Feature
/
ReviewNewsUpdates05
Bank
of America
A short look
at the Bank's Strategic
TimeLines
1906 - Bank of Italy
Founded by: Amadeo P. Giannini.
1930
- Bank of America was formed.
The name change from the
Bank of Italy to the Bank of America took
place.
1977 - The
financial, banking, insurance world, discovers the
"mortgage pass-through certificate."
1986 - May 29th.
The
One-satisfaction rule, Judge Tashima and his
Memorandum Opinion II And Order of May 29, 1986:
Mortgage Pool Certificates Securities
Litigation.1986,
1989 - Benchmarks and
Guides to finance. FICO MAKES their first changes
as to "Who's who" will to fit into the new Federal
"One Satisfaction -- World" benchmarks. The
bailout of mortgage once paid off by an Guarantee
Bond, or by a Federal Bail out Agreement (See the
Wall Street Bailout of October 2008), can be paid
since the scores were used during the recent boom
as a substitute for detailed underwriting
procedures. It appeared in 2006, there were
numerous ways to game the FICO system,.
1998: BankAmerica
Corp. in San Francisco merges with NationsBank
Corp. The new company, Bank of America Corp.,
will be based in Charlotte, N.C.
1990
to 2001
smart90.com/books/books02boatort
2001: April 25th -
CEO Kenneth Lewis takes over as Bank of
America's President and Chief Operating Officer.
Hugh McColl, 65, will retire April 25, stepping
down after 20 years as head of the largest U.S.
bank rated by deposits.
- CLICK FOR MORE STORY Bank of America CEO to
Step
Down.
2001b
-
BofA Quits Subprime
Lending, Car
Leases
Banking: Those sectors
have hurt other lenders. The bank will take a
$1.25-billion charge. August 18, 2001. CLICK FOR
MORE
STORY.
2001c
- The LA TIMES
reported the Bank of America Corp. on August 16,
2001 became the latest lender to
report big problems with
loans to less-credit-worthy borrowers amid the weak
economy. CLICK FOR MORE STORY.
2002
to 2003
smart90.com/books/books02boaupdate
2002: NationsBank. Bank of America
agrees to pay $490 million to settle claims that it
misled shareholders before its merger
with NationsBank
February
9, 2002 BofA Settles Suits by Shareholders.
Bank accused of playing down losses before merger
with NationsBank. It will pay $490 million to
shareholder for its Tortfeasants. CLICK FOR MORE
STORY
2004
- 2005 - 2006 -
2007
smart90.com/660bankofamericaupdate04
2004: Bank
of America buys FleetBoston Financial Corp. for
$47 billion
2004: Bank of America
and FleetBoston agree to pay $675 million in fines
and restitution to settle charges that the banks
let privileged investors engage in trading
practices that hurt regular shareholders
2006: Bank
of America buys MBNA Corp., the biggest
independent credit card issuer, for $35 billion
August
2007: Countrywide Financial Corp. Amid rising
concern about financial problems at Countrywide
Financial Corp., Bank of America invests $2 billion
in the lender
2007b
BofA
settles privacy lawsuit. Who's next -- American
Express? CLICK FOR MORE
STORY
2007: Fair-Issac
Corporation changes their scoring methods for 2008.
CLICK FOR
MORE STORY
January 2008: Countrywide
Sells to Bank of America. Agrees to buy
Countrywide, paying $2.5 billion in BofA
stock.
CLICK FOR
MORE STORY
September 2008: Merrill
Lynch & Co & Bank of America
tentatively agrees to buy brokerage giant Merrill
Lynch & Co. for $44 billion in stock.
CLICK FOR
MORE STORY
A
Happy Welcome is extended into the world and
secrets of Sun Tzu, the innovator of the popular
"Bait Switch Game".
"We Couldn't Have Done It Without
You."
