Price Waterhouse Coopers - Part of the 911 Plot? Flight 11 & 175 Passengers - by: do2read

Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member
A Peek into the Dark Side - Addendum; Phil Jayhan 11/17/2024

If you can read all of this through and understand the content, you will have a deeper insight into why they pulled off 9/11 business-wise. And who pulled it off. And how relatively simple it was for them to create the hoax and illusion of 9/11. It's not that some were involved, it's that they were all involved. Think Murder on the Orient Express but but with a fake murder and add 20 miles of train cars of suspects for scale. These few posts below are a model of what the World Trade Center really was. A total scam, a self printing money machine, from beginning to end, involving far in excess of the 55 TRILLION dollar Carbon Credit scam. Remember the Argentine Bridas Corp scam whereby American companies took control of Bridas natural gas contracts in the Caspian sea which was in excess of 11 TRILLION DOLLARS just after 9/11. I am certain the total amount of plunder far exceeds just that 66 TRILLION DOLLARS listed. Some of it is boring. If you can understand 9/11 and use this model for all of the other corporations falsely listed as tenants of the World Trade Center during it's history of 1972 -2001 you would probably find that it too, is far in excess of 66 trillion. That 66 Trillion could pay the American National debt and still have 32 trillion, enough to fund the American government for 5 years in Biden dollars. Also when replacing the Web Archive photo's, I also ran the Metadata on the Price Waterhouse Five; Booms, and Brandhorst have no relevant metadata. Quigley and Kinney both have impossible dates of 9/13/2001 on their pictures metadata. And this one came as a shock, Jessica Sachs picture has metadata which dates back to June 1st, 1996. 06-01-1996 - My guess is it's possibly the original metadata of a picture of a girl some place, somewhere in time, whose name is probably not Jessica Sachs. It's possibly also the only instance I know of that has a picture that goes back as far as 1996 as well as also possibly being original metadata. I added in the Metadata for each of the Price Waterhouse 5 as well as additional pictures. Metadata's a bitch for the bad guys. Many thanks to Larry McWilliams (do2read) for spearheading this research, enriching the true historical record of the 9/11 Broadcast.

This is a really good foundational thread for people to comprehend, that already know that 9/11 was a hoax. Think Deep State. No, Deeper...

Added as an addendum; 1/17/2024

Cheers-
Phil ;)



Written by; do2read. Found @ the Web Archive, somewhere in time...
24 May 2010 , 22:24 PM
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by: do2read

Price Waterhouse Coopers, 911 Money-Changing & Accounting Team?

the.Price.Waterhouse.Five.jpg

Price Waterhouse Coopers had 5 employees on the passenger lists for flights 11 and 175.

Price Waterhouse Coopers is a Mega Accounting firm, a product of the merger between two accounting giants. It is the fourth largest professional services firm, in fact PWC has offices all over the world, in 151 countries.

While PWC is a very large Corporation, the fact that it had 5 employees aboard 2 flights on 9/11 is a statistically significant oddity. All 5 were on seemingly unrelated travel, and no ties, professional or personal, are mentioned between any of them.

The 5 passengers were;

Flight 11:

booms.kelly.jpg
Kelly Ann Booms, 24, Brookline MA, Accountant, on a 4 week business assignment
Meta Data - Nothing Relevant - See attachment

sachs.jessica.jpg
Jessica Leigh Sachs, 23. Billerica MA, Auditor, on a business trip
June 1, 1996 - This one was a shocker! Might be original exif data!

Flight 175:


brandhorst.daniel.jpg
Daniel R. Brandhorst, 41, Los Angeles CA, Attorney, on vacation. Mr. Brandhorst
was traveling with his partner David Gamboa and their adopted child.
No relevant metadata


kinney.brian.jpg
Brian Kinney, 29, Lowell MA, Auditor, no reason for travel given
Metadata on picture - 9/13/2001 with obit embedded

quigley.patrick.jpg
Patrick J. Quigley, 40, Wellesley Ma, Partner, on business
Metadata on picture - 9/13/2001 with obit embedded

While very few of the 9/11 passengers received Victim's Compensation Fund money, four out of five PWC employees families did. Only the family of Kelly Booms did not.

There was a perfect cross-section of PWC on those lists. A Partner, An Attorney, and 3 Auditor/Accountants. It could also represent the make up of a Team.

What kind of things are PWC personal services teams doing?
They are involved in nearly everything imaginable. Here's a partial Client List from Wikipedia;

Quote:
Major clients:

Europe and North America account for about 81% of PwC's annual revenue,[27] with Europe alone accounting for 45%.[27] The firm's dominant practice, auditing, accounts for over 50% of PwC's revenue.[19]

As of March 2005, PricewaterhouseCoopers' audit clients included four of the 10 largest public companies in the United States (ExxonMobil, Ford Motor Company, ChevronTexaco and IBM). PwC also audits four of the 10 largest companies in the United Kingdom (GlaxoSmithKline, Royal Dutch Shell, Barclays and Lloyds TSB).

One client, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, gives PwC the unique distinction of having been (in various incarnations) the tabulator and certifier of votes for the Academy Awards since 1934.[28]

PwC audits 40 per cent of companies in the FTSE 100 Index[29] and 45 per cent of the Fortune 1000 energy companies.[30]

The following are PwC audit clients that are part of the FT Global 500 (2006), grouped by FT industry:


PricewaterhouseCoopers' new Melbourne offices at Freshwater Place

Many of the above corporations were involved in 911. Money had to be moved around to hide the purchase of expensive remote-controlled aircraft, fund background operations, pay personnel, cover for demolition operation, etc.. It took money to fund the 9/11 operation, and accountants somewhere saw a lot of money move. PWC is an Accounting firm responsible for watching and counting money for these clients worldwide.

If you wanted to leave a cold money trail THAT BIG you would require the services of a top accounting team.

Many facts point toward these passengers being real people. They definitely didn't die on flight 11 or 175.

So what happened to them? Were they;

1 Real people who were "reassigned" to a fat retirement or promoted and reassigned to PWC's office in Australia (8), or Rome, or Paris, or Kabul?

2 Real people who were done away with by some other means (to keep them permanantly quiet)?

3 The PWC employees never existed at all, and a cozy relationship with spooks made PWC a good company to use for cover?

4 Spooks planted inside PWC for these purposes, now "reassigned" identity wise via the passenger lists?

I'm not sure, but I know they were not on flights 11 or 175. If they were choices 1 or 4 above, they are somewhere. These were all relatively young people, all would be under 50 today. If they were alive, we could expect some of them to be around for a long time.

Read their Biographies, look at their pictures, and see what you think.


booms.kelly.jpgsachs.jessica.jpgquigley.patrick.jpgkinney.brian.jpgbrandhorst.daniel.jpg
 

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Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member
From somewhere in time @ the Web Archive somewhere in time...

24 May 2010 , 22:40 PM​
Phil Jayhan
Admin

There appears to be some real people they used as passengers and evidence, strong evidence that others were aliases, fictions or carefully prepared aliases. Yet we should assume nothing when it comes to investigating what happened on 9.11.2001. Assuming these people below are real, and can stand up to scrutiny in verifiable background checks, picture history, college records, drivers license, etc... Assuming all of this stands up, and they are indeed real people, they would no doubt be in quite excellent positions inside of American Airlines to help expedite somehow the plans of 9/11 and be in positions to help accomplish this objective. The irony here is amazing.

Quote:


9. Mary Jane (MJ) Booth, 64
, of Falls Church, Va., secretary for American Airline's general manager at Dulles Intl. Airport..

An American Airlines employee for 45 years, she worked for more than 30 years as secretary to American's general manager at Dulles.

Mary Jane "M.J." Booth

American Flight 77

MARY JANE (MJ) BOOTH, 64, of Falls Church, Va., was a familiar face at Dulles International Airport in suburban Virginia. An American Airlines employee for 45 years, she worked for more than 30 years as secretary to American's general manager at Dulles. Everyone called her MJ, except at the annual American holiday party when she dressed up in costume and went by the name Mrs. Santa Claus. Booth was a passenger aboard American's Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon. She was on her way to Las Vegas for a meeting of the employees' credit union.

mjbooth-photo-01.jpg


Copyright © 2001 The Associated Press

Quote:
Renee Lucille Newell - American Airlines Ticketing Agent

It is plausible that they had insiders such as Renee who took care of the "fraudulent ticketing" of passengers. If this even occurred at all. I am certain there is a tie in with her and 9/11 conspiracy and probably something to do with her job.

Use your imaginations; Speculate, theorize; Private room. No harm, no foul. By: Phil Jayhan

Renee Lucille Newell

Original link:


American Flight 11

Yours in Customer Service

Renee Newell really cared about the answer when she would ask, "How can I help you?" That made her an excellent customer service agent, bartender, family member, friend.

"She had customers of hers, through the airline, come from out of state to the wake; that's the kind of person she was," said her brother Ronnie Tetreault. "Any time they were flying, she would try to get them better seats."

Mrs. Newell, 37, was on Flight 11, traveling with a friend who was afraid of flying. Mrs. Newell would usually fly out of the airport in Providence, R.I., near her home in Cranston. But she left from Boston on Sept. 11 so they could fly nonstop and first class.

Her mother, Lillian Tetreault, was supposed to go along but was not feeling well. She remembered how Mrs. Newell used to work at the family restaurant, and how she helped when her father went into a nursing home, in between taking her son, Matthew, now 9, to soccer, baseball and bowling. "For a long time, when I used to call the house after this happened, he would pick up on the first ring, thinking it was her," Mr. Tetreault said. "He was hoping she'd call, that she was all right."

Profile published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on March 17, 2002.

