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		|  09-30-2009, 02:03 PM | #4621 |  
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				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: NYC 
					Posts: 18,597
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  But I am also saying that a bank which exclusively does business outside the US should not be required to do so.  I'm saying that if I make money in France, then take that money to Switzerland and put it in the Swiss bank that has no branches in the US, the US should not have any right to force that bank to divulge anything about my account.  The US can try to force me, as a US citizen, to divulge the info, but if I don't, they have no right to compel the Swiss bank which is not maintaining any branches in the US or courting US customers in the US to do so.  
 I find it deplorable that any nation would try to force a bank in another country, with no ties to the requesting nation, to break its own secrecy laws to aid the foreign nation's prosecution of one of its own nationals.  That's a gross, ridiculous over-reach.
 |   I don't disagree with any of this.  But your complaint really has nothing to do with the facts.  We are not running around the world forcing companies with no US ties to give up a bunch of information as it pleases us.  Part of UBS' settlement for the crime they committed was turning over information about other criminals they are hiding.  They did not have to do that.  They could have taken the full penalty.  They chose not to.  They rolled on their clients instead.  Why didn't you draft a post about how shitty UBS acted concerning the crime they committed and the resulting sell-out of their clients to save their own skins?
 
And as yesterday's article stated, the Swiss government will decide what information gets passed along to ours.  And I bet UBS and other Swiss banks who do business here want their government to cooperate.
 
So the "gross, ridiculous over-reach" you're talking about doesn't exist.  You act like you've got some prosecutor walking into Bank of Zurich and demanding that they release information on every US citizen that has an account there.
 
TM |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:09 PM | #4622 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Appalaichan Trail 
					Posts: 6,201
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by ThurgreedMarshall  So the "gross, ridiculous over-reach" you're talking about doesn't exist.  You act like you've got some prosecutor walking into Bank of Zurich and demanding that they release information on every US citizen that has an account there.
 
 |  You mean like Jason Bourne?  I wouldn't fuck with that guy.  Which distinguishes me from Sarah Silverman. |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:10 PM | #4623 |  
	| Hello, Dum-Dum. 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 10,117
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				Re: Dolls
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by greatwhitenorthchick  I do not buy into the stereotype.  I played softball (even broke my nose doing it) and am anything but fat or gay. |  No stereotype that is entirely false will catch on.  No stereotype that is entirely true is useful. |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:16 PM | #4624 |  
	| Moderator 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Monty Capuletti's gazebo 
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by ThurgreedMarshall  I don't disagree with any of this.  But your complaint really has nothing to do with the facts.  We are not running around the world forcing companies with no US ties to give up a bunch of information as it pleases us.  Part of UBS' settlement for the crime they committed was turning over information about other criminals they are hiding.  They did not have to do that.  They could have taken the full penalty.  They chose not to.  They rolled on their clients instead.  Why didn't you draft a post about how shitty UBS acted concerning the crime they committed and the resulting sell-out of their clients to save their own skins?
 And as yesterday's article stated, the Swiss government will decide what information gets passed along to ours.  And I bet UBS and other Swiss banks who do business here want their government to cooperate.
 
 So the "gross, ridiculous over-reach" you're talking about doesn't exist.  You act like you've got some prosecutor walking into Bank of Zurich and demanding that they release information on every US citizen that has an account there.
 
 TM
 |  We don't know how broad the initial request was, and having dealt with Federal prosecutors, I'd be shocked - shocked - if it didn't include a demand for everything imaginable, including the exempted category I cited.  As Cletus noted, if you want 5, ask for 25.  They started with 52,000, and now they're down to 4,450.  Shows what kind of borderline bad faith went into the initial request.   
 
And don't think for a minute that the US wouldn't make the argument that it had the right to demand info from exclusively Swiss banks on some "minimum contacts" theory based on allegations that the banks marketed secrecy to Americans traveling or living abroad if they could.
				__________________All is for the best in the best of all possible worlds.
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:32 PM | #4625 |  
	| the poor-man's spuckler 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2005 
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  They started with 52,000, and now they're down to 4,450.  Shows what kind of borderline bad faith went into the initial request. |  And when someone argued that your initial production request was "borderline bad faith", you'd tell them to comply with the request and kindly fuck the hell off, too.  That's specious, and you know it.
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  And don't think for a minute that the US wouldn't make the argument that it had the right to demand info from exclusively Swiss banks on some "minimum contacts" theory based on allegations that the banks marketed secrecy to Americans traveling or living abroad if they could. |  And the Swiss replied that "Every American who has ever seen a packet of "Swiss Miss" and failed to perform mandatory service in the Swiss military has violated Swiss law.  Please extradite them immediately."  And then told the DOJ to kindly fuck off.
				__________________never incredibly annoying
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:54 PM | #4626 |  
	| [intentionally omitted] 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: NYC 
					Posts: 18,597
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  We don't know how broad the initial request was, and having dealt with Federal prosecutors, I'd be shocked - shocked - if it didn't include a demand for everything imaginable, including the exempted category I cited.  As Cletus noted, if you want 5, ask for 25.  They started with 52,000, and now they're down to 4,450.  Shows what kind of borderline bad faith went into the initial request. |   Demand, request, negotiated.  Who cares?  If they had asked for 100, they would have received 100 or less.  This just doesn't bother me in the context of a settlement by a bank who has broken the law (hell, the request is related to one of the laws they broke, no?).  And you still haven't answered why you're so pissed at the prosecutors and not the bank.  But I'll chalk it up to a personal experience you've had with a prosecutor and the fact that you now seem to think they overstep as a rule.
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  And don't think for a minute that the US wouldn't make the argument that it had the right to demand info from exclusively Swiss banks on some "minimum contacts" theory based on allegations that the banks marketed secrecy to Americans traveling or living abroad if they could. |   I don't really want to argue about what people would get away with if they could.  But if I did, I would start with the assholes who skip out on their taxes and leave you and me paying more.
 
