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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jamie153 who wrote (1380450)11/18/2022 1:51:08 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580439
 
Typically what happens on a farm is the kids learned a trade while growing up and left.

Usually one would stay behind to carry on the farm, sometimes the others had an interest in the farm and would be bought out over time.



To: Jamie153 who wrote (1380450)11/18/2022 1:52:29 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580439
 
Are you altruistic Jamie?

"There are two moral questions which altruism lumps together into one “package-deal”: (1) What are values? (2) Who should be the beneficiary of values? Altruism substitutes the second for the first; it evades the task of defining a code of moral values, thus leaving man, in fact, without moral guidance.

Altruism declares that any action taken for the benefit of others is good, and any action taken for one’s own benefit is evil. Thus the beneficiary of an action is the only criterion of moral value—and so long as that beneficiary is anybody other than oneself, anything goes."

AYN RAND



To: Jamie153 who wrote (1380450)11/18/2022 3:25:23 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580439
 
Where is the crime, Jamie?

BUSINESS NEWS

NOVEMBER 18, 2022 / 03:19 PM

Elizabeth Holmes arrives in court to face sentencing for Theranos fraud

SAN JOSE, Calif. (Reuters) -Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes arrived on Friday at a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., where she is scheduled to be sentenced for defrauding investors in her now-defunct blood testing startup.

U.S. District Judge Edward Davila will sentence Holmes on three counts of investor fraud and one count of conspiracy. A jury convicted Holmes, 38, in January following a trial that spanned three months.

Prosecutors, who are seeking a 15-year prison sentence, called Holmes’ fraud “among the most substantial white collar offenses Silicon Valley or any other district has seen.”

Defendants in other major fraud cases have received sentences ranging from 10 to 25 years, prosecutors said in court papers. Examples included Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling who was sentenced to more than 13 years in prison for his conviction on charges stemming from the company’s spectacular collapse.

But Holmes’ attorneys have asked that she receive a more lenient sentence of 18 months of home confinement, followed by community service, urging the judge not to make her a “martyr to public passion.”

More than 130 friends, family, investors and former Theranos employees submitted letters to Davila urging leniency.

They included U.S. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey, who said Holmes “can, despite mistakes, make the world a better place.”

Prosecutors said Holmes misrepresented Theranos’ technology and finances, including by claiming that its miniaturized blood testing machine was able to run an array of tests from a few drops of blood. The company secretly relied on conventional machines from other companies to run patients’ tests, prosecutors said.

Once valued at $9 billion, Theranos Inc promised to revolutionize how patients receive diagnoses by replacing traditional labs with small machines envisioned for use in homes, drugstores and even on the battlefield.

Forbes dubbed Holmes the world’s youngest female self-made billionaire in 2014, when she was 30 and her stake in Theranos was worth $4.5 billion.

But the startup collapsed after a series of articles in the Wall Street Journal in 2015 questioned its technology.

At trial, prosecutors said Holmes engaged in fraud by lying to investors about Theranos’ technology and finances rather than allowing the company to fail.

Holmes testified in her own defense, saying she believed her statements were accurate at the time.

Though she was convicted on three counts, Holmes was acquitted on four other counts alleging she defrauded patients who paid for Theranos tests.

Davila has denied Holmes’ requests to overturn her convictions, saying they were supported by the evidence at trial.

After the sentence has been imposed, Holmes can challenge those rulings and her sentence at the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York and Dan Levine in San Jose;Editing by Noeleen Walder and Diane Craft

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles



To: Jamie153 who wrote (1380450)11/18/2022 4:23:46 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580439
 
"It never made sense and thank god people weren't always this dumb."

$9,000,000,000 of your generation's money has vanished. Why is Biden silent?

====
Bankman-Fried Secretly Cashed Out $300 Million During FTX Funding Spree

by Tyler Durden

Friday, Nov 18, 2022 - 10:46 AM

One can read SBF's latest, excruciatingly grating and self-serving twitter thread in 32 parts...

... which is heavy in self-pity and material, self-incriminating evidence that will be used by the prosecution, which even the FTX liquidator tried urgently to distance the now bankrupt company from...



.... but sadly light on how SBF commingled and swindled billions in client funds, a question over a million FTX "creditors" demand an answer to immediately if only to get closure on how they all got "Ccompletely orzined" (speaking of other popular democrats).

