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Geithner Ordering AIG To “Repay” $165 Million To Taxpayers



Mar 17, 2009 4 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

geitner731

This is such bull! “Repay the taxpayers”????

As IF that money will be coming back to us … It’s going back to Congress. NOT to “The Taxpayers”.

Also, I don’t know if it can be done, but seeing the fact the bonuses were in legal contracts set up before the bailout funds, and also “protected” by Chris Dodd’s clause … I’d sure love to see AIG take the bastards to court over this. Because you know if the people who were supposed to get the bonuses don’t get them they’d sue AIG for breach of contract. But you know they’ll be paid, and AIG will suck and swallow this one in handing over what amounts to extortion money by the Congress.

Same can be said for AIG’s Dodd clause in the bailout plan.

FOX:

Geithner: AIG Will Repay Taxpayers for Bonuses

Treasury Department will order embattled insurance giant American International Group Inc. to repay U.S. taxpayers up to $165 million that the company is giving employees as bonuses.

The Treasury Department will order embattled insurance giant American International Group Inc. to repay U.S. taxpayers up to $165 million that the company is giving employees as bonuses, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said late Tuesday.

Acknowledging “considerable outrage” about the bonus payments, Geithner said AIG will pay the Treasury an amount equal to the payments, and the Treasury will deduct that amount from the $30 billion in government assistance that will soon go to the company.

“We will impose on AIG a contractual commitment to pay the Treasury from the operations of the company the amount of the retention awards just paid,” Geithner said in a letter to congressional leaders.

Geithner is using the controversy over employee pay at AIG to press Congress to work with the Obama administration to shore up regulations of the financial industry.

The treasury secretary, who has been criticized for his handling of AIG’s employee bonuses, said Tuesday in a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that “we should not lose focus on the larger issue it raises.”

“This situation dramatically underscores the need to adopt, as a critical part of financial regulatory reform, an expanded ‘resolution authority’ for the government to better deal with situations like this,” Geithner says in his letter.

He also outlines in the letter how the administration learned of the $165 million in bonuses and how it is responding.

AIG has been the recipient of more than $170 billion in federal aid, part of a effort to rescue the giant insurance company from collapse. The federal government now holds a 80 percent stake in the company, further fueling outrage over the bonuses that were mandated by employee contracts that predated the bailout money.

Despite the outrage in Washington and across the country since news broke Saturday about the bonuses, President Obama is standing behind Geithner. White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel categorically dismissed to the Associated Press on Tuesday any suggestion that Geithner was in trouble, and Press Secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters that Obama has “complete confidence” in Geithner.

Gibbs, during his daily news conference, didn’t give an explanation why President Obama did not find out about the $165 million in bonuses until last week, but later Tuesday, a senior administration official provided a timeline of events that coincided with the outline provided by Geithner in his letter.

Click here to read a PDF of Geithner’s letter.

The timeline says Geithner learned of the bonuses on March 10 and, after expressing his outrage to AIG officials and researching the government’s options, notified the White House of the bonuses on Thursday, two days later.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo added to the outrage on Tuesday when he said his office had found that 73 employees at AIG received bonuses of $1 million or more, with one receiving more than $6 million. Cuomo, who is launching an investigation into the company, reported the latest findings in a letter to Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House financial services committee.

Lawmakers, meanwhile, expressed outrage on Capitol Hill about the bonuses, even as they tried to explain a provision included in the $787 economic stimulus package passed by Congress last month that seemed to give AIG a loophole for doling out the bonuses.

The amendment, meant to restrict executive pay for bailed-out banks, included an exception for “contractually obligated bonuses agreed on or before Feb. 11, 2009.” This would seem to exempt the AIG bonuses that lawmakers and President Obama are looking to recover.

Gibbs said the Obama administration has taken “extraordinary actions” to protect taxpayers in whatever ways it can and will work “as quickly as possible” with Congress to recoup the AIG bonuses.

“I think the secretary of treasury took extraordinary steps based on contracts that were in existence in April of last year in order to do all that he could to protect the taxpayer,” Gibbs said.

Republicans have sharply criticized Geithner after learning the bailed-out insurance company was distributing the bonuses. House Minority Whip Eric Cantor said the administration is in “disarray.”

Like the administration, House and Senate lawmakers are scrambling to find ways to block or recoup the AIG money. But they’ve expressed doubt about the ability of the White House to handle the issue.

Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., suggested Tuesday that Geithner does not have a grasp on the AIG matter.

“Did Secretary Geithner know and look the other way?” said Shelby, the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee.

“I think Secretary Geithner does not have his hands around the details of this, and if he does, then there’s a lot more questions to be asked,” he said.

Gibbs was peppered with questions at his daily briefings Monday and Tuesday on why the administration didn’t act earlier — such as when it was offering another $30 billion to the company in early March.

Gibbs said Monday, “Based on what I read in the newspaper,” the administration learned about the bonuses last week. He declined to offer a timeline on Tuesday.

Obama said Monday he’s instructed Geithner to use the government’s leverage to pursue ways to “block these bonuses.”

“This is not just a matter of dollars and cents. It’s about our fundamental values,” Obama said.


  • sully

    “..Gibbs said the Obama administration has taken “extraordinary actions” to protect taxpayers in whatever ways it can…”

    Because we need government protection from big bad corporations.

    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/paternalism/

    ALL of this subterfuge and misdirection is the moral equivalent of Barry saying “Who’s your Daddy” while he fucks us in the ass with a $3.5 TRILLION ‘budget’ and ‘bailout’ and ‘stimulus’ money grabs.

  • BradW (the Infidel)

    AIG is going to send as much of the total 180 BILLION out of th ecountry as they can, they will be moving any and all positions overseas they can, and when the time looks right (when it will benefit the executives and screw the US the most) they will close all US operations, and set themselves back up as a totally foreign entity, with all profits they make leaving the country. Any employees working in the US will be treated like employees of a foreign company, and the taxes will be minimal.

    What it boils down to is the US taxpayer will see little if any of the money back from AIG or any other bailed out firm.

    When those funds are repaid to the government, the natinal debt will NOT be retired any, Congress will spend the money on another social program, like giving relocation expenses to illegal immigrants, so they have more cash to wire out to the country.

    I wish the heck more people would realize how many other countries still depend on the export of US dollars to run. We support many South American countries through immigrants sending money earned in the US to family members in their home countries. And that is on top of the tax dollars the congress keeps giving those foreign countries.

    I would like to see how much $$ is sent to Venezuala, and other countries that are anti- United States of America.

    Stop that cash exodus at the expense of tax payers, and like shutting off a water main, the water leak of a broken pipe vanishes when the pipe is empty, and then the break can be fixed.

    We have to stop sending the money out of the country, so those who use OUR MONEY against us can lose their power, wehich is DERIVED from US TAXPAYERS

  • jasjfarrell

    This bonus money is nothing compared to billions given to ACORN by the democrats. What about the billions given to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for mortgages that will never be paid.

    What subterfuge.

  • http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&friendID=89280654 DEVILDOG81MM

    “I N D I A N G I V E R S ”

    this money was just handed to them, thus it became private property, and now all these senators and rep. and the no-bama admin. want to go and take it and suggest suicide and etc.
    i consider these bonuses a stupid tax and America deserves it, for electing the senators and rep. in office
    WTF
    outrage double dippin taken private property and giving it away to take that property back