By The Huffington Post
Everett Stern
didn't realize that becoming a whistleblower would change his life. Not only
did he lose his job and career at HSBC, and become blacklisted from the banking
industry, he now sleeps with a gun by his bed after receiving death threats on
a regular basis. He can barely afford a ticket to New York City to speak at a
press conference this Thursday Aug. 29, at noon on the steps of the New York
Public Library. But he isn't worried. According to the former bank employee, he
will stop at nothing to expose HSBC's continued actions of laundering money for
terrorists groups. Although the bank paid a 1.9 billion penalty in 2009,Stern claims he has evidence
that HSBC continued to launder money during his tenure after they admitted that
they had stopped in 2010.
"The
public needs to know that money is still being funneled through HSBC to
directly buy guns and bullets to kill our soldiers. Fines are not acceptable. I
want a criminal indictment of HSBC executives," he asserts. "And if I
die because of this, my life will have been worthwhile."
A noble cause
doesn't mean people will listen to you. During his employment with HSBC as an
AML (Anti-Money Laundering officer), Stern found discrepancies and brought them
to the attention of his supervisors. Through an Internet search, Stern found a
Saudi fruit company was sending millions to a high-ranking figure in the Yemeni
wing of the Muslim Brotherhood. Stern also uncovered that HSBC was allowing
millions of dollars to be moved from the Karaiba chain of supermarkets in
Africa to a firm called Tajco, a company that had been singled out by the US
Treasury Department as major financiers of the Lebanese Shiite group,
Hezbollah. Stern's supervisors, however, told him to not make waves and keep
"clearing the quota of 72 alerts per week."
Stern then took
his evidence further, notifying appropriate government agencies such as the FBI,
CIA and SEC, about violations of US money laundering laws. All efforts fell on
deaf ears -- the excuse being that prosecuting the Too Big To Fail bank would
precipitate a financial collapse. Frustrated with the lack of action, Mr. Stern
recently decided to take the case public, approaching various media outlets, in
addition to Occupy Wall Street. By doing so, he has given up a multi-million
dollar whistleblower award.
"This is
not a Democrat or Republican issue," he said. "Banks financing drug
cartels and terrorists affects every single American. I went to Occupy not
because I am a major supporter of the movement. I went because they care enough
to hit the streets, carry signs and send a message that I also believe
in."
The OWS
Alternative Banking Working Group, working in conjunction with Stern for tomorrow's protest, agrees. "Everett Stern is able to
give us a mountain of information and point us in the right direction to apply
effective pressure," says Cathy O'Neil, the Alternative Banking lead
organizer. "In turn, we are able to give him an army of supporters and a
populist megaphone with a proven ability to get the public's attention."
Michael Hearns an Anti Money Laundering specialist with over 24 years of AML experience can also be found at http://www.launderingmoney.com/ and on twitter at : http://twitter.com/#!/LaunderingMoney and http://moneylaunderingworld.blogspot.com/ and http://launderingmoney.com/