Featured Story
By SRH,Engaging in cryptocurrency trading can yield significant profits; however, it is accompanied by various risks and challenges. Regrettably, the pursuit of rapid wealth has resulted in the emergence of numerous schemes that guarantee implausible returns.
The prospect of significant financial gains within a brief period serves as a compelling motivation for numerous individuals venturing into the cryptocurrency market. This aspiration for rapid wealth can obscure rational thinking and result in hasty choices.
Indicators of dubious get-rich-quick schemes encompass assurances of assured profits, absence of clarity, urgency in investment decisions, and dependence on recruitment for generating income.
Last year, the employees of Heartland Tri-State Bank, a federally-insured institution in Kansas, transferred over a third of the bank’s total deposits to a crypto scam. The reason? The bank’s CEO, Shan Hanes, instructed them to do so. Hanes fell victim to the enticing promise of quick riches that crypto schemes often advertise.
On Monday, Hanes received a 24-year prison sentence from the U.S. Department of Justice for embezzling $47.1 million through those wire transfers. This was money that he was supposed to safeguard as the bank’s leader. The bank collapsed last July, with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) stepping in to protect depositors, while shareholders faced total losses.
There’s a saying on Wall Street: “Bulls make money, bears make money, pigs get slaughtered.” This highlights that excessive greed can cloud judgment, leading to disastrous outcomes for those who become too greedy.
Exactly one year prior to the downfall of Heartland Tri-State Bank, Wall Street On Parade discussed the concept of being “pig butchered,” a term for falling victim to crypto scams. Sadly, the former CEO, now facing prison time, didn’t heed the warning. Prosecutors allege he was ensnared in a pig-butchering crypto scam, which ultimately led to his embezzlement activities at the bank.
In addition to the federal charges resulting in his recent sentencing, Hanes is also confronted with 29 state criminal charges, some of which involve misappropriating funds from a local church and an investment club during his spree of wiring money to the crypto fraudsters. A trial for these charges is set for October.
What stands out about this small bank’s failure is that similar schemes could be unfolding right now in much larger banks across the nation. The Office of Inspector General of the Federal Reserve has released a detailed 27-page report investigating these alarming practices.
Don't Miss
America is at War with Itself, No End to This Political Civil War in the Us
The polarization in American politics has become so extreme there seems no longer to be any center ground. The political establishment is consequently imploding into…
Read More
“Paper Money Systems Have Always Wound-Up With Collapse And Chaos”, Buffett Senior
Warren Buffett, despite his extraordinary investment success, has a rather famous and long-standing love/hate relationship with precious metals. Maybe it started with his dad – Congressman…
Read More
Central Bankers Go Green… Why?
I was told many depressing things as a child. Watching World Vision infomercials educating the west to the want and misery suffered by millions of…
Read More
The Beginning of the End: Great Recession 2.0 is Obscured but Here!
The Great Recession never ended. I say that because the deep economic flaws that caused it was never corrected. All recovery efforts since merely clouded…
Read More
Danske Bank Executive At Center Of Massive Money-Laundering Scandal Found Dead, So They Say?
Greed refuses to be satisfied. More often than not, the more we get, the more we want. Material possessions will not protect us—in this life…
Read More