Wednesday 30 April 2014

Sing A Song


Spring Beauty


Love that is hidden in the heart



flower language of Margaret "love that is hidden in the heart."

The Swoop



www.andrewyu.co.uk The Swoop.

Soul of Mad Magazine Al Feldstein Dies at 88



By BRUCE WEBER via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1kr690l

Baltic sunset V



water level sunset

Endo to Pay $830 Million to Settle Claims Over Devices



By REUTERS via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1jjL2iK

PRETTY YELLOW



IF SOMEONE KNOWS WHAT KIND OF BIRD IT IS LET ME KNOW :)

The Pink Morning


Changed Life of the Poor: Better Off but Far Behind



By ANNIE LOWREY via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/SciFcJ

dália e bokeh



*****

As New Shipping Rules Are Studied Another Oil Train Derails



By CLIFFORD KRAUSS and TRIP GABRIEL via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/Schdag

Colours of Life.


A Ghost Town Going Green



By DIANE CARDWELL via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1n4Gu03

Famous Faces Cross Over to Online Video



By STUART ELLIOTT via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1iBKqWE

Alibaba Said to Be in Talks to Regain Stake in Payments Affiliate



By MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1iBFwJv

800 Years old Oak


F.A.A. Computer Problem Grounds Planes in Los Angeles



By MATTHEW L. WALD via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1kqsdIG

Raw and Peace



Mostly much to do about nothing, on the peaceful bank. Travelers like walking in the park on a Sunday. Photographer getting ready to shoot a beast. On the other hand in the river something raw and powerful is about, water bursting from the glacier down the falling fall ( Dettifoss). Is it war, or is it peace, no nature awesome power play, on the trembling stage of live.

...y un trio más!


Abercrombie Settles Board Fight With Engaged Capital



By MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1kjl9fI

Crab Apple Blossoms



Lovely Crab Apple blossoms on a beautiful sunny morning

Shake-Up at Repsol as New Chief Is Named



By RAPHAEL MINDER via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1iBlC11

High Price in Utility Deal



By CHRISTOPHER SWANN via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1hXOCKA

Untitled



tulip from Reutingen

Green window


IR - mix



A mixture of IR and normal exposure. With my old Canon Rebel that I have converted to IR camera.

Pink row



Early Morning sight of the Tulips in the Skagit Valley

agapanthus


Orange Ranunculus 2


Tuesday 29 April 2014

Mercury



Photographing waves on sunset is a beautiful combination of water and light that I love. More over on Instagram - @chrisdixxon

Rain Drops


Syringa



Syringa vulgaris (Common Lilac) flowers

The World is worth to see...



Apollonia Lake

piers


TWO


Insurance Site and Walmart in Deal to Sell Auto Policies



By ELIZABETH A. HARRIS via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1pMDGZX

Желтенький цветок



первоцвет, желтый цветок

RAMO ROSA BOCCIOLI


Preet Bharara Has Figured Out How To Indict A Big Bank

The aggressive Manhattan U.S. Attorney is close to pursuing guilty pleas from two banks. His trick: an unusual two-step with regulators.



Preet Bharara, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.


Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Preet Bharara, the Manhattan U.S. Attorney, appears to have found a way around one of the major obstacles to indicting big banks, sharpening a new prosecutorial tool and offering satisfaction critics who say the Justice Department has been soft on major financial institutions since the 2008 financial crisis.


The basic obstacle to charging a bank with a crime is this: It's hard to indict a bank without killing it. In particular, a criminal indictment could easily persuade the bank's regulators, at the state or national level, to pull its banking charter, effectively shutting the institution down and turning a guilty plea to specific criminal counts into a death penalty.


And the Justice Department has, since it indicted and destroyed the accounting firm Arthur Andersen in the 2002 Enron case, had a policy of considering the collateral consequences — lost jobs in innocent business units, economic ripples — of indicting a corporation. That policy has allowed bank lawyers to stare down prosecutors, and produced criticism of the Justice Department that they've effectively allowed banks to become "too big to jail."


