https://wallstreetonparade.com/2025/02/donald-trump-gives-the-greenlight-to-goldman-sachs-and-jpmorgan-chase-to-return-to-bribing-foreign-officials/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: February 11, 2025 ~

President Donald Trump Tells Fox News that Americans Would End Up Poor
Without His Brain in the White House
President Donald Trump Tells Fox News that Americans Would End Up Poor
Without His Brain in the White House

The President of the United States appears to be on a mission to Make
Corruption Great Again.

Just yesterday, Trump’s Justice Department ordered prosecutors to drop
corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams. Also, Trump
issued a pardon to former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, who was
convicted in 2011 on corruption charges, including an FBI-recorded attempt
to sell the U.S. Senate seat that was vacated when Barack Obama took the
office of the President. Trump had commuted Blagojevich’s sentence during
his first term as President.

In a further jaw-dropping move yesterday, Trump issued an Executive Order
that suspends the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) for 180 days, giving
a greenlight to megabanks on Wall Street and other U.S. corporations to
bribe officials in foreign countries to get business deals approved. The
order bars federal prosecutors from starting any new FCPA investigations,
enforcing new actions and orders a review of existing FCPA investigations
to “restore proper bounds” on applying the FCPA law.

Two of the megabanks on Wall Street – Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase –
had previously been charged with outrageously brazen violations of the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). (See here and here.)

The FCPA has been the law of the United States for almost half a century.
It was enacted in 1977 and protects the reputations of giant
publicly-traded companies in the U.S., the stock of many of which are held
to the tune of billions of dollars in public pension funds. It also
supports the reputation of the United States as a country that will not
allow its largest corporations to engage in predatory practices against
vulnerable countries through bribery.

Trump’s moves yesterday to normalize corruption are being interpreted by
some media outlets as an effort by Trump to normalize his own history of
corruption as simply what smart dealmakers do. Trump is, after all, the
first convicted felon (a 34-count convicted felon to be precise) to serve
as President of the United States in 248 years.

Trump’s unprecedented moves since taking office just last month are ringing
more and more alarm bells. Trump has stunned the world at large with his
announcement last Tuesday that the U.S. would take ownership of Gaza, the
homeland of the Palestinian people, and develop it into “the Riviera of the
Middle East.” Trump expanded on that in an interview with Fox News,
portions of which were released yesterday. In that interview, Trump said
the Palestinians would not be allowed to return to Gaza.

>From firing Inspectors General, to shuttering federal agencies, to allowing
the unprecedented breaches of U.S. government payment and computer systems,
to appointing grossly disqualified individuals to lead critical federal
agencies, Trump is increasingly appearing to be destabilizing the U.S.
government.

Yesterday, five former U.S. Treasury Secretaries (Robert Rubin, Larry
Summers, Tim Geithner, Jack Lew and Janet Yellen) jointly penned an OpEd at
the New York Times. In it, they wrote the following about Elon Musk and his
band of young techies gaining access to the U.S. Treasury’s $6 trillion
payment system:

“These political actors have not been subject to the same rigorous ethics
rules as civil servants, and one has explicitly retained his role in a
private company, creating at best the appearance of financial conflicts of
interest. They lack training and experience to handle private, personal
data — like Social Security numbers and bank account information. Their
power subjects America’s payments system and the highly sensitive data
within it to the risk of exposure, potentially to our adversaries. And our
critical infrastructure is at risk of failure if the code that underwrites
it is not handled with due care. That is why a federal judge this past
weekend blocked, at least temporarily, these individuals from the
Treasury’s payments system, noting the risk of ‘irreparable harm.’ ”

One member of Congress who appears to have sized up the machinations of
Donald Trump, Elon Musk and his 19-25 year old tech bros running amok in
the computer systems of critical federal agencies is Senator Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-RI).

When the news of the mass firings of Inspectors General by Trump made their
way to Whitehouse, he summed up the Trump agenda with one sentence at X
(formerly Twitter):

“Corruption 101: Clear out the cops before you send in the thieves.”

Over the weekend, another cop has been gutted by the Trump administration
in a brazen coup d’état. The building of the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB) has been shuttered for at least this week, its government
website gives a 404 error notice, and its major operations have been
suspended by a Trump appointee, Russell Vought (a key author of Project
2025), who has also been installed as the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).

The CFPB was created in 2010 under the Dodd-Frank financial reform
legislation, duly passed by both houses of Congress and signed into law by
President Barack Obama. It allows average Americans to file complaints
directly with the CFPB against financial institutions that have ripped them
off. That complaint database is publicly available and allows journalists
to mine it, looking for the latest predatory actions against vulnerable
Americans. Taking down the CFPB has been on Wall Street’s wish list since
its creation.

Senate and House Democrats funneled their outrage against the Trump
administration’s unlawful actions against the CFPB in a quickly launched
protest rally in front of its shuttered building yesterday.

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