March 19, 2009
LANSING
- Attorney
General Mike Cox today announced that his office, along with other state
attorneys general, sent a letter to AIG demanding very specific information
about bonus payments to AIG employees. AIG has recently paid employee bonuses
of approximately $165 million, Cox and the other state attorneys general want to
know if tax dollars were used to reward the employees responsible for AIG's
collapse.
"Safeguarding
taxpayer dollars is a top priority for my office," said Cox. "AIG has lost
billions and is only surviving because of taxpayer-funded bailouts. The
taxpayers deserve clear and complete answers about why millions of dollars of
their money is going to pay bonuses to some of the very employees who
contributed to the current financial crisis."
AIG has been
kept afloat by taxpayer-funded bailouts which already total nearly $170
billion. Recently AIG posted a quarterly loss in excess of $60 billion.
AIG is a large
multinational insurance corporation. When the credit crisis erupted last fall,
AIG was exposed to massive liabilities related to the sale of credit default
swaps (CDS) - complex financial vehicles that essentially insure against
defaults on bond payments. These liabilities threatened AIG's survival.
Because of the reach of AIG throughout the world financial system, the Federal
government decided it was "too big to fail" and stepped in to shore up AIG with
taxpayer-funded bailouts.
It has now
come to light that last week, in the midst of this massive government support,
AIG paid $165 million dollars in "retention bonuses" to employees ? including
employees of the company's Financial Products Unit, the unit that sold the CDS
responsible for AIG's collapse.
In response to
these payments, Attorney General Cox, together with other state attorneys
general, has signed a letter from New Jersey Attorney General Anne Milgram
demanding very specific information about the AIG bonus payments, including a
list of who was paid bonuses, the amount of the bonuses paid, and copies of the
employees' contracts. The letter gave AIG five days to provide the information.
Cox also filed for lead plaintiff status in a national securities lawsuit
against AIG for misleading investors about the true value of the CDS's, which
resulted in investors losing billions of dollars.
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