How the Rothschild are above the law (1)

“The story of what happened to BankCal, which was the oldest bank in California, illustrates how powerful the Rothschilds are in the United States. (The details of this story come from the San Jose Calif Mercury News, Jan. 12, 1992. I was somewhat surprised that the article appeared, considering the strength of the Rothschilds. Sometimes corruption at the top stinks so bad that it can’t be suppressed entirely.)

The United States has the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) in place to protect the American public from stock fraud. During the 1980s, there were 3 highly publicized cases of fraud that the SEC uncovered. These three cases created widespread confidence within the American public that stock market trading was, in general, honestly traded. The story of what Edmond Rothschild (full name is Edmond Adolphe Jules Jacques Maurice Baron de Rothschild) did with BankCal exposed to the world that men like the Rothschilds do not have to play by the same rules as everyone else. They are literally above the law. The powerful Illuminati control the law. In 1973, the CEO of BankCal, De Bretteville, sold Edmond Rothschild 300,000 shares of Bancal Tristate Corp., 22% of the holding company for the Bank of California. De Bretteville had originally asked two English Rothschild cousins if they wanted to purchase the stock. These two cousins then called two French Rothschild cousins, who then called Edmond in Geneva, Switzerland, for assistance. Edmond told them he would help them buy it, and that after he purchased it, he would turn around and divide it with his relatives. He lied. And over the next few years, he would continue to lie to numerous people about his intentions for the bank.

De Bretteville says, ‘He lied to his family and he lied to me; it was a dirty deal all around.’ Bank of California had the only banking franchise at the time, which was in all three Pacific Rim states (OR, WA, and CA). It turned out that the Bank of California was like a piece of art to Rothschild. He had no intention of improving the bank. He simply wanted it for his collection of companies. Edmond already owned companies in Brazil, toy companies, 10% in De Beers mining in South Africa, joint business ventures with Robert Vesco, and 30% of Club Mediterranean, which Edmond co-founded. Club Mediterranean was created out of the idea that others of the elite would enjoy seaside playgrounds like those he and his mother cavorted at when he was a youngster. Edmond went on to marry a chorus girl named Nadine. Actually, sources indicate that Baron Edmond had wanted to give the Bank of California to his only son, Bengie (Benjamin de Rothschild), as a graduation present. But Bengie, who was going to Pepperdine University, was more interested in partying. Bengie lived high on the hog at a fabulous California beach house while flunking school and living wildly. Apparently, his father decided his son wasn’t ready for a graduation present. In fact, he left Pepperdine University after four years with thirty-one credits (97 short to graduate) and went back home to Chateau Pregny on the shore of Lake Geneva near Geneva, Switzerland.

It wasn’t until 1989 that Benjamin stepped forward into the world of finance by launching his La Compagnie de Tresorerie—Benjamin de Rothschild. The San Jose Mercury reported on January 12, 1992:

‘The long-time chief executive of the blue-blood San Francisco bank invited Rothschild to invest. Banking regulators encouraged Rothschild to take charge. Securities investigators ignored the frenzy of trading overseas and, later, the documentation of insider trading. The bank’s directors fawned while the baron used it as a personal plaything.’

‘This is not what made this country great,’ says Bill Miles, a former BankCal vice president. ‘This is greed, all the way through.’

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