----- Discover
the hidden secrets and never before revealed truths
about the Bank of America -- NMEC scandal; the
events that destroyed many people, including the
president and chairman of the Board of Bank of
America and NMEC. BofA's Sam Armacost, called the
NMEC scandal, "that crazy mortgage thing never
should have happened". BofA's Board of Directors
called the scandal "their personal Pearl Harbor" --
analogized after Federal Judge Tashima. ( The
Tashima Era)
-----This Book, however is not only about
Bank of America, NMEC and Wells Fargo, it is also
about the founders, the good and bad guys of the
financial, banking, insurance world, and the
corporate gurus who make up the pieces of the
puzzle -- from the early days of mortgage
pass-through certificates, in 1977 to
1993.
-----The methodology which Troy and Josie
Cory applied to resolve the BoA -- NMEC scandal,
is, what you might call in he high tech world -- as
Motion with Devotion. You'll find there's as much
as a thin-line between Bank of America and NMEC
activities, as there is between Trust Deed and
mortgage notes-- for without one you might not have
the other.
We Couldn't Have Done It Without
You -- said BofA the 80s and
1990s
-----The Banks
Un-American Banking Activities in the 80s, promoted
itself as the bank that -- "We Couldn't Have
Done It Without You." But to Claire Giannini
Hoffman, the bank her father founded in 1906, as
the Bank of Italy, is doing an unflattering job on
his memory.
ffman, was an ongoing critic of Bank of
America for much of her lifetime. She made a habit
of contacting newspapers and radio stations
condemning the wild and wooly ways of various BofA
officials, calling them "an insult to my
father."
-----"It is contemptible, what they are
doing," the 89 year-old Hoffman would tell
interviewers. "They are using my father's name and
picture to promote their bank". She said the modern
Bank of America does not represent the business
philosophy espoused by her father. "My father
believed that, if you helped people, eventually you
would have people for friends, as well as
customers."
-----Hoffman, delivered a blow to the bank's
image in 1985, by resigning her honorary seat on
its board. It was over what she called, the
"unpardonable" act of selling its San Francisco
headquarters; the repossessing of trucks,
automobiles and the homes and farms from our
customers, in a time of
need.
-----Today's BofA, she said, "is just
another bank. If it didn't have the same name there
would be no similarity at
all."
We Couldn't Have Done It
Without You -- said BofA in the 2002s and
08s
-----And the
predictions declared by the daughter of founder of
BofA, Amadeo P. Giannini, were right on - JUST LOOK
AT THE TIMELINE. The name change from the Bank of
Italy, to the Bank of America took place in
1930.
Publishers
IN THIS
ISBN BOOK SET
hereby
authenticates the use of its ISBN.
The Co-authors have endeavored to narrow down and
explain the bare facts and the several legal
theories behind the U.S. Federal governments most
recent 2008 Bank, Wall Street and Insurance Company
Bail Out by the use of the "ONE SATISFACTION RULE".
"The Bail out of the 90s, involved the same folks,"
says co-author Scott Stubblefield,
Esq.
Legal literature is not a tool by which
compiling authors may keep for themselves, thus,
the facts and data that has been collected from
existing works, may be freely used. Of course, that
includes the opinions of judges, attorneys and the
information leaked to the news media. Even some of
the material the authors herein have compiled to
redefine and ascertain the time period -- when the
"new parties to this action, joined the existing
"joint tortfeasors" -- is not immune from this
copyright.
Both the authors and publisher believe that
the examples and case history data found within the
book set, and special eWeb editions are accurate,
thus such reliance, will be most useful in helping
the para-legal, case and trial attorney prepare for
trial.
However, the story line, data, news
clippings and other information are intended solely
as researching aids and should not be used in any
particular application without independent studies
and verification by the person making the
application.
For these reasons, the Authors and Publisher
make no warranties, express or implied, that the
examples, data, or other information in these
volumes are free of error, that they are consistent
with industry standards, or that they will meet the
requirements for any particular legal
application.