But Bharara, who has led has become the face of a widespread crackdown on insider trading, appears to have solved that prosecutorial dilemma. The New York Times reported Tuesday that his Southern District is nearing bringing criminal charges against two banks that "could produce the first guilty plea from a major bank in more than two decades."


The Times report suggests that Bharara's strategy has been to negotiate in advance with regulators, and to take the risk — and threat — of a pulled charter off the table.


It's a strategy he's attempted in the past: Bharara reportedly met with Thomas Curry, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and JPMorgan's national bank regulator, "to discuss the potential fallout from criminal charges" but was unable to win assurances that the OCC wouldn't pull JPMorgan's charter following a guilty plea. (It's widely thought that banks will plead guilty to criminal charges if they're bought because of the fear that lenders and depositors will abandon a bank that's been indicted, driving the firm into failure. )


But Bharara's new targets are reportedly foreign banks operating in the United States, Credit Suisse, a Swiss bank, and BNP Paribas, a French bank, which have different regulators than U.S.-based banks, giving Bharara the chance to make his case anew for cooperation. (Neither bank has been formally accused of or charged with a crime.)


Prosecutors are investigating BNP Paribas for processing money transfers to countries under U.S. sanctions, like Sudan and Iran, while Credit Suisse is being investigated for aiding Americans in setting up tax shelters that may have run afoul of tax evasion laws.


The Times reported that the Southern District prosecutors and their counterparts in Washington have held similar meetings with regulators that could determine the fate of BNP Paribas following a guilty plea. Bharara, the head of the Justice Department's criminal division David O'Neil, and Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance, met with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Ben Lawsky, New York's financial and insurance regulator. The law enforcement officials left the meeting "largely reassured," the Times said.


The cooperation of Lawsky, who served as an assistant U.S. Attorney in Manhattan attorney prosecuting organizing crime cases alongside Bharara earlier in both men's career, is key.


The New York official has been aggressive in pursuing banks for violating sanctions laws and has recently emphasized the need for going after individuals as opposed to corporations.


Early in his tenure at the head of New York's Department of Financial Services, Lawsky threatened to pull the charter of another foreign bank — Standard Chartered — for violating sanctions rules and eventually settled for a $340 million fine. The Times said that Lawsky "planned to impose steep penalties against BNP and its employees but would not revoke the bank's license" and that the New York Fed made "similar assurances."


All the while, regulators do not appear to have been completely defanged. Lawsky will reportedly consider "temporarily suspending the bank's ability to transfer money through New York branches on behalf of foreign clients."


The criminal division of the Justice Department "has held discussions with the New York Fed about securing a guilty plea" from Credit Suisse for helping American citizens evade taxes.


In a speech earlier this year at a financial industry trade conference, Bharara said "After Arthur Andersen, the pendulum has swung too far and needs to swing back a bit. And so you can expect that before too long a significant financial institution will be charged with a felony or be made to plead guilty to a felony, where the conduct warrants it."


"Tiger in love "



"Two Tiger in love" © Michael Stoehr =>>> HOMEPAGE || FANPAGE || FLICKR

Dreaming Wide Awake


EBay Posts First-Quarter Loss Tied to Tax on Foreign Profit



By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1pMp50L

Two Rulings May Curb Lawsuits Over Patents



By ADAM LIPTAK via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1iys4WI

Dreamworks Animation Posts Loss as MR. Peabody Falters



By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1keyVQD

Allstate Case Shows Risk of Signing Away the Right to Sue



By TARA SIEGEL BERNARD via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/QXHyrI

Slow Going on Overhaul of Mortgage Finance



By SHAILA DEWAN via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1lwmdAL

Emails Show Concern on Sotheby's Board



By RITA FARRELL via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1iFrSUC

Author of the Book Gravity Sues Warner Bros. Over Credit



By BROOKS BARNES via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1kefzeo

In the U.S. Punishment Comes Before the Crimes



By EDUARDO PORTER via NYT Business Day http://ift.tt/1fO9293