Cee ๐จ๐ฆ๐บ๐ฆ๐ฌ๐ฑ๐ฉ๐ฐ๐ณ๏ธโ๐๐ณ๏ธโโง๏ธ retweetet

Bank of America just agreed to pay $72.5 million for helping Jeffrey Epstein traffic underage girls.
The settlement dropped late Friday night. Buried under war headlines and protest coverage. Almost like they planned it that way.
And this is literally the FOURTH major bank settlement tied to Epstein's sex trafficking operation.
JPMorgan paid $290 million to victims. Then another $75 million to the US Virgin Islands. Deutsche Bank paid $75 million to victims and got hit with a $150 million regulatory fine on top of that. Now Bank of America adds $72.5 million.
Total exposed so far: Over $660 million.
Number of bankers criminally charged: ZERO.
Number of bankers who went to prison: ZERO.
Every single settlement came with "no admission of wrongdoing." Every bank said some version of "we regret the association" and moved on.
But the court filings tell a very different story:
JPMorgan filed suspicious activity reports on Epstein's accounts as early as 2002. Their own compliance team flagged him. They KNEW something was wrong but they kept banking him for 11 more years anyway.
When Epstein was alive and actively trafficking girls, JPMorgan flagged $4.3 million in suspicious transactions.
After he died in his cell? They retroactively reported $1.3 BILLION in suspicious activity going back to 2003. That's 300 times more than what they reported while he was alive.
A Senate investigation found that JPMorgan executives overruled their own compliance officers to keep Epstein as a client. Internal emails show top executives approved continued business with Epstein even AFTER his 2008 conviction because he was bringing in ultra-wealthy referrals.
Deutsche Bank picked Epstein up as a client in 2013, the same year JPMorgan finally dropped him. Their own CEO later admitted onboarding him was "a critical mistake that should never have happened." They literally kept him for five more years.
Bank of America allegedly didn't file suspicious activity reports on Epstein-linked accounts until AFTER he was dead.
The pattern is identical every time:
See the red flags. Ignore them. Profit from the relationship. Wait until the client dies or gets arrested. Then file a report. Then write a settlement check. Then say you did nothing wrong.
Now think about this...
These are the same banks that freeze your business account over a $5,000 wire transfer. The same compliance departments that require endless forms of ID to open a checking account. The same institutions that flag small business owners for "suspicious activity" if they deposit cash from their own customers two weeks in a row.
But a convicted sex offender runs hundreds of millions through their systems for DECADES and nobody notices. Nobody reports it. Nobody escalates it. Nobody calls law enforcement.
Until he's dead. Then suddenly everyone remembers everything.
Senator Wyden called for a criminal investigation. The Treasury Department has thousands of pages of Epstein bank records they still won't release. Congressional investigators say the full picture of what these banks knew hasn't come close to being revealed.
$660 million in settlements and fines. But not a single criminal charge against any banker at any institution.
That's the system working exactly as designed.
I wonder why no one's talking about the files anymore?
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