This
Book, However,
is not only about
Bank of America, NMEC and Wells Fargo, it is also
about the One-satisfaction rule, Judge Tashima and
his Memorandum Opinion II And Order of May 29,
1986: Mortgage Pool Certificates Securities
Litigation. No. MDL, 647 AWT. United States
District Court, C.D. California, May 13, 1986,
CLICK FOR MORE
STORY
"1. Damages ¬ 59
One-satisfaction rule, which is based upon
principle that injured party may re cover only once
for single injury, and thus that any payment made
by any person in compensation for harm diminishes
proportionally injured party's claim against any
tortfeasors, is applicable to federal securities
claims and, under California law, to state
statutory and common-law fraud
claims.
2. Subrogation ¬
2
Bank, as escrow agent for mortgage pools,
was not subrogated to rights of pool investors when
it paid off investors following discovery that
pools were being operated fraudulently where bank
admitted paying off investors in recognition of its
own responsibilities toward
them.
3. Assignments ¬
24(1)
Once injured party is fully compensated for
its injury, whether by tort-feasor or someone else,
his claim is extinguished by operation of law and
thus cannot be as
assigned.
4. Assignments ¬
24(1)
Payment by escrow agent of mortgage pools to
investors, upon discovery that pools were being
operated fraudulently, constituted full
satisfaction of investors' claims, where agent was
itself liable to investors, and thus agent could
not bring investors' claims by way of assignment
against other allegedly fraudulent operators and
participants in mortgage pools; rejecting
(American Commercial Lines v. Valley Line Co.,
529 F.2d 921 (8th Cir.).
THE AUTHOR AND
PUBLISHER OF THIS ISBN
EXPRESSLY DISCLAIM THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF DISTRIBUTION AND OF PUBLISHING FOR
ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE, even if the author has
been advised of a particular purpose, and even if a
particular purpose is indicated in the book. The
author and publisher also disclaim all liability
for direct, indirect, incidental, or consequential
damages that result from any use of the examples,
data, or other information in this book.
Melvin M. Belli, Esq.
Kevin McLean, Esq.
Scott C. Stubblefield, Esq.
San Francisco, California
2001
Bank of America CEO to Step
Down
----- Bank of America Corp. confirmed that
Chairman and Chief Executive Hugh McColl will
retire April 25, stepping down after 20 years as
head of the largest U.S. bank rated by
deposits.
----- He'll be replaced by President and
Chief Operating Officer Ken Lewis. McColl, 65, will
leave a bank he built by gobbling up rivals,
quadrupling the company's assets over the last
seven years to more than $640 billion with a series
of acquisitions that culminated in Charlotte,
N.C.-based NationsBank Corp.'s 1998 merger with
BankAmerica Corp. of San Francisco. He had
originally planned to stay on until 2002. Lewis,
53, will take the reins at a difficult time for
Bank of America.
----- The company's stock is down 10%since
the 1998 merger, and rising defaults have bitten
into earnings and lifted bad loans on Bank of
America's books to $5.5 billion at the end of last
year, from $3.2 billion in 1999. Bank of America
shares rose 69 cents to close at $51.06 on the New
York Stock Exchange. (Bloomberg News)A Happy
Welcome is extended into the world and secrets of
Sun Tzu, the innovator of the popular "Bait Switch
Game".
----- Discover the hidden secrets and never
before revealed truths about the Bank of America --
NMEC scandal; the events that destroyed many
people, including the president and chairman of the
Board of Bank of America and NMEC. BofA's Sam
Armacost, called the NMEC scandal, "that crazy
mortgage thing never should have happened". BofA's
Board of Directors called the scandal "their
personal Pearl Harbor" -- analogized after Federal
Judge Tashima.
-----This Book, however is not only about
Bank of America, NMEC and Wells Fargo, it is also
about the founders, the good and bad guys of the
financial, banking, insurance world, and the
corporate gurus who make up the pieces of the
puzzle -- from the early days of mortgage
pass-through certificates, in 1977 to
date.
-----The methodology which Troy and Josie
Cory applied to resolve the BoA -- NMEC scandal,
is, what you might call in he high tech world -- as
Motion with Devotion. You'll find there's as much
as a thin-line between Bank of America and NMEC
activities, as there is between Trust Deed and
mortgage notes -- for without one you might not
have the other.