Flight 11, September 11, 2001. American Airlines Customer Service Agent, Renee (Tetreault) Newell, of Rhode Island, perished on Flight 11, American Airlines, on Tuesday, (September 11, 2001). She leaves her beloved husband, Paul Newell of Rhode Island; and her very precious son, Matthew. Loving daughter of Lillian (DiMartino) Tetreault and her father, Raymond Tetreault of Rhode Island, formerly of Hartford. Renee is also survived by her dearest sister, Michelle Murphy and brother-in-law, Michael Murphy of Rhode Island; brothers, James, Ronald and Steven Tetreault of Rhode Island; uncles, Frank DiMartino and wife, Kathleen of East Windsor, Salvatore DiMartino and wife, Elizabeth of Florida, John Guerriero of Windsor, James Tetreault of Rhode Island, and Paul Tetreault of Rhode Island; aunts, Rose (DiMartino) Norrie of Windsor, Antoinette (DiMartino) Zawerton of New York, Carol (DiMartino) and her husband, Guido DiPadua of Rhode Island, Theresa DiMartino of Glastonbury; many nieces, nephews, cousins; and an abundance of friends. Renee was predeceased by her paternal grandparents, Salvatore and Anna (Congelosi) DiMartino; her aunt, Lucy (DiMartino) Guerriero; uncles, Lester Norrie, Gene Zawerton, and Jack DiMartino. Renee's legacy to all of us were "The Three L's" - Live kindness; Laugh often; Love much. Renee will always be remembered in love, and with many beautiful memories. Visitation hours, and special prayers for all mankind, will be held September 28, 6-9 p.m. at the Urguhart and Murphy Funeral Home, 800 Greenwich Ave., Warwick, RI. Memorial Mass, September 29, 10:30 a.m., St. Rocco Church, 927 Atwood Ave., Johnson, RI.

Paid Notice published in THE HARTFORD COURANT on 9/17/2001.
 

Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member

What Price Waterhouse? - The poop on Pricewaterhouse’s Coop

If anyone takes the time to read upon any of the dirt on Price Waterhouse Coopers, it isn't hard to believe at all that this company would be part of such a scheme as that of the Price Waterhouse 5, the 5 employees it allegedly had on the planes which hit the world trade center. Here is the original link to this, and the scroll on PWC is endless as are its many crimes and obvious criminality. My guess is most, if not all of the companies, corporations, which were in the world trade center, including PWC are CIA front companies, totally owned by the CIA, NSA & other Western intelligence agencies through proxy for the purpose of money laundering.

Original link with far more dirt on PWC- This was just a snippet of that;

Cheers-
Phil
icon_wink.gif




What Price Waterhouse?
~ ~ ~
The poop on Pricewaterhouse’s Coop
Sightings from The Catbird Seat

~ o ~​
PricewaterhouseCoopers (or PwC) is the world's largest professional services firm. It was formed in 1998 from a merger between Price Waterhouse and Coopers & Lybrand. PwC is the largest of the Big Four auditors, whose other member firms include Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Ernst & Young and KPMG.

PricewaterhouseCoopers earned aggregated worldwide revenues of $20.3 billion for fiscal 2005, and employed over 130,000 people in 148 countries.

In the United States, where it is the fourth largest privately owned organization, it operates as PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

May 19, 2009


AIG investors to get
$843 million: SEC
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A federal court has approved the distribution of more than $843 million to harmed investors at insurer American International Group, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said on Tuesday.

The court estimates that checks will soon be mailed to more than 257,000 AIG investors that were affected by an alleged accounting fraud at the company, the SEC said.

AIG, which has been propped up by billions of dollars in taxpayer funds, was charged with
Click to View Search Results for Google (Search Results) Google (Search Results)
and reported misleading information about its financial condition.

The company, which did not admit or deny the allegations, had repaid its ill-gotten gains, as well as penalties to the government. In 2007, a federal court authorized the SEC to establish a 'fair fund' to distribute the money to harmed AIG investors.

"The commission continues to utilize the tools that Congress provided to ensure that funds are returned to harmed investors to the greatest extent possible," said Dick D'Anna, director of the SEC's office of collections and distributions, in an agency statement.

Freddie Mac:

He and a group of company attorneys tussled with its regulator in early March as the firm prepared to file its quarterly earnings report with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The group insisted that Freddie Mac inform shareholders of the cost to the company of helping carry out the Obama administration's housing recovery plan.

The regulator urged the company not to do so, according to several sources familiar with the matter. An FHFA official contested that account, saying the regulator did not oppose disclosure but how the information was portrayed in the filing.

UPDATE 11:30 PM: More details have emerged about the last few months of David Kellerman's life. According to the New York Times, he was alarmed by the public outcry over bonuses, he arranged security guards to watch his home.

Then early this month, Mr. Kellermann and other executives at Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae became the focus of intense scrutiny when lawmakers learned they would receive bonuses totaling $210 million. Mr. Kellermann was set to receive $850,000 over 16 months. Reporters and camera crews showed up at his home in Vienna, an affluent Virginia suburb of Washington. Fearing that someone might attack his house, his wife or their 5-year-old daughter, he asked the company for a security detail.

According to colleagues, the usually jovial Kellerman had appeared "stressed and overwhelmed by the job." The Wall Street Journal reports:

"He worked himself into a frazzle," a former co-worker said. Colleagues said Mr. Kellermann was involved in dealing with investigations into Freddie's accounting by the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission, but that there was no indication he was a target or that the inquiries were causing him anguish.
UPDATE 12:35: SEC, Justice Department investigating accounting practices at the agency:

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the SEC and the Justice Department have been questioning Freddie Mac "officials" on possible accounting violations. The company made the disclosure in an SEC filing in March:

Freddie disclosed in the recent SEC filing that in September it received a federal grand jury subpoena from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York seeking documents related to accounting, disclosure and corporate-governance matters. That subpoena was later withdrawn, Freddie has disclosed, and the investigation was taken over by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia.

"We know of no connection between this terrible personal tragedy and the ongoing regulatory inquiries discussed in our recent SEC filing," said David Palombi, Freddie's chief spokesman.

UPDATE 11:30 AM EST: Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner issued a statement on acting Freddie Mac CFO David David Kellermann's death:
"On behalf of the Treasury we are deeply saddened by the news this morning of David Kellermann's death. Our deepest sympathies are with his family and his colleagues at Freddie Mac during this difficult time."...

Continued at...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/04/22/freddie-mac-suicide-offic_n_189911.html
# # #​
Related information:
* http://www.freddiemac.com/investors/faq.html :
11) Who is Freddie Mac's auditor?
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC)
has been our auditor since March 6, 2002.

February 6, 2009

PwC dragged into Satyam class action suits
In a new class action lawsuit over the Satyam scandal, global audit major PwC, along with its Indian and international units, has been charged with having 'recklessly disregarded' a multi-year massive fraud by the former management of Satyam, which is already facing many such cases in the US courts.

The lawsuit has been filed in the US District Court, Southern District of New York, by Pomerantz Haudek Block Grossman & Gross LLP law firm against Indian IT firm Satyam, its former chairman B Ramalinga Raju, his brother B Rama Raju and Satyam's outside auditors PricewaterhouseCoopers Pvt Ltd, Price Waterhouse and Pricewaterhouse Coopers International Ltd.

The suit was filed on behalf of purchasers of Satyam's American Depository Receipts between January 6, 2004 through January 6, 2009.

'In addition to allegations of fraud against Satyam and the officer defendants, the complaint alleges that PwC was aware of, or recklessly disregarded, a multi-year massive fraud by Satyam management to overstate the company's earnings and concocting $ 1 billion of cash that didn't exist,' the law firm said in a statement.

'The case further alleges that PwC ignored red flags that should have alerted it to the fraud, and moreover, failed to perform its audits in accordance with the requisite accounting principles,' it added.

Price Waterhouse, the Indian unit of the global audit major, has been maintaining that it followed all the standard accounting principles while auditing the books of Satyam Computers. However, it also said that its auditing on Satyam could be construed invalid if the statements made by Raju in his admission letter on January 7 about the fraud were correct.

Raju had said that the financials of the company were incorrect for past several years, thus inflating the profit and cash position and under-stating the liabilities.
Two partners of PwC have been arrested in India in connection with their audits of Satyam.

Disclosure of the stunning fraud at Satyam materially impacted the price of the company's ADRs. Trading in the company's ADRs was briefly halted after the fraud was revealed, and the ADRs are now currently trading just below two dollars, a precipitous drop from the company's 52-week high of 29.84 dollar, the law firm said.
January 23, 2009
Will Satyam sink PriceWaterhouseCoopers?
by Peter Cohan
Filed under: India, Scandals
After Enron, Arthur Andersen collapsed. With a new bombshell allegation about Satyam Computer Services (NYSE: SAY), will its former auditor

PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) be next? To be fair, I have not seen any evidence implicating PWC in the Satyam scam. But surely PWC can't have been so incompetent that it did not know what its client was doing.

Satyam's CEO, B. Ramalinga Raju, initially claimed that there was a $1.1 billion shortfall between its reported and actual cash. Now an Indian prosecutor alleges that Raju made up 10,000 employees and then used the money those fake employees would have received (net of taxes and insurance) to buy land through almost 400 companies with fake names -- including that of his elderly mother. The prosecutor also alleges that Raju forged documents related to bank deposits.

You can't make this stuff up! And if these allegations are true, it does make me wonder what PWC was doing to earn its fee. There are some basic things that auditors are supposed to do -- like checking a company's bank deposits and comparing those to what management reports or verifying that the employees who are getting paid actually exist. If PWC couldn't pull off these basics, then it was either incredibly incompetent or in with management on the scam.

Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also teaches management at Babson College and editsThe Cohan Letter.He has no financial interest in the securities mentioned.

Tags:accounting, B. Ramalinga Raju, B.RamalingaRaju, India, inthenews, pricewaterhousecoopers, satyam
http://bstocksdev.weblogsinc.com/2009/01/23/will-satyam-sink-pricewaterhousecoopers/

December 16, 2008

THE FINTAG NEWSLETTER
Madoff part 2.
Last Thursday the news broke and it hardly registered a blip on the news radar. Today we face financial meltdown of the hedge fund industry and the loss of tens of billions of dollars and the destruction of livelihoods.

