $10 billion in assets,” the OCC website explains. “They review internal controls, internal and external audit, and compliance with law. They also evaluate management’s ability to identify and control risk.” It is not clear why the Treasury Department is ordering the kits. Contracts for survival kits are usually made for the military, or law enforcement such as the FBI. The OCC did not return request for comment before publication of this story. |
|
Satori
Valued Member Joined: June 03 2013 Status: Offline Points: 28655 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
sounds like a VERY cheap and poorly thought out "bug out" bag they need to talk to a PROFESSIONAL prepper before WASTING all that money on some Micky Mouse fannie pack |
|
Kay
Adviser Group Joined: October 22 2014 Location: OHIO Status: Offline Points: 7205 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
That's what I thought too, sounds like a good feel thought. Wonder if they are worried about a run on the banks?
|
|
onefluover
Admin Group Joined: April 21 2013 Location: Death Valleyish Status: Offline Points: 20151 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
Wow.
Sounds like our banking system will be all "safe and sound" and hunky-dory if they can just get enough of them thar lost-in-the-woods kits us pros so rely on. Jeeze. |
|
"And then there were none."
|
|
Post Reply | |
Tweet
|
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You can vote in polls in this forum |