-----The Banks Un-American Banking
Activities in the 80s, promoted itself as the bank
that -- "We Couldn't Have Done It Without You." But
to Claire Giannini Hoffman, the bank her father
founded in 1906, as the Bank of Italy, is doing an
unflattering job on his
memory.
-----Hoffman, was an ongoing critic of Bank
of America for much of her lifetime. She made a
habit of contacting newspapers and radio stations
condemning the wild and wooly ways of BofA, calling
them "an insult to my
father."
-----"It is contemptible, what they are
doing," the 89 year-old Hoffman would tell
interviewers. "They are using my father's name and
picture to promote their bank". She said the modern
Bank of America does not represent the business
philosophy espoused by her father. "My father
believed that, if you helped people, eventually you
would have people for friends, as well as
customers."
-----Hoffman, delivered a blow to the bank's
image in 1985, by resigning her honorary seat on
its board. It was over what she called, the
"unpardonable" act of selling its San Francisco
headquarters; the repossessing of trucks,
automobiles and the homes and farms from our
customers, in a time of
need.
-----Today's BofA, she said, "is just
another bank. If it didn't have the same name there
would be no similarity at all."
A 2001 LA Times
Briefly: Jan
25,2001.
///
2002
-
February
9, 2002 BofA Settles Suits by Shareholders.
Bank accused of playing down losses before
merger with NationsBank. It will pay $490 million
to shareholder for its Tortfeasants. CLICK FOR MORE
STORY
-----Scott
Reckard of LATimes
reported on February 9,
2002, that Bank of America Corp. confirmed that it
would pay $490 million to put to rest claims that
it misled shareholders before its 1998 merger with
NationsBank Corp. He added that the huge settlement
was influenced by Enron Corp.'s
meltdown,
-----The Charlotte,
N.C., company, the nation's third-largest bank,
said it had set aside reserves for the settlement
so future results would not be affected. It
admitted no
wrongdoing.
-----Within weeks of
the takeover of San Francisco's BankAmerica Corp.
by Charlotte's NationsBank, the new institution
announced losses of $372 million on what it
described as a $1.4-billion unsecured loan made in
1997 to D.E. Shaw & Co., a New York hedge fund.
The suits, filed on behalf of shareholders whose
stock holdings plunged after the disclosure,
contended executives played down the banks'
exposure to losses from the volatile fund in order
to keep the merger on track. They also claimed that
NationsBank failed to investigate the deal
sufficiently and that BankAmerica failed to
disclose the deal was an acquisition, not a merger
of
equals.
-----The losses from
Shaw contributed to the departure of David Coulter,
chairman of the old BankAmerica, who some had
considered to be a possible successor to Hugh
McColl, then-chairman of the old
NationsBank.
-----"While we
believed our actions in 1998 were totally
appropriate, we also felt it was best to get this
litigation behind us," Bank of America's chief
executive, Ken Lewis, said in a statement Friday.
He cited the "inordinate amount of management's
time" spent dealing with class-action lawsuits
filed by shareholders of both
banks.
-----Robert Stickler,
a Bank of America spokesman, also cited another
"driving factor" in the decision to settle: the
fallout from
Enron.
-----As the bank
looked toward the April date for trial, Stickler
said, "the atmosphere ... was not conducive to
corporations."
-----The $490 million
to be paid by Bank of America ranks in the top 10
of amounts to settle such shareholder class-action
suits, said John C. Coffee, a Columbia University
professor of securities
law.
-----Coffee said the
fiasco involving Enron, which hid large debts and
losses in partnerships while executives earned
millions of dollars on stock options, had "at least
marginally changed the balance of advantage in
securities
litigation."
-----Because of Enron,
juries are more inclined to favor plaintiffs in
such cases, "particularly in a case involving
financial or accounting irregularities," Coffee
said.
-----Bank of America
last year settled Securities and Exchange
Commission charges that it improperly accounted for
its relationship with the hedge fund and failed to
adequately inform investors about the risks of the
deal. The SEC said the bank had made an equity
investment in the fund that it treated as a
loan.
