https://wallstreetonparade.com/2025/01/jpmorgan-chase-charged-by-yet-another-internal-whistleblower-with-cooking-the-books/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: January 31, 2025 ~

Jamie Dimon Sits in Front of Trading Monitor in his Office (Source -- 60
Minutes Interview, November 10, 2019)
Jamie Dimon Sits in Front of Trading Monitor in his Office (Source — 60
Minutes Interview, November 10, 2019)

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) has gotten
its hands on a blockbuster 35-page letter that a former JPMorgan banker
sent to the bank’s Audit Committee of the Board of Directors in August
2023. The letter asserts that the bank has been ginning down the amount of
capital it is required to hold by improperly using an accounting technique
called “netting.” The whistleblower asserts that “this could have allowed
JPMorgan Chase to generate an additional $2 billion in net income in one
year alone.”

The whistleblower indicates that he/she brought this alleged malfeasance to
bank officials in 2018 but was “ultimately retaliated against and laid off
in 2022.”

That is becoming a common refrain by whistleblowers inside JPMorgan Chase:
they say they are rewarded for bringing improper, or brazenly illegal,
conduct to the attention of their superiors by being shown the exit door.

Consider what we reported in October 2022:

“The plaintiff in the case is Shaquala Williams, an attorney and financial
crimes compliance professional with more than a decade of experience at
multiple global banks. The defendant is JPMorgan Chase – the largest bank
in the U.S. which has been charged with five felony counts by the U.S.
Department of Justice since 2014. Despite the bank’s unprecedented crime
spree, federal regulators and the Board of Directors of JPMorgan Chase have
allowed the same Chairman and CEO, Jamie Dimon, to continue to run the bank.

“Williams charged in her lawsuit that JPMorgan Chase was keeping two sets
of books and effectively making a monkey out of the U.S. Department of
Justice by brazenly flouting the non-prosecution agreement it had signed
with the Justice Department in a previous case. It came out in her
deposition testimony, which is part of the court record, that one of the
people being paid under her allegation of the bank keeping two sets of
books was Tony Blair, the former Prime Minister of the U.K. (See our
report: JPMorgan Whistleblower Names Former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair
in Court Documents as Receiving ‘Emergency’ Payments from Bank.)”

Williams’ lawsuit also charged that the bank retaliated against her
protected whistleblowing activities by terminating her employment after she
raised concerns about the improper payments.

Like so many other federal lawsuits alleging brazen crimes at JPMorgan
Chase, the Williams case ended up before Judge Jed Rakoff in the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of New York. And like so many
other cases against JPMorgan Chase, Rakoff allowed the lawsuit to be
settled with a vast array of documents remaining under seal. (See Judge Jed
Rakoff Has Regularly Dined in the Past with the Chairman of the Law Firm
that Just Got a Big Win in His Court in the JPMorgan Sex Trafficking Case.)

Then there was the federal lawsuit brought by Donald Turnbull, a former
trader on the precious metals desk at JPMorgan Chase. Turnbull alleged that
the bank trumped up false charges against him as a pretext to terminate him
when it was actually terminating him for cooperating with the Department of
Justice’s investigation of illegal precious metals trading at the bank.
Turnbull states in the lawsuit that the indicted traders received better
benefits when they were released from employment than he did. Despite a
seriously-ill wife, Turnbull alleges in the lawsuit that JPMorgan Chase
cancelled his health insurance, did not pay him severance, and took away
his unvested stock awards when they terminated him.

This would also not be the first time that JPMorgan Chase has been alleged
to have engaged in dodgy tactics to reduce the amount of capital it must
hold. The Office of Financial Research (OFR) called the bank out for just
such an issue in a June 2015 report.

The Office of Financial Research was created under the Dodd-Frank financial
reform legislation of 2010 to make sure that Wall Street megabanks would
never again ravage the economy and financial system of the United States —
as they did in 2008 – by engaging in reckless derivative trades and toxic
bets. OFR describes its mission as follows:

“Our job is to shine a light in the dark corners of the financial system to
see where risks are going, assess how much of a threat they might pose, and
provide policymakers with financial analysis, information, and evaluation
of policy tools to mitigate them.”

Buried in OFR’s June 2015 report was a bombshell. When JPMorgan Chase was
initiating hundreds of billions of dollars in risky derivative trades in
London in 2012, using deposits from its federally-insured bank in the U.S.,
it was attempting to engage in tricked-up capital relief trades. This
outrageous gamesmanship resulted in $6.2 billion in losses at the bank; an
investigation by the FBI; embarrassing Senate hearings; a scathing 300-page
report by the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations;
charges of engaging in “unsafe and unsound” banking practices by the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency; and the payment of $920 million in
fines to its regulators.

The OFR researchers wrote this in their June 2015 report:

“Despite limited public data, post crisis, there is reason to believe banks
continue to use credit derivatives for capital relief. JPMorgan Chase &
Co.’s losses in the 2012 London Whale case were the result of CDS [Credit
Default Swap] usage which was undertaken to obtain regulatory capital
relief on positions in the trading book. SEC staff said in early 2015 they
were evaluating potential transactions at other banks akin to those that
resulted in JPMorgan’s losses. Additionally, banking regulators have
observed that banks’ use of high-cost credit protection could only be
economically viable if the cost of the risk weights on the asset in
question were high. Specifically, the Federal Reserve said in a 2011
supervisory letter that regulators would scrutinize high-cost transactions
and could disallow favorable regulatory capital treatment in some cases.”

Clearly, JPMorgan Chase and its long-tenured Chairman and CEO, Jamie Dimon,
believe they have nothing to fear from the U.S. court system, the
Department of Justice, or their regulators.

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