Sun, Jun 14th, 2009
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When the Supreme Court refused to halt the bankruptcy proceedings at Chrysler, the rule of law died and with it America ("High Court Clears Way for Chrysler's Sale," page one, June 10). To reward the people who drove Chrysler and General Motors to financial ruin and to punish the people who in good faith invested their savings in these companies is an abomination. Bankruptcy laws were created to protect the innocent, not reward the guilty.
Related stories from top sites:
Filter any stock advice you get from amateurs
Jun 20th, 2009 - cleveland.com
Welcome to Amateur vs. Pro, our Plain Dealer simulation in which a business reporter and a financial expert square off in the most unpredictable economics paradigm, the stock market. In a previous column...
Stanford indicted in massive U.S. fraud case
Jun 20th, 2009 - Reuters
RICHMOND, Virginia (Reuters) - Texas billionaire Allen Stanford, three associates and a top Caribbean regulator were indicted on fraud, conspiracy and obstruction charges in an elaborate $7 billion pyramid scheme to bilk investors, U.S...
WSJ: Apple's Jobs had liver transplant
Jun 20th, 2009 - bizjournals
Steve Jobs, CEO of of Apple Inc., had a liver transplant about two months ago, the Wall Street Journal is reporting. Jobs has been on a leave of absence since January from Apple with an undisclosed illness...
GM's Sale Opposed by 10 States, Union Retirees and Chrysler
Jun 20th, 2009 - Bloomberg
June 20 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp.’s planned saledrew objections from Chrysler Group LLC, the other U.S.automaker that filed for bankruptcy protection this year...
Billionaire R. Allen Stanford charged in Ponzi scheme
Jun 20th, 2009 - The Seattle Times
WASHINGTON - Texas businessman R. Allen Stanford, who boasted on television last September that "it's fun to be a billionaire," appeared in leg irons Friday in U.S. District Court in Richmond...




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