And while we wait for more information from the FTX liquidator on how the 30-year-old Democrat who "got Biden elected"...

[url=][/url][url=]Source: Vox: "[/url] An interview with Sam Bankman-Fried, who uses math for ... everything"... pilfered and pillaged the company with an $8 billion shortfall, moments ago the WSJ disclosed another nefarious, self-enriching scheme by the Bahamas-based sociopath. According to the Journal, besides commingling and stealing client funds, Sam Bankrupt-Fraud also lied to investors that FTX was holding a primary stock offering when it was really conducting a secondary.

When FTX raised $420 million from an array of big-name investors in October last year right around the peak of the crypto bubble, at an FTX valuation of $25 billion, the cryptocurrency exchange said the money would help grow the business, improve user experience and allow it to engage more with regulators. In other words, a pure primary offering.

But as the Journal reports, what was left unmentioned was that nearly three-quarters of the money, $300 million, went instead to FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, who sold some of his personal stake in the company, according to FTX financial records reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. In other words, what was repped & warranted as a primary offering was really most a secondary. Which of course is completely criminal but in SBF's case it just means "get in line."

SBF's sale of stock in October 2021 came in the midst of a six-month fundraising blitz that ultimately brought in roughly $2 billion from investors including Sequoia Capital, funds managed by BlackRock and the Singapore sovereign wealth fund Temasek.

The October 2021 fundraising valued the company at $25 billion. In a press release, Bankman-Fried said he was happy “to partner with investors that prioritize positioning FTX as the world’s most transparent and compliant cryptocurrency exchange." Of course, it ended being everything but.

The amount raised contained numerical references to marijuana and oral sex: $420.69 million raised from 69 investors. An article published by one of FTX’s investors, Sequoia, called that fundraising a “meme round,” referring to the embedded jokes.

Three months earlier, in July 2021, Bankman-Fried bought out the roughly 15% stake owned by Binance, FTX’s first outside investor. Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao tweeted this month that the amount totaled $2.1 billion, paid in a combination of FTT, FTX’s in-house crypto currency, and BUSD, Binance’s stablecoin, whose value is pegged to the U.S. dollar.

After the July 2021 sale, the FTX shares Binance previously owned ended up in Paper Bird Inc., according to FTX documents. Paper Bird is an entity 100% owned by Mr. Bankman-Fried, according to documents on FTX filed with Miami-Dade County, in Florida.

Which means that in addition to the direct $300 million cash out, SBF also siphoned off $3.3 billion in "related party receivables" - as we noted yesterday, we already knew that $1 billion went directly to Bankman-Fried.



We can now add the $2.3 billion to Paper Bird as part of SBF's total, bringing the total to $3.6 billion that we know of so far.

As the WSJ adds, Bankman-Fried’s equity sale fraud, er, cashout was large by startup-world standards, where such sales historically were taboo because they allow founders to reap profits before investors. Bankman-Fried told investors at the time it was a partial reimbursement of money he spent to buy out rival Binance’s stake in FTX a few months earlier, according to some of the people familiar with the transaction.

Additionally, the deal offers an explanation for the extremely complicated FTX org chart, whose purposes was to obfuscate fund flows...



... and to enable the transfer of money between Bankman-Fried and multiple entities he controlled while his crypto business flourished, a funding stream that helped finance a burst of Democratic political donations, "philanthropic" commitments and a large purchase of Robinhood Markets stock in the past year, all in hopes of masking the epic fraud taking place behind the scenes and greenwashing his political influence which SBF took to mean a perpetual get out of jail card signed by the democrats in return for his "generosity" with stolen funds.

Of course, that swirl is now under scrutiny in the massive $10-$50BN bankruptcy of FTX and Alameda Research, Bankman-Fried’s crypto hedge fund. FTX, which lent customer funds to Alameda, faces a funding gap of roughly $8 billion, Alameda and FTX executives have said.

John Ray, FTX’s new chief executive installed to oversee the bankruptcy, said in a court filing Thursday the process would involve the “comprehensive, transparent and deliberate investigation into claims against Mr. Samuel Bankman-Fried” and other cofounders of the entities.

The filing highlighted numerous failings, including “the concentration of control in the hands of a very small group of inexperienced, unsophisticated and potentially compromised individuals.”



To: Jamie153 who wrote (1380450)11/19/2022 10:22:17 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580439
 
Are you influecning people the right way Jamie? Can you give more and more and more?