Yesterday I looked critically at the investors who had not read the prospectuses or carried proper due diligence. The problem with Madman Madoff's funds is you could only touch them by investing through feeder funds. These feeder funds were promoted by interested parties who put layers of fees on top and sold them as proper fund of funds.

Take the Fairfield Sentry fund. It has a proper Auditor - PWC, an administrator and a custodian - Citco. It is a BVI fund and is managed by a well known Investment Manager. So far, so good. Ok, the custodian only looks after 5% of the assets (the other 95% are looked after by Madoff) but unless you like reading small print it looks like fine.

The biographies of the managers are respectable, including Jeffrey Tucker who used to work as a lawyer for the SEC. The fund has a board including 2 directors located in risk adverse Switzerland. One of the directors is not paid which is strange but I guess he must be paid elsewhere. Thankfully, Goldman Sachs is a sub custodian although I think Refco must have been a misprint.

The Investment objective is "The Fund seeks to obtain capital appreciation of its assets principally through the utilization of a nontraditional options trading strategy described as "split strike conversion", to which the Fund allocates the predominant portion of its assets. This strategy has defined risk and profit parameters, which may be ascertained when a particular position is established ..." and sounds quite convincing.

I am not so sure about the Investment Restrictions including "e) no more than 10 percent of the Net Asset Value of the Fund may be invested in securities of countries where immediate repatriation rights are not available;" but I like the fact US citizens are excluded - "The Fund will require as a condition to the acceptance of a subscription that the subscriber represent and warrant that he has a net worth in excess of U.S. $1,000,000 and is not a U.S. person".

The 13 year track record averages in excess of 10% a year and its volatility is very low indeed. The fund has grown and subscriptions exceed redemptions so it must be a popular.

Excellent. So where did it go wrong? Well PWC have some explaining to do. It looks like they never validated the underlying investments. Madoff obviously just gave them the NAVs and they took them as red. Citco's care of duty is to look after the assets and it has done so. Shame it only looked after 5% but that is better than nothing. The manager should perhaps have carried out some proper due diligence on the underlying but then it made so much in fees it got a bit punch drunk.

So there you go. A sound investment run by people who didn't quite do their jobs. I take back all my negative posturing and instead tell you how I see it through a slew of crap cartoons and virals....
October 6, 2008
PwC Zapped in $97.5-million Settlement

The auditor, accused by Ohio of violating securities laws in its work with AIG, will pay one of the highest amounts ever for an accounting firm in a class action
.

Alan Rappeport, CFO.com​
PricewaterhouseCoopers agreed to pay $97.5 million to the state of Ohio to settle a class-action lawsuit on behalf of investors in troubled insurer American International Group, which uses PwC as its independent auditor.

The "partial" settlement, on Friday, came after the Ohio Public Employees Retirement System, the State Teachers Retirement System, and the Ohio Police and Pension Fund filed a lawsuit seeking damages for investors who bought AIG securities from 1999 to 2005. In the complaint, PwC was accused of violating securities laws relating to a market division scheme allegedly involving AIG that was disclosed in 2004 and improper accounting for reinsurance and other transactions.

In May 2005, AIG's accounting problems led to a $3.9-billionrestatement, and removal of former CEO Maurice Greenberg.

The settlement is among the 10 highest to be paid by an accounting firm to settle a securities fraud class action lawsuit, according to Nancy Rogers, Ohio's attorney general. The arrangement, however, still needs to be approved by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan.

"This important settlement represents a tremendous result for investors," said Chris Geidner, principal assistant attorney general. "We are pleased with this milestone and will continue to vigorously pursue investors' claims against the remaining defendants in the case."
"We have decided to settle the case at this stage to avoid the enormous litigation costs that would be incurred if the case continued against the firm, while at the same time eliminating any potential exposure," said Steve Silber, a PwC spokesman told The Columbus Dispatch. "The settlement does not contain an admission of wrongdoing by the firm, and we continue to believe that our work was in accordance with professional standards."

AIG currently is facing another lawsuit filed in May by the Jacksonville Police and Fire Pension Fund. The Florida fund accused the insurer of manipulating the market by making false statements about its financial health before disclosing a first quarter loss of $7.8 billion. PwC is not implicated in that lawsuit and in February it gave a warning sign of AIG's problems when it found that there was a "material weakness in its internal control" relating to the accounting of its credit default swaps portfolio.

Last month the U.S. government agreed to an $85 billion bail out of AIG in exchange for warrants to purchase 80 percent of the company, which is selling off several units of its business to repay the loan.

See also: RICO in Paradise

June 6, 2008
Prosecutors said
seeking AIG data

Associated Press​
WASHINGTON - Federal prosecutors have asked the Securities and Exchange Commission for material from its probe of whether American International Group Inc. overstated the value of mortgage-linked contracts, according to a newspaper report Friday.

The request to the SEC from prosecutors in the Justice Department and the U.S. Attorney's office in Brooklyn, N.Y., could lead to a criminal investigation of the matter, in addition to the SEC's civil inquiry into AIG. The development was reported in Friday's editions of The Wall Street Journal, which cited unnamed people familiar with the matter.

New York-based AIG, one of the world's largest insurance companies, paid a then-record $1.64 billion in February 2006 in a settlement with federal and New York state authorities over alleged deceptive accounting practices.

The current SEC investigation focuses on AIG's valuation of credit default swaps, which function as insurance policies against defaults, including those backed by subprime mortgages, The Journal reported.

The company in February told the SEC that its outside auditors had found significant weakness in how it reports the value of certain credit default swaps. AIG also said the auditors had concluded that the company "had a material weakness in its internal control over financial reporting and oversight" related to how it determines default probabilities and expected losses on the underlying securities.

Due largely to writedowns related to credit default swaps of more than $20 billion through March, the company posted the two biggest quarterly losses in its history: a $7.8 billion loss for the first quarter, following a loss of nearly $5.3 billion in the fourth quarter.

SEC spokesman John Nester in Washington and Bob Nardoza, spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office in Brooklyn, on Friday both declined to confirm or deny investigations by the agencies.

AIG spokesman Chris Winans also would not confirm a federal probe. He said AIG has always cooperated with regulators and has "consistently and promptly" provided best estimates of its portfolio valuations and potential exposures of its financial products amid the recent uncertainty in the credit markets.

The finding of material weakness doesn't mean that the company has reported inaccurate financial results, Winans said. "We have clean audited financial statements with no qualifications from our auditors," he said.
< < < FLASHBACK < < <
October 24, 2007


I waited to post this story about AIG's reappointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers as their external auditor. I am incredulous. I was slightly apoplectic too, but then I calmed down.

After all, greater minds than mine, like the famous Arthur Levitt, have made sure that, "AIG's selection process was designed and executed with integrity, and the Audit Committee's evaluation of the proposals was both fair and impartial. AIG did an exceptional job."

It seems Levitt was hired by AIG in 2005 to spruce up their image in the wake of Elliot Spitzer's investigation of AIG. Mr. Levitt's tenure at that time was expected to be less than a year as a special consultant to the Board, but it has obviously taken longer than that to address AIG's governance problems and will continue to take longer to fix them completely, if that's possible. Mr. Spitzer was the former Attorney General for the State of New York and is now their Governor.

The audit committee of AIG's board of directors spent 12 months on the RFP process, which is part of the company's 2006 settlement with the New York Attorney General's Office, said AIG spokesman Chris Winans.

The agreement, Winans said, required AIG to take actions above and beyond the normal annual review of its relationship with the company's independent auditor. This RFP is something we did as part of the settlement agreement, he said. It requires us to do the RFP process for the 2008 fiscal year.

In 2006, AIG agreed to pay a total of $1.64 billion to settle litigation stemming from New York state and federal investigations of its accounting, financial reporting and insurance brokerage practices, and claims related to workers' compensation premium taxes.

Mr. Levitt, therefore, is not a court appointed monitor based on a settlement with the SEC, a la Mr. Breeden and KPMG, but a shill for AIG.
Interestingly enough Mr. Levitt has a long and contentious history with PwC. It all goes back to reforms he wanted to make to how the audit firms did and didn't do business and how PwC was the big stubborn holdout. This was in spite of the fact that they had been nabbed big time with serious independence violations and the SEC could have disqualified the audited financial statements of all of their clients (and caused them to have to resign from those clients) if they had not cooperated with the regulators at the time. For a history of this sword fight, go here.

So it's all the more surprising that Arthur Levitt was willing to stand by and put his imprimatur on the charade which is the reappointment of PwC at AIG. After all, AIG's shareholders are suing PwC. And PwC has been AIG's auditor for as long as they have been in trouble.

I have seen some Google searches regarding this "RFP" process wherein other firms, in particular Deloitte, are searching for more details about why they weren't chosen. Let me give them all a clue... The fix was in.

I have requested via the Freedom of Information Act provisions for the State of New York Attorney Generals office, a copy of the RFP, the responses, the evaluation process and the grading of all proposal submissions. I have heard no response from them. Given that this was a public agency mandated process, I would assume that public disclosure would be mandated. Will make for interesting reading, if so. How can anyone for the Attorney General's Office be sure that it was a fair and competitive process if they also do not see and approve the process that AIG conducted?

As for Mr. Levitt, I am disappointed. I guess everyone has to make a buck. But I had hoped he would do it by being on the side of the investor and the other stakeholders of AIG, and not on the side of perpetuating the myth of a job well done by PwC as AIG's auditor.

Update: One of my favorite writers on these subjects reminded me:

"If you really want to have some fun with this, remember also that Levitt can't let go of his affiliations inside the Beltway -- now acting as co-chair of the so-called Paulson committee, along with Don Nicholaisen. Looking at the list of members, it's almost sure to be MOTS..."
__________________

 
Last edited:

Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member
Edit; It gets even better here. Certainly it isn't a coincidence that in the Towers were the companies that were creating the software for carbon trading. Estimated value of this carbon trading scam they were preparing to burden the world taxpayers with; 55 TRILLION DOLLARS!

Marsh & McLennan, Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed and Aon Corp were engaged in an economic war game scenario with the Naval War College on 9/11. The game involved the use of carbon emissions trading software.

Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed held the patent on the unique software which would be used in the future carbon emissions trading which will result in trillions of dollars of trades. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) located at 10 Downing Street is currently estimated at $55 trillion.

I expanded my hunch last night and started searching on the other firms at or above the impact zones; I googled Aon, Marsh Mclennan, Cantor Fitzgerald and Price Waterhouse; It appears that they are front corporations for the CIA, especially Price Waterhouse. Check this post which was copied from another thread, but needed to be here in this thread as well.

Enjoy-
Phil
icon_wink.gif




Quote:

Originally Posted by 2getherwestand Somewhere in time...

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Were Specific Companies in the World Trade Center Targeted on 9/11?


wtc.jpg

Were specific companies in the World Trade Center targeted for attack on September 11, 2001?

Marsh & McLennan, Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed and Aon Corp were engaged in an economic war game scenario with the Naval War College on 9/11. The game involved the use of carbon emissions trading software.

Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed held the patent on the unique software which would be used in the future carbon emissions trading which will result in trillions of dollars of trades. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) located at 10 Downing Street is currently estimated at $55 trillion.

Carlton Bartels, CEO of Cantor’s CO2e.com, invented and held the patent on the computer-based system for simulated automated carbon trading. Bartels was operating this simulated game and it is alleged that his simulation administrator codes were stolen. The game was hacked into which took the game from a simulation to a live game.

Were Marsh & McLennan, Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed and Aon Corp destroyed to eliminate the competition in a future multi-trillion dollar carbon trading market?

carlton_bartels.jpg

Carlton Bartels In 2000, the Joyce Foundation provided a grant to Richard Sandor and Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management to develop a competing carbon trading software. At the time, Barack Obama was on the board of directors for the foundation. A second grant was made in 2001 and eventually led to the birth of the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) the only emissions reduction and trading system for all six greenhouse gases and the only operational cap and trade system in North America.

The Obama administration is currently strongly pushing carbon emission policy. While leaning heavily on congress, they have also instructed the Environmental Protection Agency to declare CO2 a dangerous threat to human health which will lead to regulation of carbon emissions.

Powerful forces behind the scenes appear to be orchestrating events to set up and profit from a carbon emissions trading system worth trillions of dollars.

The impact area of American Airlines Flight 11 in the North Tower was the offices of Marsh & McLennan. ( See below)

The offices above Marsh & McLennan were primarily Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed. Cantor Fitzgerald was cut off from the rest of the building by the impact and suffered the greatest single loss by any company on 9/11. 658 of its employees died in the north WTC tower. [Business Week, 9/11/2006]

But Thomas Barnett’s two “mentors” at the firm that he interacts with—Bud Flanagan and Philip Ginsburg—are both out of the building at the time, for “accidental reasons,” and survive the attacks. [Institute of International Studies]

Marsh & McLennan loses 295 employees & 60 contractors.

In the South Tower, United Airlines Flight 175 impacts a zone mostly occupied by Fuji Bank. The Aon Corporation offices are above the impact area and they are also cut off. 175 employees of Aon Corp. die in the attacks.

There were 2605 deaths in 2 towers that day. Marsh & McLennan, Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed and Aon Corp lost a total of 1153 persons. That is just over 44% of the total deaths—a staggering amount.

The employees of these 3 companies were a small fraction of the total number of individuals in the two towers but accounted for 44% of the deaths.​



wtc1.jpg

wtc2.jpg
Kelly,

I have come back to this article many times because in an odd sort of way it mirrors some of my own thinking and research, howbeit along separate lines.

Quote:​
There were 2605 deaths in 2 towers that day. Marsh & McLennan, Cantor Fitzgerald/CO2e.com/eSpeed and Aon Corp lost a total of 1153 persons. That is just over 44% of the total deaths—a staggering amount.

The employees of these 3 companies were a small fraction of the total number of individuals in the two towers but accounted for 44% of the deaths.​
As we start investigating each and every passenger, one by one, we find nothing but riddling inconsistencies and obvious make believe pasts or similar. We haven't found a passenger yet that can bear up to any real scrutiny.

Now follow me here because I won't be making any claims, simply asking questions, and am sure everyone,once they see where this is heading will be more then a little interested in researching this themselves.

So we have 3 companies which accounted for 44% of all deaths at the world trade center. All at the impact zones. How utterly convenient.

I had this idea. What if those firms were CIA controlled corporations? Hows that for an ice breaker guys? So, for the first time I start investigating one of the corporations at the world trade center. To see if I might find some CIA connections,.

I did. And it didn't take long;
snicker.gif


Google this; AON central intelligence agency


Quote:​
C U B A P O L I D A T A · Aon Corporation

- 4:15amAon Corporation (a leading global provider of risk management services) in partnership with ...Central Intelligence Agency Date of Information: 5/4/2010 ...
cubapolidata.com/?tag=aon-corporation - Cached


Aon Corporation

You are currently browsing articles tagged Aon Corporation.

High political risk for Cuba

20100525 at 0535 in Commentary by Armando F. Mastrapa III | 1 comment

Aon Corporation (a leading global provider of risk management services) in partnership with Oxford Analytica (an international consulting firm) produces a yearly Political Risk Map that “provides an indication of overall levels and types of Political Risk in more than 200 territories worldwide.”

Cuba has been identified with high political risk for 2010 by Aon/Oxford Analytica. The island nation received the same rating in 2009.​
aon-pol-risk-cuba-10.png

The rating is based on measures of Cuba’s risk of currency inconvertibility and transfer; strikes, riots and civil commotion; war; terrorism; sovereign non-payment; political interference; supply chain interruption; and legal and regulatory risk.​

(Images: Aon Corporation, Political Risk Map 2010.)

aon-key-101-300x284.png

Tags:
Aon Corporation, civil commotion, Cuba, currency inconvertibility and transfer, legal and regulatory risk, political interference, Political Risk Map, riots, sovereign non-payment, strikes, supply chain interruption, terrorism, war

They seem to mirror the folks over at CIA Factbook or perhaps do a lot of their work for them. My guess is they do a lot of contract work for CIA and are a CIA corporation top down.

Then I went and found similar results for Cantor Fitzgerald and came to the same conclusion.

google this;
Click to View Search Results for Cantor Fitzgerald central intelligence agency

Cantor Fitzgerald Central Intelligence Agency
And you will see many of the same connections and wonder if Cantor Fitzgerald wasn't a CIA corporation top down as well;

google this; March Mclennan central intelligence agency

Wala, even more of the same; I wouldn't be surprised when you guys get done tearing the cover off this ball if all the corporations and/or companies at the WTC were CIA front companies or corporations.

Google this; Price Waterhouse central intelligence agency

Are you starting to see a pattern here guys, with all the major corporations and companies who lost huge amounts of people at the WTC? CIA companies, CIA front corporations.

This would also go a long way into solving how it is the WTC was rigged for demolition. It's a lot easier when the tenants are occupying space for that very purpose, to install or allow to have installed whatever was necessary for 9/11 to happen as it did.

It's a new way of thinking along new paths of investigation which are virgin paths, even to this day. I hope you guys one by one will start investigating the corporations at the WTC in detail and expose them for what they appear to be; CIA Corporations and companies. Understanding the complex relationships between Intelligence and Finance is necessary in understanding the truths outlined above;

Citation; Crossing the Rubicon;

CIA, THE BANKS AND THE BROKERS
Understanding the interrelationships between CIA and the banking and brokerage world is critical to grasping the already frightening implications of the above revelations. Let's look at the history of CIA, Wall Street and the big banks by looking at some of the key players in CIA's history.

Clark Clifford - The National Security Act of 1947 was written by Clark Clifford, a Democratic Party powerhouse, former Secretary of Defense, and one-time advisor to President Harry Truman. In the 1980s, as Chairman of First American Bancshares, Clifford was instrumental in getting the corrupt CIA drug bank BCCI a license to operate on American shores. His profession: Wall Street lawyer and banker.

John Foster and Allen Dulles - These two brothers "designed" the CIA for Clifford. Both were active in intelligence operations during WW II. Allen Dulles was the U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland where he met frequently with Nazi leaders and looked after U.S. investments in Germany. John Foster went on to become Secretary of State under Dwight Eisenhower and Allen went on to serve as CIA Director under Eisenhower and was later fired by JFK. Their professions: partners in the most powerful - to this day - Wall Street law firm of Sullivan, Cromwell.

Bill Casey - Ronald Reagan's CIA Director and OSS veteran who served as chief wrangler during the Iran-Contra years was, under President Richard Nixon, Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission. His profession: Wall Street lawyer and stockbroker.

David Doherty - The current Vice President of the New York Stock Exchange for enforcement is the retired General Counsel of the Central Intelligence Agency.

George Herbert Walker Bush - President from 1989 to January 1993, also served as CIA Director for 13 months from 1976-7. He is now a paid consultant to the Carlyle Group, the 11th largest defense contractor in the nation, which also shares joint investments with the bin Laden family.

A.B. "Buzzy" Krongard - The current Executive Director of the Central Intelligence Agency is the former Chairman of the investment bank A.B. Brown and former Vice Chairman of Banker's Trust.

John Deutch - This retired CIA Director from the Clinton Administration currently sits on the board at Citigroup, the nation's second largest bank, which has been repeatedly and overtly involved in the documented laundering of drug money. This includes Citigroup's 2001 purchase of a Mexican bank known to launder drug money, Banamex.

Nora Slatkin - This retired CIA Executive Director also sits on Citibank's board.

Maurice "Hank" Greenburg - The CEO of AIG insurance, manager of the third largest capital investment pool in the world, was floated as a possible CIA Director in 1995. FTW exposed Greenberg's and AIG's long connection to CIA drug trafficking and covert operations in a two-part series that was interrupted just prior to the attacks of September 11. AIG's stock has bounced back remarkably well since the attacks. To read that story, please go to http://www.fromthewilderness.com/fre...gs/part_2.html.