-----The bank, without
admitting or denying guilt, consented to an SEC
cease and desist order but was not
fined.
-----Under the terms
of the settlement, $333.2 million will go to former
NationsBank shareholders and $156.8 million to
former BankAmerica
shareholders.
-----The bank's shares
rose $1.65 to close at $60.60 on Friday on the New
York Stock Exchange.
////
2001b
- BofA Quits Subprime Lending, Car Leases
Banking: Those sectors have hurt other lenders. The
bank will take a $1.25-billion charge. August 18,
2001. CLICK FOR MORE
STORY.
-----(TimeLine
INFO Heading - Who's Who is doing
it
-----Subprime
Mortgage
Leaders
Here are the lenders
that originated the largest dollar volume of
subprime mortgages in the firstquarter, according
to estimates by Inside Mortgage Finance of
Bethesda,
Md.
Loans originated
Change from Lender in Q1 (billions) Q1 2000
CitiFinancial Credit $4.70
+241%
Household Financial
3.72 +14 Washington Mutual 2.16 +68 Bank of America
2.03 -12
Option One
Mortgage 1.50 +12 GMAC-RFC
1.35 +2 Countrywide Credit 1.30 +8 Ameriquest
Mortgage 1.20+17
New Century Financial
1.03 +8 First Franklin Financial 1.01
-5
Confirmed by: LA
Times, August 16, 2001 - Banking: Those sectors
have hurt other lenders. The bank will take a
$1.25-billion charge.
2001c -
The LA
TIMES reported the Bank of America Corp. on August
16, 2001 became the latest lender
to
report big
problems with loans to less-credit-worthy borrowers
amid the weak economy. CLICK FOR MORE
STORY.
-----BofA,
the nation's third-largest bank, said it will stop
making realestate loans to so-called subprime
borrowers, generally individuals with shaky credit
histories or no credit
histories.
-----The bank also
will quit the car-lease finance business, which has
suffered amid slumping prices for used
cars.
-----Both of these
businesses . . . have become unattractive from a
risk-reward standpoint and have not produced
required rates of return," said Kenneth Lewis,
BofA's chief
executive.
-----The Charlotte,
N.C.-based bank said it will liquidate its
$26.3-billion subprime real estate portfolio over
the next nine months and has lined up buyers for
the subprime unit's branch
network.
-----BofA will take a
$1.25-billion charge against earnings in the
current quarter reflecting its exit from the
subprime business and the car-lease
business.
-----"You've got many
more banks getting out of subprime lending than
coming in right now," said Marni O'Doherty, an
analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in New
York. "Banks are finding it much more
labor-intensive, since you've got to be on top of
these types of loans as soon as they get
delinquent."
-----The BofA
announcement follows the failure of Chicago's
Superior Bank two weeks ago. That thrift was a big
lender to subprime borrowers, a sector many lenders
courted in the late 1990s amid the economic
boom.
-----In fact, some of
the nation's biggest banks are among the largest
subprime lenders, mostly because of acquisitions
made by the banks in the last few years. For
example, the nation's largest bank, New York-based
Citigroup Inc., recently purchased Associates First
Capital, a Dallas-based subprime lender, making
Citigroup one of the most active subprime
lenders.
-----In the past, most
subprime lenders were consumer finance
companies.
-----In May, the
percentage of subprime mortgages nationwide that
were seriously delinquent--meaning three or more
months late on payments--rose to 6.37% from 5.55%
at the end of last year, accordingto San
Francisco-based Mortgage Information Corp. That
rate has risen from 3.83% in September
1997.
-----Bank of America's
subprime real estate lending business, EquiCredit,
which offers both mortgagesand home equity loans,
said at the end of June that $1.4 billion, or
5.57%, of its loans were nonperforming, meaning
delinquent.
-----"This subprime
market has changed since the economy has slowed,"
said John Ballentine, director of the American
Bankers Assn.'s community development program. "If
there are losses, they will be ithis market, and
lenders simply can't afford to lose money right
now."
