https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/08/crypto-took-down-another-federally-insured-bank-and-just-handed-its-ceo-a-24-year-prison-sentence/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: August 23, 2024 ~


Shan Hanes, Former CEO of Heartland Tri-State Bank

Last year, the staff of a federally-insured bank in Kansas, Heartland
Tri-State Bank, wired out more than one-third of the amount the bank held
in deposits to a crypto scam. Why did they do that? Because the CEO of the
bank, Shan Hanes, told them to do it. Hanes had become one more crypto
sucker seduced by the allure of a get-rich-quick scheme.

On Monday, Hanes was sentenced in a case brought by the U.S. Department of
Justice to 24 years in prison for embezzling $47.1 million (via the wire
transfers shown in the graph above) from the bank he was in charge of
protecting. The bank failed last July with the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) stepping in to make depositors whole while the investors
in the bank (shareholders) were wiped out.

There’s an old saying on Wall Street: “Bulls make money, bears make money,
pigs get slaughtered.” The premise is that if a person becomes too greedy
(a “pig”), he or she loses the ability to make prudent judgment calls and
gets slaughtered.

Exactly one year before Heartland Tri-State Bank failed, Wall Street On
Parade wrote about getting “pig butchered” – slang for getting scammed out
of your money by crypto con artists. Unfortunately for the shareholders of
Heartland Tri-State Bank, its prison-bound former CEO didn’t read our
article. Prosecutors say he became the target of a pig-butchering crypto
scam which led him into the embezzlement scheme at his bank.

In addition to the federal charges on which Hanes was just sentenced, he
also faces 29 state criminal charges, some of which relate to his looting
the accounts of the local church and an investment club as part of his
wiring binge to the crypto scam artists. A trial in that case is scheduled
for October.

What is most noteworthy about this small bank going bust is that the way it
was brought down could be happening, at this very moment, at much larger
banks anywhere in this country.

The Office of Inspector General of the Federal Reserve released a 27-page
investigative report, detailing how the scam was facilitated inside the
bank. The investigators wrote:

“The CEO’s wire requests were inconsistent with both Heartland’s prior and
recently implemented wire transfer limits and appeared to be unusual given
the bank’s agricultural lending business. The wire requests included the
name and account numbers of a cryptocurrency platform. Three of the seven
wire transfer requests processed before June 24 exceeded the applicable $5
million limit. These requests exceeded the $5 million applicable limit by
$1.7 million to $5.3 million per sender. All three of the wires processed
after the implementation of the wire policy on June 24 exceeded the new $3
million limit. Those wires exceeded the limit by $300,000 to $5 million per
sender. Despite the atypical recipient and the dollar amounts of each
transfer significantly departing from prior wire activity and established
limits, Heartland’s chief financial officer (CFO) and other bank employees
approved the wire transfers. We believe that had Heartland employees
followed the bank’s policies, they would have not processed the wires that
led to the bank’s failure.”

Federal banking regulators and Congress are just as responsible as the
acquiescing employees inside the bank for yet another bank failure related
to crypto. The voluntary liquidation of Silvergate Bank last year and the
failure of Signature Bank during last year’s spring bank runs were both
tied to the banks’ involvement with the crypto industry.

Numerous other major countries have outlawed crypto or placed heavy
restrictions on it. In the U.S., however, we are allowing the crypto
billionaires to place their fingers on the scale of our elections in
November as the Republican candidate for President, Donald Trump, shills
for the crypto billionaires at their convention last month and announced
yesterday that he is starting his own crypto platform.

This tolerance in the U.S. toward crypto as it brings down
federally-insured banks and loots the life savings of thousands of
Americans, comes despite 1,600 of the brightest scientific minds in
technology signing a letter calling both crypto and blockchain a sham.

The Federal Trade Commission announced in February that Americans reported
$1.4 billion in losses to cryptocurrency scams in 2023.

Reply via email to