And I only tried a few of the links below but they seem to be intact from what I see. General research links with tons of data that back up all the above conclusions. See below. Another addendum; Edit: PJ 11/18/2024 **Remember when you click on a link you can erase the way back part of the URL to see if it still works live.
Olympic Debt & the FC-KU Crime Scene



Site Archive


Sunday, April 4, 2010

Specific Companies in the World Trade Center Targeted on 9/11


__________________
 

Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member
Original link:

meet General Richard Myers

RICHARD B. MYERS, Ret. U.S. Air Force General, served as Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2001 to 2005. He was the principal military adviser to President George W. Bush, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and the National Security Council. Gen. Myers previously served as Vice Chairman, which included acting as Chairman of the Joint Requirements Oversight Council, Vice Chairman of the Defense Acquisition Board, and member of the National Security Council Deputies Committee and the Nuclear Weapons Council. He also serves on the boards of Aon Corp., Deere & Company, and Northrop Grumman. Gen. Myers is the Foundation Professor of Military History at Kansas State University and holds the Colin Powell Chair for Leadership, Ethics and Character at the National Defense University. He is a member of the Central Intelligence Agency's External Advisory Board, the Defense Policy Board and the Department of State's Transformation Diplomacy Advisory Board. Gen. Myers has been a UTC director since September 2006.

July22_GenMyersRumsfeldPentPakArrAlQaedaOff.jpg

Now tell me this doesn't matter. One of the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff serving on the very board of a corporation which allegedly got wiped out on 9/11, a totally corrupt corporation up to their eyeballs in the hoax of 9/11 which ended up costing millions of lives in unjust wars overseas. Osama in Afghanistan never attacked America. Rumsfeld, Bush and the International swarm they represent created and executed 9/11.

The fraud & hoax of 9/11 were the American made catalyst for those wars. Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Egypt, Syria, Gaza. 9/11 was the spark which lit that fire, giving them the usurped authority to now commandeer our Military for their private purposes. Much like what Joe Biden is openly doing now in plain sight. Mocking all of the people of this country. Obviously I added a little bit to this last post. I just didn't feel like creating another post. This thread was ported over because I think you can use this research as a model for each and every company or organization that ever claimed to lease space at the World Trade Center.

Duh-
Phil
icon_rolleyes.gif

__________________


lets.roll.forums.logo.png
 

Phil Jayhan

Administrator
Staff member
I went to the original link I took that quote about Rumsfeld and saw some great information which should be common knowledge just showing the utter complete corruption of every facet of American government. This is eye opening stuff, especially for people wading through the information overload of all the banal bullshit they are throwing against the wall right now. This will help unconfuse people. [sic] Below, the website that created this information is STILL around and that page is active. So I fixed the link so you can listen to the show if you want. This might look boring to read but it is so enlightening and I didn't want this information lost. Rather it needs dissemination.

Cheers
phil ;)

Tangible Information

The virtue of uncertainty is not a comfortable idea, but then a citizen-based democracy is built upon participation, which is the very expression of permanent discomfort. The corporatist system depends upon the citizen's desire for inner comfort. Equilibrium is dependent upon our recognition of reality, which is the acceptance of permanent psychic discomfort. And the acceptance of psychic discomfort is the acceptance of consciousness. John Ralston Saul The Unconscious Civilization

Original link - WEBSITE STILL ACTIVE

Wednesday, August 29, 2007​

911 war profiteers (United Technologies)​



if you rather listen to a mp3 CLICK HERE
(29minutes 10mB download - Pratab Chatterjee interview TUC radio www.corpwatch.org)

meet Richard Myers

RICHARD B. MYERS, Ret. U.S. Air Force General, served as Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff from 2001 to 2005. He was the principal military adviser to President George W. Bush, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and the National Security Council. Gen. Myers previously served as Vice Chairman, which included acting as Chairman of the Joint Requirements Oversight Council, Vice Chairman of the Defense Acquisition Board, and member of the National Security Council Deputies Committee and the Nuclear Weapons Council. He also serves on the boards of Aon Corp., Deere & Company, and Northrop Grumman. Gen. Myers is the Foundation Professor of Military History at Kansas State University and holds the Colin Powell Chair for Leadership, Ethics and Character at the National Defense University. He is a member of the Central Intelligence Agency's External Advisory Board, the Defense Policy Board and the Department of State's Transformation Diplomacy Advisory Board. Gen. Myers has been a UTC director since September 2006.

meet André Villeneuve

ANDRÉ VILLENEUVE has been the Non-Executive Chairman of Euronext.liffe, the London futures and derivatives exchange, since 2003. He was an executive director of Reuters from 1989 to 2000. He was Chairman of Instinet Corp., an electronic brokerage subsidiary of Reuters, from 1990 to 1999, and Executive Chairman from 1999 to 2002. He is Chairman, City of London EU Advisory Group and a member of the UK Chancellor's High Level Financial Services Group. Mr. Villeneuve was Chairman of Promethee, the French think tank, from 1998 to 2002 and non-executive director of Aviva PLC from 1996-2006. He is currently a non-executive director of IFRI (Institut Francais de Relations Internationales) and EuroArbitrage. Mr. Villeneuve has been a UTC director since 1997.

meet CIA adviser H. Patrick Swygert

H. PATRICK SWYGERT has served as President of Howard University since 1995. Mr. Swygert served as President of the University at Albany, State University of New York from 1990 to 1995, and as Executive Vice President of Temple University from 1987 to 1990. He also serves on the Boards of Fannie Mae and Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. Mr. Swygert is a member of the Central Intelligence Agency's External Advisory Board, the Advisory Council for the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History and Culture, the D.C. Emancipation Commemoration Commission, the U.S. National Commission for United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the Commission on Presidential Debates. Mr. Swygert has been a UTC director since 2001.


Profile

BUSINESS UNITS
Carrier heating and air conditioning systems
Hamilton Sundstrand aerospace and industrial systems
Otis elevators and escalators
Pratt & Whitney aircraft engines
Sikorsky helicopters
UTC Fire & Security protection services
UTC Power
United Technologies Research Center

RANKING
20th largest U.S. manufacturer (2006 list, Industry Week)
43rd largest U.S. corporation (2006 list, Fortune)
55th largest publicly held manufacturer in the world (2006 list, Industry Week)
126th largest in the world (2006 Global 500 list, Fortune)
Named "Most Admired" aerospace and defense company (2001-2006 lists, Fortune)

CURRENT EMPLOYMENT
215,000 employees (2006)
47th largest employer in the world (2006 Global 500 list, Fortune)

REVENUES
$47.8 billion (2006)

SALES TO U.S. GOVERNMENT
$6.4 billion (2006)

CURRENT BUSINESS BALANCE (REVENUES)
Commercial & industrial 63%
Commercial aerospace 21%
Military aerospace & space 16%

INTERNATIONAL REVENUES
60% of total revenues (2006)

INTERNATIONAL PRESENCE
Over 4,000 locations in approximately 62 countries; UTC does business in approximately 180 countries.

NET INCOME
$3.7 billion or $3.71 per share (2006)

ASSETS
$47 billion (as of Dec. 31, 2006)

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT
$3.2 billion (2006)

CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
$954 million (2006)

Board of Directors

Louis Chênevert
President and Chief Operating Officer

George David
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

John V. Faraci
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
International Paper

Jean-Pierre Garnier, Ph.D.
Chief Executive Officer,
GlaxoSmithKline plc

Jamie S. Gorelick
Partner,
WilmerHale

Charles R. Lee
Retired Chairman and Co-CEO,
Verizon Communications

Richard D. McCormick
Retired Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer,
US West Inc.

Harold McGraw III
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer,
The McGraw-Hill Companies


Richard Myers
Retired Chairman,
Joint Chiefs of Staff

Frank P. Popoff
Retired Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer,
The Dow Chemical Co.

H. Patrick Swygert
President,
Howard University

André Villeneuve
Chairman,
Euronext.LIFFE

Harold A. Wagner
Retired Chairman,
Air Products and Chemicals Inc.

Christine Todd Whitman
President,
The Whitman Strategy Group

Leadership
Board committees
Audit Committee
Frank P. Popoff, Chairman
John V. Faraci
Richard D. McCormick
Richard B. Myers
H. Patrick Swygert
André Villeneuve
H. A. Wagner

Committee on Nominations & Governance
Richard D. McCormick, Chairman
John V. Faraci
Jean-Pierre Garnier
Charles R. Lee
H. Patrick Swygert
H. A. Wagner
Christine Todd Whitman

Compensation & Executive Development
H. A. Wagner, Chairman
Jean-Pierre Garnier
Charles R. Lee
Richard D. McCormick
Harold McGraw III
Frank P. Popoff

Executive Committee
George David, Chairman
Charles R. Lee
Frank P. Popoff
H. A. Wagner
Board of directors
Executive leadership
Finance Committee
Charles R. Lee, Chairman
Louis Chênevert
George David
Jamie S. Gorelick
Harold McGraw III
Richard B. Myers
Frank P. Popoff
André Villeneuve

Public Issues Review Committee
Jean-Pierre Garnier, Chairman
Jamie S. Gorelick
Harold McGraw III
H. Patrick Swygert
André Villeneuve
Christine Todd Whitman

United Technologies executive leadership

Mario Abajo
President,
South Europe and Middle East,
Otis

David Adler
Senior Vice President,
Worldwide Customer Service,
Sikorsky

Ted F. Amyuni
President,
Refrigeration,
Carrier

Alain M. Bellemare
President,
Pratt & Whitney Canada

Richard H. Bennett, Jr.
Vice President,
Environment,
Health & Safety

Ari Bousbib
President,
Otis

William M. Brown
President,
UTC Fire & Security

William L. Bucknall, Jr.
Senior Vice President,
Human Resources and Organization

Tony Chamberlain
President, Fire & Security,
Australasia,
UTC Fire & Security

Louis R. Chênevert
President and
Chief Operating Officer

Jean Colpin
Director, United Technologies
Research Center

Halsey M. Cook
President, Residential & Light Commercial,
North America,
Carrier

Geraud Darnis
President,
Carrier

George David
Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer

John Doucette
Vice President and
Chief Information Officer

Michael R. Dumais
Vice President and General Manager,
Customer Service,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Thomas E. Farmer
President,
Military Engines,
Pratt & Whitney

