Subject: Mary Jo White

Subject of Interest

Mary Jo White is an American attorney who served as the 31st Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from 2013 to 2017. She was  the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, serving from 1993 to 2002. On January 24, 2013, President Barack Obama nominated White to replace Elisse B. Walter as Chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. She was confirmed by the Senate on April 8, 2013 and was sworn into office on April 10, 2013. On November 14, 2016, White announced she would step down from her SEC position at the end of the president’s term and is now the Senior Chair at Debevoise & Plimpton. She received a bachelor of arts from the College of William & Mary in 1970. She earned an master of arts in psychology in 1971 from The New School for Social Research and a Juris Doctor degree from Columbia Law School in 1974.

Biography

Debevoise & Plimpton

Subject: Danielle Chiesi

Subject of Interest

Danielle Chiesi is a former beauty queen turned stock analyst that helped former Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam with insider trading. Chiesi pleaded guilty on three counts of securities fraud, and was sentenced to a West Virginia Prison in 2011. She served 15 months before being released. She agreed to pay $540,000 to settle related civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Danielle Chiesi to Pay $540,000 in Insider Trading Case

Galleon Group

Tip: SEC Tokenism — Wilson-Davic & Co. Mock Hit . . .

Tip

SEC Charges Wilson-Davis & Co., Inc. with Failing to Report Suspicious Transactions

Everyone on the street knew this market maker was a complete front for the naked shorts, Goldman Sachs and the other big boys are worse.  It’s like they rent their market-maker driving license for fat fees to the hedge funds, no worries how many investors get run over and killed by naked short sellers.

Need to fence the small caps and end market-maker exemptions.  Need to make all trades transparent “by name” of the buyer or seller.  Need to see the tickets every day, no exceptions.  And of course need to hang anyone who fails to settle.  DTCC is the enabler — dirty, dirty, dirty.

Tip: Riot Blockchain Fucked by CNBC and SEC to Protect Naked Short Sellers and Major Institutions Doing Naked Short Selling

Tip

A public company that crushed short sellers The stock went form $3 to $45 The shorts on Wall St were screaming Fraud even CNBC was in on this one to stop the stock from GOING higher. CNBC story They are now Dateline instead of a business show WHY?

Riot Blockchain plummets after CNBC investigation finds no evidence of an advertised shareholders meeting (RIOT)

And after all the attacks the SEC joined in and here is the outcome  THEY ARE CLEARED and the stock which was once $45 is now $2
That’s how Wall St works hurt the big boys and they call the cops to protect them  — so SEC sanctions defamation and tortious interference on a daily basis.

Tip: How SEC Intimidates Boards Into Complicity?

Tip

Comment: Wall Street uses SEC as an enforcer or bully boy.

Boards of directors go along to get along — and avoid being whacked.

They are just following the rules that the street set up.

1) become a board member
2) never say anything
3) if you do say anything the SEC will come after you

That’s it , everyone does the same thing and they just loot you while you watch

IF YOU SPEAK UP OR DO ANYTHING you get the SEC on your back just like Dems with TRUMP.

Subject: Jay Clayton

Subject of Interest

Jay Clayton is the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).  He was nominated to chair the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on January 20, 2017, by President Donald Trump and sworn in on May 4, 2017. Prior to joining the Commission, Chairman Clayton was a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, where he was a member of the firm’s Management Committee and co-head of the firm’s corporate practice.

 

Continue reading “Subject: Jay Clayton”

Subject: Allison Herren Lee

Subject of Interest

Allison Herren Lee is a  Commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). She was appointed by President Donald Trump to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate, and sworn into office on July 8, 2019. Commissioner Lee brings to the SEC over two decades of experience as a securities law practitioner. Most recently, she has written, lectured, and taught courses internationally in Spain and Italy on financial regulation and corporate law.

Continue reading “Subject: Allison Herren Lee”

THE DOLLAR HAS NO INTRINSIC VALUE : DO YOUR ASSETS?