El poder judicial también corrupto?
El Juez de ghostofwamu
I am very disappointed by Judge Collyer's decision and do not think it is correct. She is telling the bondholders, "Even assuming that JPM screwed you with malice aforethought, you have no legal recourse because it's a procedural Catch-22 situation." That's not how American justice is supposed to work. For every wrong there is supposed to be a remedy.
To review: The plaintiff WMB bondholders sued JPM only in Texas state court for evil acts committed solely by JPM which caused FDIC to seize and sell WMB assets. JPM successfully persuaded the judge to punt the case to federal court in Texas, alleging exclusive federal jurisdiction, but then FDIC intervened as a defendant and persuaded the federal court in Texas to punt the case to DC because FIRREA sez FDIC can only be sued in DC. Now the DC judge sez to plaintiffs, "You never filed a claim against FDIC as required by FIRREA, so your suit against FDIC is out. But, the FDIC is a 'necessary party' because it committed the 'ultimate' acts of seizure and sale which 'caused' your damage, so JPM is off the hook, too." This creates an absurd result. (And, Village of Oakwood case she cites as controlling authority does not compell this result.)
An analogy: Suppose a criminal fleeing a bank robbery jumps in your car, puts a gun to your head and forces you to drive him away in a high speed chase. Your tire blows, resulting in an accident where an innocent civilian is killed. The criminal is prosecuted for "felony murder", but you are not prosecuted because you only acted under duress. You yourself physically did the acts which "caused" the death, but should the case against the crook get dismissed because you're not charged, too? Of course not.
I hope the plaintiff's appeal.
Pd. La justicia deja sin caso a los bonistas de wmb en favor de la fdic/jpm. Veremos que pasa con nosotros como todos quieran firmar el POR.
Saludos