Stephen N. Finger
President,
Pratt & Whitney

James E. Geisler
Vice President,
Finance

Charles D. Gill
Senior Vice President and
General Counsel

Bruno Grob
President,
North and East Europe,
Otis

Gregory J. Hayes
Vice President,
Accounting & Control

Stephen N. Heath
President,
Commercial Engines,
Pratt & Whitney

David P. Hess
President,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Darryl Hughes
President,
Security Services,
Europe, Middle East & Africa,
UTC Fire & Security

Alison Kaufman
Senior Vice President,
Government and International Affairs

James E. Keenan
Senior Vice President and General Manager,
Aftermarket Services,
Pratt & Whitney

John P. Leary
Vice President,
Employee Relations

Robert Leduc
President,
Flight Systems,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Patrick L’Hostis
President, Residential & Light Commercial,
International,
Carrier

Nancy T. Lintner
Vice President,
Communications

Arthur W. Lucas
Senior Vice President,
Engineering,
Pratt & Whitney

Paul W. Martin
Senior Vice President,
U.S. Government & Advanced Development Programs,
Sikorsky

Jim Maser
President,
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne

J. Michael McQuade
Senior Vice President,
Science & Technology

Didier Michaud
President,
U.K. and Central Europe,
Otis

Raymond J. Moncini
Senior Vice President,
Operations,
Otis

Michael Monts
Vice President,
Business Practices

Larry O. Moore
Senior Vice President,
Module Centers and Operations,
Pratt & Whitney

Timothy M. Morris
President,
Aerospace Power Systems,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Stephen G. Oswald
President,
Industrial,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Eric Patry
President,
Fire Safety,
Europe, Middle East & Africa
UTC Fire & Security

Jeffrey P. Pino
President,
Sikorsky

Jothi Purushotaman
Vice President,
Operations

Thomas I. Rogan
Vice President,
Treasurer

Kelly Romano
President,
Building Systems & Services,
Carrier

Tobin J. Treichel
Vice President,
Tax

Joseph E. Triompo
President,
Engine & Control Systems,
Hamilton Sundstrand

Debra A. Valentine
Vice President,
Deputy General Counsel,
and Secretary

Jan van Dokkum
President,
UTC Power

Charles M. Vo
President,
North Asia,
Otis

Randal E. Wilcox
President,
North and South America,
Otis

keywords: psyops CIA MOSSAD ONI DIA alpha 182 airborne marines special operation undercover operations psyop NSA NRO NGO spying intelligence spooks 911 conspiracy theories wtc7 767 757 pentagon impact tv fakery norad wtc 7 world trade center wtc6 new york city atrocities terror attacks inside job iran nuke aircraft carrier group uss enterprise nuclear navy secret service manipulation deception perception management propaganda pr corporate communications news tv media fox abc nbc cnn

Posted by u2r2h at 12:52 PM
 

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
And if your still unconvinced PriceWaterhouseCooper could, would or did partake in something as dastardly as the 9/11 hoax, and you have stomach to wade through PWC's long list of corrupt dealings {the one's we know about that is) then click the spoiler below, grab a new hot cup of Java, and glance through PWC's rap-sheet on Wiki. Is all PWC is is a colossal money laundering operation for the US government and more then likely other Western nations intel agencies.

46 languages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

PricewaterhouseCoopers
Trade namePwC
TypeMembers have different legal structures; both UK and US firms are limited liability partnerships
IndustryProfessional services
Founded1998
(PricewaterhouseCoopers)
1849
(Price Waterhouse)
1854
(Coopers & Lybrand)[1]
FoundersSamuel Lowell Price
Edwin Waterhouse
William Cooper
HeadquartersUnited Kingdom
Area servedWorldwide
Key peopleRobert Moritz (Chairman)[2]
ServicesAssurance
Risk assurance
Risk advisory
Tax advisory
Legal services
Data and analytics
Management consulting
Digital Transformation
Financial advisory
Forensic accounting
Revenue
Increase
US$53.1 billion (2023)[3]
Number of employees364,000 (2023)[3]
Websitewww.pwc.com
PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited[4] is a multinational professional services brand of firms, operating as partnerships under the PwC brand. It is the second-largest professional services network in the world[5] and is considered one of the Big Four accounting firms, along with Deloitte, EY and KPMG.[6]

PwC firms are in 157 countries, across 742 locations, with 328,000 people.[7] As of 2019, 26% of the workforce was based in the Americas, 26% in Asia, 32% in Western Europe and 5% in Middle East and Africa.[8] The company's global revenues were $50.3 billion in FY 2022, of which $18.0 billion was generated by its Assurance practice, $11.6 billion by its Tax and Legal practice and $20.7 billion by its Advisory practice.[9] The firm in its recent actual form was created in 1998 by a merger between two accounting firms: Coopers & Lybrand, and Price Waterhouse.[1] Both firms had histories dating back to the 19th century. The trading name was shortened to PwC in September 2010 as part of a rebranding effort.[10]
The firm has been embroiled in a number of corruption controversies and crime scandals. The firm has on multiple occasions been implicated in tax evasion and tax avoidance practices. The firm has frequently been fined by regulators for performing audits that fail to meet basic auditing standards. Amid Russia's war in Ukraine, PwC has helped Russian oligarchs to hide their wealth and helped to undermine the global sanctions regime on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.[11][12]

History[edit]​

The firm was created in September 1998 when Coopers & Lybrand merged with Price Waterhouse.[1]

Coopers & Lybrand[edit]​

In 1854, William Cooper founded an accountancy practice in London. It became Cooper Brothers seven years later when his three brothers joined.[1]

In 1898, Robert H. Montgomery, William M. Lybrand, Adam A. Ross Jr. and his brother T. Edward Ross formed Lybrand, Ross Brothers and Montgomery in the United States.[1]

In 1957, Cooper Brothers, along with Lybrand, Ross Bros & Montgomery and a Canadian firm (McDonald, Currie and Co.), agreed to adopt the name Coopers & Lybrand in international practice.[1] In 1973, the three member firms in the UK, US and Canada changed their names to Coopers & Lybrand.[13] Then in 1980, Coopers & Lybrand expanded its expertise in insolvency substantially by acquiring Cork Gully, a leading firm in that field in the UK.[14] In 1990, in certain countries, including the UK, Coopers & Lybrand merged with Deloitte, Haskins & Sells to become Coopers & Lybrand Deloitte;[1] in 1992 they reverted to Coopers & Lybrand.[15]

Price Waterhouse[edit]​


Edwin Waterhouse c. 1907

In 1849, Samuel Lowell Price, an accountant, founded an accountancy practice in London.[16] In 1865, Price went into partnership with William Hopkins Holyland and Edwin Waterhouse.[16] Holyland left shortly afterwards to work alone in accountancy and the firm was known from 1874 as Price, Waterhouse & Co.[16] The original partnership agreement, signed by Price, Holyland, and Waterhouse could be found in Southwark Towers.[17]

By the late 19th century, Price Waterhouse had gained recognition as an accounting firm. As a result of growing trade between the United Kingdom and the United States, they opened an office in New York City in 1890, and the American firm expanded. The original British firm opened an office in Liverpool in 1904, and then elsewhere in the United Kingdom and worldwide, each time establishing a separate partnership in each country: the worldwide practice of Price Waterhouse was, therefore, a federation of collaborating firms that had grown organically, rather than the result of an international merger.[16]

In a further effort to take advantage of economies of scale, PW and Arthur Andersen discussed a merger in 1989[18] but the negotiations failed, mainly because of conflicts of interest such as Andersen's strong commercial links with IBM and PW's audit of IBM, as well as the two firms' radically different cultures. It was said by those involved with the failed merger that at the end of the discussion, the partners at the table realized they had different views of business, and the potential merger was scrapped.[19]

1998 to present[edit]​

In 1998, Price Waterhouse and Coopers & Lybrand merged to form PricewaterhouseCoopers (written with a lowercase "w" and a camel case "C").[20] At that time, MCS was the largest and fastest growing division.[21]

ERP projects required radically different staffing models, skill development, risk management, contracts, employee compensation, and fee structures. The increasingly technical projects were "one and done", while post-project add-on work was common, the entire client-management approach was different from maintaining an audit relationship. Instead of engagements requiring small teams a few weeks on-site, ERP projects spanned 18 months to 6 years at the client, frequently with teams of 200 or more clients, contractors, and consultants. MCS staff and leadership chafed under the strict rules governing accounting firms despite reorganizing personnel with new titles, promotions, and pay grades.[22]
Few consultants and partners were CPAs and thus were treated differently than their Tax and Audit counterparts. Independence rules required consulting managers, directors, and partners to completely divest personal investments of all audit clients. Employee incentive bonuses aligned to major project goals were not allowed, nor was MCS permitted to accept contingency fees from its clients. Traditionally, PwC one client-relationship partner as a liaison and coordinator, receiving a share of all work for that client despite the contracting and managing partner. Consulting engagements rarely involved a client gatekeeper, and MCS partners fought paying an Audit partner a share of tens of millions of dollars in revenue based on tradition. The largest personal services company in the world kept expanding while infighting between partners and practices only grew.[23]

PwC was not the only member of the Big 5 to experience cultural and financial rifts between accounting and consulting. In 1997, Arthur Andersen's Andersen Consulting filed for arbitration, reaching an agreement in 2000 to finalize the split of the two partnerships, with Andersen Consulting rebranding as Accenture.[24] Also that year, Ernst & Young became the first of the Big Four to sell its consulting services practice outright, which it did to Capgemini.[25][26]

