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Obama's Finance Chair Penny Pritzker: Pioneer In SubPrime Mortgages
Interesting stuff, caught via AOSHQ
Barack Obama has slammed the banking industry for its predatory use of sub-prime mortgages, which are pushing millions of American homeowners toward foreclosure.

But his campaign's Finance Chair, Penny Pritzker, owned a failed Chicago thrift that helped pioneer sub-prime financial instruments and faced accusations of abuse.

Superior Bank of Chicago went belly up in 2001 with over $1 billion in insured and uninsured deposits. This collapse came amid harsh criticism of how Superior's owners promoted sub-prime home mortgages. As part of a settlement, the owners paid $100 million and agreed to pay another $335 million over 15 years at no interest...
We've known about this in Chicago for a number of years; the Chicago Tribune covered it pretty well at the time. But Penny Pritzker has so much money she can pretty much buy whatever she needs, and especially can buy her way out of trouble, which is what her family did in the Superior fiasco. Someone should have gone to prison but didn't. Now she's Obama's finance chair. There's something about the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of wealthy families that makes them a positive argument for a 100% inheritance tax.
But this seven-year-old bank failure has relevance in another way today, since the chair of Superior's board for five years was Penny Pritzker, a member of one of America's richest families and the current Finance Chair for the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, the same candidate who has lashed out against predatory lending.

Though Superior Bank collapsed years before the current sub-prime turmoil that is rocking the world's financial markets -- and pushing those millions of homeowners toward foreclosure -- some banking experts say the Pritzkers and Superior hold a special place in the history of the sub-prime fiasco.

"The [sub-prime] financial engineering that created the Wall Street meltdown was developed by the Pritzkers and Ernst and Young, working with Merrill Lynch to sell bonds securitized by sub-prime mortgages," Timothy J. Anderson, a whistleblower on financial and bank fraud, told me in an interview.

"The sub-prime mortgages," Anderson said, "were provided to Merrill Lynch, by a nation-wide Pritzker origination system, using Superior as the cash cow, with many millions in FDIC insured deposits. Superior's owners were to sub-prime lending, what Michael Milken was to junk bonds."

In other words, if you traced today's sub-prime crisis back to its origins, you would come upon the role of the Pritzkers and Superior Bank of Chicago.
More here.

Posted by: Frank G 2008-09-20
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=250539