-----Car-lease
financing also has proved to be much less lucrative
than bankers expected, and several big names have
exited the business. Bank One Corp. and Chase
Manhattan Corp. have posted losses recently in that
area. Among other big banks, KeyCorp and National
City Corp. both left the business last
year.
-----Banks have been
big suppliers of car leases in recent years,
betting on a strong market for used cars. But the
weak economy has spurred a plunge in prices in the
used-car market. Some banks say they are losing
$1,000 or more on leased cars in
resales.
-----BofA said it has
made lease loans on about 495,000 vehicles. The
bank said that although it won't make new leases,
customers with outstanding leases won't be
affected.
-----Despite the hefty
charge BofA will take to quit the businesses, its
stock fell only modestly Wednesday, losing 6 cents
to $62.50 on the New York Stock Exchange. The
shares have surged 36% year to
date.
-----BofA said exiting
the businesses will "pave the way to significantly
reduce volatility" in its earnings.
///
2007b
BofA
settles privacy lawsuit. Who's next -- American
Express? CLICK FOR MORE
STORY
July 12,
2007 / Bank of America
Corp. agreed to pay $14 million to resolve claims
that it improperly disclosed customer information
to marketers and third parties without
permission.
The bank
will pay $10.75 million to 35 million checking and
savings customers nationwide and to credit card
customers in California and $3.25 million to
finance privacy projects, said Shirley Norton, a
spokeswoman for the bank.
BofA did
not admit wrongdoing in the accord.
"Bank of
America denies all allegations of wrongdoing and
contends that it fully complied with the law, its
privacy policy and its customer agreements," Norton
said.
The
Plainfiff's accused the bank of disclosing
customers' confidential information to third
parties to market products or services, according
to a notice sent to customers.
The
class-action lawsuit, filed in 1999 in state court
in San Francisco, has not only effected the bank,
"but other credit card firms such as: American
Express and Master Card" -- says Troy
Cory-Stubblefield, author of Bank of America, The
Tortfeasor. "Disclosing customers' confidential
information to third parties to market products or
services, will be the next credit reporting
agencies firms to be hard hit for their
tortfeasants." BofA settles privacy lawsuit. Who's
next -- American Express? CLICK
MORE STORY ABOUT THE TORTFEASOR
UpDates /
Bank
Of
America
- The
Tortfeasor
Updates
A
Cordial Welcome is extended to this Revised,
Updated & Expanded 3rd Edition 2008
of Bank of America, "The Sky's The Limit."
To reinforce any claim
which purports to take precedence over legal
decisions, there must of course, be proof in the
way of documented information, in order that the
claim can be substantiated in a legally credible
& legitimate fashion. CLICK FOR MORE WELCOMES
TO The Sky' The Limit.
Such is the case surrounding the hidden
secrets and never before revealed truths about the
Bank of America -- NMEC scandal; the events that
destroyed many people, including the president and
chairman of the board of Bank of America and NMEC.
BofA's, Sam Armacost, called the NMEC scandal,
"that crazy mortgage thing never should have
happened." BofA's Board of Directors called the
scandal; "their personal Peal Harbor."
This Book,
However,
is not only about Bank of America and NMEC
it is also about the founders, the good and bad
guys of the financial, banking, insurance world,
and the corporate gurus who make up the pieces of
the puzzle -- that helped develop the Bank of
America -- NMEC scandal -- from the early days of
mortgage pass-through certificates, in 1977 to
date.
The Results
of Their experiments with banking,
insurance, stock and mortgage banking
during the early days of bank deregulation, are
interesting, fascinating & astonishing --
especially the way David Feldman put his mortgage
recycling program together -- with the largest
banks, in America. As you follow each chapter and
the chronological eras, as categorized in this
volume, you will discover how many people and
events the Bait Switch Game --
touched
For instance, not only was BankAmerica, just
about taken over by First Interstate Bank, but all
of the companies included in the Mortgage recycling
program, are now defunct. This is the purpose of
this book, prepare the owners and borrows of NMEC
loans, with the windfall given to them by --
Judge Tashima's order of, May 29,
1986.