The fallout from the Enron, Worldcom and other financial auditing scandals led to the demise of Arthur Andersen, reducing the count down to the Big Four and spurring passage of the 2002 Sarbanes–Oxley Act (SOX). Among other restrictions, SOX severely limited overlap between management consulting and auditing services. PwC Consulting continued to split itself off, conducting business under its own name and branding rather than as the MCS division of PwC. Around July 2000, PwC began to prepare for either an acquisition or IPO by developing separate financial records that would be required for due diligence. PwC leadership began to seek buyers, with an initial interest by Hewlett-Packard for a reported $17 billion but negotiations broke down in 2000.[27] Almost a year after the collapse of Arthur Andersen in 2001, Arthur Andersen, LLP affiliates in Hong Kong and China completed talks to join PricewaterhouseCoopers, China.[28]

In 2000, PwC acquired Canada's largest SAP consulting partner, Omnilogic Systems, to add to its relatively nascent consulting presence in Canada.[29] PwC announced in May 2002 that PwC Consulting would be spun off as an independent entity and filed with the SEC for an initial $1B IPO to trade in August.[30] Because PwC accounting partners owned 60% of PwC Consulting, an IPO or acquisition was seen as the only way to split the two firms without decimating the consulting arm's working capital.[31]

PwC Consulting leadership continued to fluff financials by expanding across-the-board pay cuts, terminating its variable compensation program, and furthering deep layoffs, all rare actions in the industry. In June 2002, PwC Consulting hired Continental Airline's Greg Brennerman as CEO to run the global division.[32] A week later, it was announced that an outside consultancy, Wolff Olins, had created new branding for the consulting group, called "Monday".[33] The firm's CEO, Greg Brenneman described the unusual name as "a real word, concise, recognizable, global and the right fit for a company that works hard to deliver results."[34] In July 2002, it was rumored that PwC was in talks with an unknown public company, as no PR space or announcement for the impending IPO had been set. Those rumors were confirmed August 2002, when PwC announced it was selling Monday to IBM for approximately $3.5 billion in cash and stock. Monday was consolidated into IBM Global Business Services while partners became employees for the first time. The acquisition had a modest increase in the size and capabilities of IBM's growing consulting practice, as IBM had 150,000 employees at the time, while Monday carried just 30,000 at the time.[35] However, it was seen as a win by IBM since PwC Consulting/Monday's valuation had suffered after the post-9/11 recession.[36]

PwC began rebuilding its consulting practice with acquisitions such as Paragon Consulting Group and the commercial services business of BearingPoint in 2009.[37] The firm continued this process by acquiring Diamond Management & Technology Consultants in November 2010,[38] and PRTM in August 2011.[39] In 2012, the firm acquired Logan Tod & Co, a digital analytics and optimisation consultancy,[40] and Ant's Eye View, a social media strategy development and consulting firm to build upon PwC's growing Management Consulting customer impact and customer engagement capabilities.[41]

On 3 April 2014,[42] Booz & Company combined with PwC to form Strategy&.[43][44] On 4 November 2013, PwC acquired BGT Partners.[45] In November 2016, PwC acquired technology/consulting firm NSI DMCC.[46] In January 2017, PwC announced a five-year agreement with GE to provide managed tax services to GE on a global basis, transferring more than 600 of GE's in-house global tax team to PwC. In addition, PwC would acquire GE's tax technologies and provide managed services not only to GE but also to other PwC clients as well.[47] In November 2017, PwC accepted bitcoin as payment for advisory services, the first time the company, or any of the Big Four accounting firms, accepted virtual currency as payment.[48] Veritas Capital acquired PwC's US public sector business in 2018, and branded the new company as Guidehouse.[49][50] The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) has utilized the services of PwC to tally the votes for the Academy Awards since 1935.[51] In addition, the company oversees AMPAS elections, prepares its financial documents, and is responsible for the group's tax filings.[52]
In December 2023, PwC acquired Surfaceink, a hardware designer that was once a close partner of Apple Inc., for an undisclosed amount.[53]

Operations[edit]​

PwC refers to the PwC network and/or one or more of its member firms, each of which is a separate legal entity due to local legislative requirements.[54] Much like other professional services firms, each member firm is financially and legally independent. PwC is co-ordinated by a private company limited by guarantee under English law, called PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited.[55] In addition, PwC is registered as a multidisciplinary entity which also provides legal services.[56]

PwC's operations are global, with Europe accounting for 36% of the total, and the Americas 44%, as of 2016.[57][58] PwC's largest growth in FY18 was in Asia where revenues were up 15%, followed by 12% revenue growth from the Middle East and Africa.[59]

Service lines[edit]​

PwC is organized into the following three service lines (the 2017 revenue shares are listed in parentheses):[60]

Data analysis[edit]​

Due to its size, PwC is able to contribute data analysis to a wide range of areas.
  • Calculation of the drone market size: PwC published a 2016 report stating that the world drone market would reach close to $127 billion by 2020, with Poland at the forefront of legislation for the commercial use of unmanned aerial vehicles.[64][65]
  • PwC coined the term E7 to describe the seven emerging economies which the company is predicting will take over today's G7 nations by 2050. Those seven emerging nations are China, Russia, India, Mexico, Indonesia, Turkey and Brazil.[66]
  • PwC assesses a country's risk premium, an important factor in analyzing the valuation of an entity.[67][68]
  • The company analyzes pay parity, the comparative salaries for men versus women. In early 2017, PwC found in its Women in Work Index study that it could take the UK 24 years, until 2041, to close its gender pay gap.[69]
  • PwC publishes the Low Carbon Economy Index, which tracks the extent to which the G20 countries are reducing carbon emissions.[70][71][72][73]
  • The Economy of the Sea is a long-term analysis project of PwC Portugal. It is part of the HELM project, launched in 2006 to create an integrated approach to successful and sustainable maritime practices. It analyses best practices around the world and compiles data from industries that rely or work on the sea and the nations that use it.[74][75]
  • PwC developed the Total Impact Measurement and Management (TIMM) framework, designed to assist companies in carrying out impact studies which will help them put a value on all of a company's activities, products or services.[76][77]

Offices[edit]​

PwC has partners in approximately 800 offices across 157 countries with 200,000 employees.[78][79] Notable offices include Seaport office tower in Boston;[80] and Magwa Crescent Waterfall City tower in Midrand, South Africa.[81]
The 2018 PwC Global Annual Review states the revenue of the firm by region, as follows:[82][83]

RegionRevenue ($bn) (2018)
Americas17.454
Asia5.675
Australasia and Pacific1.810
Central and Eastern Europe0.918
Western Europe13.864
Middle East and Africa1.559

Logo[edit]​

The following are the several logos the company has used through the years. The current PwC logo was introduced in September 2010, when the company changed its trading name from PricewaterhouseCoopers to PwC. It was designed by Wolff Olins.[84][85][86]
  • The Coopers & Lybrand logo prior to the 1998 merger
    The Coopers & Lybrand logo prior to the 1998 merger
  • The Price Waterhouse logo prior to the 1998 merger
    The Price Waterhouse logo prior to the 1998 merger
  • The PricewaterhouseCoopers logo from 1998 to 2010
    The PricewaterhouseCoopers logo from 1998 to 2010
  • The PwC logo from 2010 to present
    The PwC logo from 2010 to present

Corporate affairs and culture[edit]​

The company employs large numbers of young workers, with 80% of their workforce millennials as of 2017.[87] According to PwC, the company uses education to bridge the culture gap between generations.[87] The firm also implements a three-step "Connect-Embed-Improve" plan to promote employee engagement.[88] The company requires senior-level staff to continue to train and learn; PwC also created a social collaboration platform called Spark to enable employees to access course materials and assignments, complete prerequisites and access reinforcement materials.[89]

In 2016, Tim Ryan, PwC's chairman, helped launch the CEO Action for Diversity and Inclusion coalition, the largest CEO-driven business commitment to advance diversity and inclusion in the workplace.[90][91][92]

Employees at PwC generally have flexibility in choosing their own working hours provided that senior management deems the arrangement acceptable.[93][94] In 2002, PwC published the accounting profession's first global "Code of Conduct".[95][96] Strategy& and PwC publish Strategy+Business, a print and online business magazine focusing on management issues and corporate strategy.[97] In June 2021, PwC together with Edelman, the company's agency partner, launched a program, The Trust Leadership Institute.[98][99]

PwC developed a ColourBrave Charity Committee, made up of employees from across the organisation, as part of its commitment to continue to build an inclusive culture and address racial disparity. The Committee chose 25 Black-led organisations and civil society organisations to join the PwC Foundation and PwC Social Entrepreneurs Club's existing list of beneficiaries.[100][101]
As of 2021, PwC is the fourth-largest privately owned company in the United States.[102]

Reports on PwC's involvement in the Australian tax scandal revealed an alternate "shadow culture" that operates separately from its public-facing culture. The "shadow culture" prioritizes loyalty to superiors, unquestioning acceptance of the status quo, and a mentality of revenue "growth at all costs", even to the point of rulebreaking.[103]

Staff[edit]​

As of 30 June 2021, PwC had 295,371 employees around the world.[104] The largest percentage of workers are employed in Western Europe, Asia and the Americas.[104]
The following shows the number of employees in each region of the world as of FY 2021.[104]
RegionNumber of Employees
Americas73,601
Asia Pacific98,876
Europe, Middle East, and Africa122,894
Total295,371
The following shows the number of employees by practice areas.[104]
Practice areaNumber of Employees
Assurance116,890
Advisory81,369
Tax55,286
Internal firm services41,826
Total295,371
The following shows the number of employees by level.[104]
Staff typeNumber of Employees
Partners11,897
Directors19,447
Managers69,195
Associates180,114
Interns and trainees14,718
Total295,371
Notable firm alumni include:

Issues[edit]​

The firm has been embroiled in a number of corruption controversies and crime scandals.[117] The firm has on multiple occasions been implicated in tax evasion and tax avoidance practices.[11][118] The company has aided war criminals evade sanctions.[12] The company has frequently performed insufficient audits, whereby it performs auditing services that vouch for the finances of companies without following basic auditing standards.[119][120][121][122][123]