TM |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:54 PM | #4627 |  
	| Registered User 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Government Yard in Trenchtown 
					Posts: 20,182
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				Re: Helpful Advice Solicited
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by robustpuppy  I see there is still something seriously off about you. |  I appreciate your honesty.  
 
Off to the Ashram, now.
 
(And welcome back).
				__________________A wee dram a day!
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:54 PM | #4628 |  
	| Patch Diva 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Winter Wonderland 
					Posts: 4,607
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  I'm saying I agree with you.  I'm saying you and Cletus are right that a bank doing business in the US should have to divulge the info.  
 But I am also saying that a bank which exclusively does business outside the US should not be required to do so.  I'm saying that if I make money in France, then take that money to Switzerland and put it in the Swiss bank that has no branches in the US, the US should not have any right to force that bank to divulge anything about my account.  The US can try to force me, as a US citizen, to divulge the info, but if I don't, they have no right to compel the Swiss bank which is not maintaining any branches in the US or courting US customers in the US to do so.
 
 I find it deplorable that any nation would try to force a bank in another country, with no ties to the requesting nation, to break its own secrecy laws to aid the foreign nation's prosecution of one of its own nationals.  That's a gross, ridiculous over-reach.
 |  Aren't you changing the hypothetical?  UBS does  do business in the United States and broke U.S. laws while doing so.
 
ETA:  Scroll then post. |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 02:57 PM | #4629 |  
	| the poor-man's spuckler 
				 
				Join Date: Apr 2005 
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by ThurgreedMarshall  They could have taken the full penalty.  They chose not to.  They rolled on their clients instead.  
 TM
 |  This isn't my field, but wouldn't the continued maintenance of the accounts, without disclosure, be a continuing violation?  There wasn't really anyway for them to get out from under the prosecution w/o divulging the identity of the subject accounts, was there?  Wonk?
				__________________never incredibly annoying
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:01 PM | #4630 |  
	| Proud Holder-Post 200,000 
				 
				Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Corner Office 
					Posts: 86,149
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				Re: Dolls
			 
 
	e.g.Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Atticus Grinch  No stereotype that is entirely false will catch on. |   Atticus's twosies issues.
 
	c.f.Quote: 
	
		| No stereotype that is entirely true is useful. |   Atticus's twosies issues.
				__________________I will not suffer a fool- but I do seem to read a lot of their posts   |  
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:51 PM | #4631 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 11,873
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				Re: Dolls
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by Mmmm, Burger (C.J.)  If I'd know that I would have used you instead of Finch.  But I stand by my example of every catcher everywhere. |  'scuse me?
				__________________Where are my elephants?!?!
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:51 PM | #4632 |  
	| It's all about me. 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Enough about me.  Let's talk about you.  What do you think of me? 
					Posts: 6,004
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				Re: Dolls
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by greatwhitenorthchick  I do not buy into the stereotype.  I played softball (even broke my nose doing it) and am anything but fat or gay. |  
I played softball too, and was even the catcher!  Yay me!
				__________________Always game for a little hand-to-hand chainsaw combat.
 
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:52 PM | #4633 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 11,873
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				Re: Dolls
			 
 
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					Originally Posted by Atticus Grinch  No stereotype that is entirely false will catch on.  No stereotype that is entirely true is useful. |  Everything in moderation, except for moderation itself.
				__________________Where are my elephants?!?!
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:53 PM | #4634 |  
	| I am beyond a rank! 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 
					Posts: 11,873
				      | 
				
				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by sebastian_dangerfield  And don't think for a minute that the US wouldn't make the argument that it had the right to demand info from exclusively Swiss banks on some "minimum contacts" theory based on allegations that the banks marketed secrecy to Americans traveling or living abroad if they could. |  "if they could."  Big caveat.  
 
You appear to be ranting about something that you recognize has never happened, and that you know is impossible.
				__________________Where are my elephants?!?!
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		|  09-30-2009, 03:54 PM | #4635 |  
	| [intentionally omitted] 
				 
				Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: NYC 
					Posts: 18,597
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				Re: the longest time it took for a sex act to come back and haunt someone?
			 
 
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Cletus Miller  This isn't my field, but wouldn't the continued maintenance of the accounts, without disclosure, be a continuing violation?  There wasn't really anyway for them to get out from under the prosecution w/o divulging the identity of the subject accounts, was there?  Wonk? |   Good question.  I don't know.  There must be a difference between the nature of the accounts.  Otherwise, why would they request info on 50,000 and only get 4,000?
 
TM |  
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