The court ruled that BofA's claim for NMEC's
Deeds of Trust and Notes were extinguished by
operation of law, under the "one-satisfaction
rule", signifying that -- once the investor
S&L's claims were paid off by BofA, they could
not be assigned, "especially in this instant case,
where BofA, was itself, liable to investors, as a
"joint-tortfeasors" with NMEC. The court ordered
that BofA, could not bring investors' mortgage pool
claims, (which included Citizens S&L, holder of
Corys mortgage certificate) -- by way of assignment
against other allegedly fraudulent operators and
participants in mortgage pools, (NMEC, Glacier or
even the Roger
Organization).
Besides, Troy & Josie Cory and Good
House, Inc., who else will claim ownership of the
real estate properties in Texas and California,
that were at one time -- owned by NMEC? The value
of the property, could exceed &emdash;$113
million.
It Has Taken Many Years of research and
investigation to piece together all of the facts,
fables, fiction and truths -- to free this Volume
from the effects of biased
reporting.
The methodology, which the authors and legal
researches have used to resolve the NMEC scandal,
is, what you might call in the high-tech world --
as Mac 'n File, then print. You'll find there's as
much as a thin-line between Bank of America and
NMEC activities, as there is between Trust Deeds
and mortgage notes -- for without one you might not
have the other.
|
08
|

BUY
Item#08
|
ITEM No.: 08; -
TITLE: 680
Bank
Of America, "The Tortfeasors" The Bait
Switch
Game".
By Troy Cory-Stubblefield, Melvin Belli,
Esq., Scott
Stubblefield,
Esq., Kevin McLean, Esq., Josie Cory.
Hardcover (September 3, 1993),
Price:$1,229.99
- (450 pages) -
Special
Order;
ISBN: 1-883644-85-2;
BK0660.
Review:
Bank Of America, The Tortfeasor
SUBJECT:
The Truth and Untold Story about the Bank
of America and NMEC scandals; A shocking
non-fiction book on how to rob a bank from
the inside. BofA's American and
un-American banking activities; Billion
Dollar Contracts, News Reports on BCCI,
Student loans. "Monopoly, that's the
favorite game of habitual crooks &emdash;
they're going to go around the board as
many times as they can, before going to
jail". Jim Donckels, FBI.
TITLE: The Sky's
The Limit -- with Speedollars
PUBDATE: 3rd Edition 2008
Revised, Updated & Expanded - -
2008.
- ISBN:
1-883644-85-2; BK0660
- Price:
$69.95
- TITLE: Bank Of
America, The Tortfeasor, the Bait
Switch Game.
- SERIES: Tortfeasor
Series
- AUTHOR:
Cory-Stubblefield; Belli, Melvin
M.
- PHOTOGRAPHER:
Cory-Stubblefield, Troy; Sova,
Mark
- ILLUSTRATOR:
Cory-Stubblefield, Troy
- EDITOR:
Stubblefield, Scott B. Esq.; McLean,
Kevin, Esq.; Johnson Ken; Huntsman,
Rulon J., Esq.; Cory, Josie
- TRANSLATOR:
- SUBJECT: The Truth
and Untold Story about the Bank of
America and NMEC scandals; A shocking
non-fiction book on how to rob a bank
from the inside. BofA's American and
un-American banking activities; Billion
Dollar Contracts, News Reports on BCCI,
Student loans. "Monopoly, that's the
favorite game of habitual crooks
--they're going to go around the board
as many times as they can, before going
to jail". Jim Donckels,
FBI.
- EDITION:
Collector's Edition
- VOLUME:
I
- PAGES:
450
- DISCOUNT:
20%
- PUBLISHER:
Television International
Publishing
- CO-PUBLISHER:
Smart Daaf Publishing
BINDING: HC
- LISTPRICE:
1,299.99
- PUBDATE: 930903
Library of Congress TX 3663273. Card
# 93-061742
Effective Date of Registration: Nov 1,
1993
DISTRIBUTOR: TVI Publishing
House
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