Featured Story
BanksterCrime
Since 2019, 15 banks have failed, with five banks failing in 2023 alone. On October 18, 2024, First National Bank of Linday’s demise marked the second bank failure of the year. The collapse raised questions about whether the failure was caused by errors at the bank or by economic issues that could affect other institutions.
First Bank & Trust Co. in Duncan, Oklahoma, assumed the First National Bank of Lindsay’s insured deposits. The only office of the First National Bank of Lindsay resumed normal business hours as a branch of First Bank & Trust Co. on October 21.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency closed the bank “after identifying false and deceptive bank records and other information suggesting fraud that revealed depletion of the bank’s capital,” the agency said in a press release.
“The OCC also found that the bank was in an unsafe or unsound condition to transact business and that the bank’s assets were less than its obligations to its creditors and others,” the regulator said.
Read more: FHFA took action against Federal Home Loan banks after bank failures
State banking groups say the demise of the $107.8 million-asset firm was due to issues at the First National, but the questionable details surrounding the bank’s CEO’s departure and regulators’ allegations of fraud are raising alarms for some bank industry experts.
While the bank was relatively small for the industry, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. estimates the failure could cost the agency’s Deposit Insurance Fund more than $43 million to wind down. In addition to the hefty cost, experts say discrepancies in the bank’s accounting filings have left questions unanswered.
Read more: One year after SVB collapse, updates on the 5 bank failures of 2023
“We don’t know whether some of these depositors had retirement accounts, trust, business accounts, escrow … so it’s hard to say how much they were covered,” industry veteran Brian Byrne told American Banker’s Ebrima Santos Sanneh. “But when I saw the point about [covering] the other 50% after we liquidate the assets … that’s a big red flag for me, because they didn’t do that with [Silicon Valley Bank] or Signature Bank, because those are bigger — and by the way, they weren’t [Global Systemically Important Banks] either.”
Catch up on the most recent bank failures:
Source: S&P
Bank | Location | Date of Failure |
The First National Bank of Lindsay | Lindsay, OK | 10/18/2024 |
Republic First Bank | Philadelphia, PA | 04/26/24 |
Citizens Bank | Sac City, IA | 11/3/2023 |
Heartland Tri-State Bank | Elkhart, KS | 7/28/2023 |
First Republic Bank | San Francisco, CA | 4/28/2023 |
Signature Bank | New York, NY | 3/12/2023 |
Silicon Valley Bank | Santa Clara, CA | 3/10/2023 |
Almena State Bank | Almena, KS | 10/23/2020 |
First City Bank of Florida | Fort Walton Beach, FL | 10/16/2020 |
First State Bank | Barboursville, WV | 4/3/2020 |
Ericson State Bank | Ericson, NE | 02/14/20 |
City National Bank of New Jersey | Newark, NJ | 11/1/2019 |
Resolute Bank | Maumee, OH | 10/25/2019 |
Louisa Community Bank | Louisa, KY | 10/25/2019 |
Enloe State Bank | Cooper, TX | 5/31/2019 |
The First National Bank of Lindsay failed on October 18, 2024.
Republic First Bank failed on April 26, 2024.
Citizens Bank of Sac City, Iowa, failed on November 3, 2023.
Heartland Tri-State Bank failed on July 28, 2023.
First Republic Bank failed on April 28, 2023.
Signature Bank failed on March 12, 2023.
Silicon Valley Bank failed on March 10, 2023.
Almena State Bank failed on October 23, 2020.
First City Bank of Florida failed on October 16, 2020.
First State Bank failed on April 3, 2020.
Ericson State Bank failed on February 14, 2020.
City National Bank of New Jersey failed on November 1, 2019.
Resolute Bank failed on October 25, 2019.
Louisa Community Bank failed on October 25, 2019.
Enloe State Bank failed on May 31, 2019. Source: https://www.americanbanker.com/list/15-most-recent-bank-failures
Don't Miss
How Greed Destroys America, Greed Has No Regard For Others
Capital sins derive their name from the Latin caput, meaning “head.” Thomas Aquinas later would call them not “sins,” but “vices.” Aquinas declared that a capital…
Read More
BANKS: A Biblical Perspective Of The Bankerster, A Sadducee Wrapped In A Pharisees Loincloth…
The Bankster’s hate bad press (lucky for them they own most of the mainstream media), so the situation was quickly rectified. This is but one…
Read More
Financial and Banking Cover-ups
The most heinous example of a bribe in the Bible is the thirty pieces of silver that Judas received to betraythe Lord Jesus. A direct result of Judas’s…
Read More
Russia Urges “Independence” from “Imposed World Order” of Us Financial System
The problem with the acceptance and approval of any New World Order is that no government has ever offered, nor will it ever offer, real…
Read More
Rickards Warns: Robo-Trading Will End In Disaster
We are tempted by our “own evil desire” first (James 1:14). That’s not to say every unbeliever is blatantly and spitefully turning from what is…
Read More