Gender employment discrimination[edit]​

Main article: Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins
In 1989, the United States Supreme Court held that Price Waterhouse must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the decision regarding Ann Hopkins's employment would have been the same if sex discrimination had not occurred. The accounting firm failed to prove that the same decision to postpone Hopkins's promotion to the partnership would have still been made in the absence of sex discrimination, and therefore, the employment decision constituted sex discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The significance of the Supreme Court's ruling was twofold. First, it established that gender stereotyping is actionable as sex discrimination. Second, it established the mixed-motive framework as an evidentiary framework for proving discrimination under a disparate treatment theory even when lawful reasons for the adverse employment action are also present.[124] Hopkins's candidacy for partnership had been put on indefinite hold. She eventually resigned and sued the company for occupational sexism, arguing that her lack of promotion came after pressure to walk, talk, dress, and act more "femininely."[125]

In 1990, a Federal district judge in Washington ordered the firm to make Hopkins a partner. It was the first time in which a court awarded partnership in a professional company as a remedy for sexual or race-based discrimination.[126]
Following the suit, the firm received media attention due to its discriminatory labor practices towards males as well.[127]

Tax issues[edit]​

In 2014, it came to light that PwC had received $55m from Caterpillar Inc. to develop a tax avoidance scheme, according to an investigation of the US Senate, and had helped Caterpillar Inc. drastically reduce its taxes for more than a decade.[128][129] Profits valued at $8bn were shifted from the US to Switzerland, which allegedly made it possible to save more than $2.4bn in US taxes over a decade. In Switzerland profits were taxed at 4%.[128] A PricewaterhouseCoopers managing director who was involved in designing the tax savings plan had written at the time to a PwC partner: "We'll all be retired when this ... comes up on audit."[129]

American International Group Inc.[edit]​

In 2005, BusinessWeek reported that PwC was American International Group Inc.'s auditor through AIG's years of "questionable dealings" and accounting improprieties. AIG on 30 March 2005, said that deals with a Barbados-based insurance company, for instance, may have been incorrectly accounted for over the past 14 years, because an AIG-affiliated company may have been secretly covering that insurer's losses.[130] BusinessWeek said that PwC also appeared to have "dropped the ball" on the deals between AIG and Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s General Re Corp. General Re transferred $500 million in anticipated claims and premiums to AIG. BusinessWeek asked: "Did the auditor do its job by verifying that AIG was assuming risk on claims beyond the $500 million, thus allowing AIG to account for the deal as insurance? That's Accounting 101 in any reinsurance transaction."[130]

PwC was also criticised by several witnesses during the 2010 Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission investigation into AIG's collapse in the financial crisis of 2007–2008, after the insurer was unable to fulfil its collateral obligations to Goldman Sachs. The insurer was expected to cover the difference in value between the credit default swap contracts it had sold to Goldman Sachs, however, the head of the unit at AIG disagreed with the valuation that Goldman presented. According to a memo published by Business Insider, witnesses wondered how PwC was signing off on the accounts for both AIG and Goldman Sachs when they were using different valuation methods for the swaps contracts (and therefore booked different values for them in their accounts).[131]

ChuoAoyama suspension[edit]​

ChuoAoyama Audit Corporation (中央青山監査法人, Chūō-Aoyama Kansa Hōjin) was the Japanese affiliate of assurance service of PwC from April 2000 to 2006.[132] In May 2006, the Financial Services Agency of Japan suspended ChuoAoyama from provision of some statutory auditing services for two months[133] following the collapse of cosmetics company Kanebo, of which three of the partners were found assisting with accounting fraud for hiding deficits of about $1.9 billion over the course of five years.[134] The accountants got suspended prison terms up to 18 months from the Tokyo District Court after the judge deemed them to have played a "passive role" in the crime.[134] The suspension was the first-ever imposed on a major accounting firm in the country. Many of the firm's largest clients were forced to find replacement auditors before the suspension began that July.[135]

Shortly after the suspension of ChuoAoyama, PwC acted quickly to stem any possible client attrition as a result of the scandal. It set up the PricewaterhouseCoopers Aarata, and some of ChuoAoyama's accountants and most of ChuoAoyama's clients moved to the new firm.[136][137] ChuoAoyama resumed operations on 1 September 2006, under the Misuzu name. However, by this point the two firms combined had 30% fewer clients than did ChuoAoyama prior to its suspension. Misuzu was dissolved in July 2007.[138][139]

Tyco settlement[edit]​

In July 2007, PwC agreed to pay US$229 million to settle a class-action lawsuit brought by shareholders of Tyco International Ltd. over a multibillion-dollar accounting fraud. The chief executive and chief financial officer of Tyco were found guilty of looting $600 million from the company.[140]

Indian companies scandals[edit]​

In 2007, India's accounting standards agency ICAI found partners of PwC guilty of professional negligence in under-providing for nonperforming assets of the now-defunct Global Trust Bank.[141] This led to the RBI banning PwC from auditing any financial company for over a year.[142][143][144] PwC was also associated with the accounting scandal at the India-based DSQ Software, which collapsed in 2003.[145]
In January 2009, PwC was criticised,[146][141][147][148][149] along with the promoters of Satyam, an Indian IT firm listed on the NASDAQ, in a $1.5 billion fraud.[150] PwC wrote a letter to the board of directors of Satyam that its audit may be rendered "inaccurate and unreliable" due to the disclosures made by Satyam's (ex) Chairman and subsequently withdrew its audit opinions.[151] PwC's US arm "was the reviewer for the U.S. filings for Satyam".[152] Consequently, lawsuits were filed in the US with PwC as a defendant. Two partners of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Srinivas Talluri and Subramani Gopalakrishnan, were charged by India's Central Bureau of Investigation in connection with the Satyam scandal. After the scandal broke out, Subramani Gopalakrishnan retired from the firm after reaching mandatory retirement age, while Talluri remained on suspension from the firm.[153][154]

Following the Satyam scandal, the Mumbai-based Small Investor Grievances Association (SIGA) requested the Indian stock market regulator SEBI to ban PwC permanently and seize its assets in India alleging more scandals like "Ketan Parekh stock manipulations."[155]

In 2015, PwC India said they were disappointed with court judgement of the case saying, "As we have said many times, there has never been any evidence presented that either of our former partners S Gopalakrishnan or Srinivas Talluri were involved in or were aware of the management-led fraud at Satyam. We understand that Gopal and Talluri are considering filing an appeal against this verdict."[156] In 2018, PwC was banned by India's securities regulator from providing auditing services to public-listed companies for 2 years, and PwC was fined $2 million in addition to the suspension.[157] In September 2019, this ban was overruled by the securities appellate tribunal stating that there was no evidence of collusion of PwC in the scam. The tribunal also stated that SEBI had no jurisdiction over audit firms and only ICAI could issue such an order.[158]

Association with the hiring of a person accused in gold smuggling case[edit]​

PwC, which provides consulting service to the Kerala government's Department of Information Technology[159][160] and its Space Park project,[161] has been criticised for appointing Ms. Swapana Suresh, who is accused in a case of smuggling gold in a diplomatic bag.[161] Following an investigation, the Kerala government decided to terminate the consultancy services of PwC for the proposed Space Park project in Thiruvananthapuram.[161] PwC sub-contracted the resource from a vendor, Vision Technologies, but the government considers that the primary liability is on PwC for recruiting Swapna Suresh.[161] Even before these events, the opening of the PwC office in Kerala secretariat had attracted serious criticism from the opposition party.[162][160][163] Following this, PwC issued clarification on their hiring of Ms. Swapna Suresh by stating that she was hired based on a background verification report from past employers as well as a criminal record verification at the time.[164] In February 2022, the state government of Kerala wrote to PwC in order to seek the refund of INR 16 Lacs paid in salary to Swapna Suresh. In April 2022, the company responded that it can't repay the amount.[165]

Yukos prosecutions[edit]​

Yukos was a Russian oil and gas company that was the target of politically motivated prosecutions by Russian authorities. The company's assets were sold for alleged unpaid taxes and it was declared bankrupt. PwC's audits were the foundation for the firm's defense in a series of continuing trials against former chief executive, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and the former majority shareholder, Platon Lebedev. The Russian authorities then went after PwC. In March 2007, police raided PwC's Moscow offices, confiscating documents related to Yukos and charging and convicting PwC of failing to pay 243 million rubles, or $9.4 million, in taxes. PwC withdrew its Yukos audits and less than two weeks later authorities cleared PwC of any wrongdoing in regard to its audit.[166][167]
In 2010, Joe Nocera in the New York Times wrote, "In 2007, with the prospect of parole on the horizon, the same prosecutors—with what appears to be the complicity of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Yukos's longtime accounting firm—indicted the two men (Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev), again, bringing a new round of Kafkaesque charges."[168]

In 2010, it was revealed that the Russian government placed pressure on PwC to withdraw audits.[169][170]
A cable from the U.S. embassy in Moscow stated that the trial was politically motivated and that a deposition in a U.S. court by PricewaterhouseCoopers may show that PwC was pressured by the Russian government to withdraw its prior Yukos audits. An embassy source noted that "If the audits were properly withdrawn, this will be a 'black mark' for the defense; if not, it could help the defense, but would greatly tarnish PWC's international reputation."[171][172][169]

Transneft Russia case[edit]​

Upon the completion of the construction of the ESPO (East Siberia-Pacific Ocean) pipeline by Transneft in December 2010, an official report of the Audit Chamber of the Russian Federation suggested that $4 billion was stolen by Transneft insiders.[173] One Federation Council Speaker, Sergei Mironov, called for an investigation. Alexei Navalny, a minority Transneft shareholder and lawyer, accused the company of wrongdoing in his personal blog, and criticized PwC, Transneft's auditor, of ignoring his warnings. PwC denied wrongdoing, stating that, "We believe there are absolutely no grounds for such allegations, and we stand behind our work for OAO AK Transneft."[174]

Northern Rock[edit]​

In 2007, PwC was criticised by the Treasury Select Committee of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for helping Northern Rock, a client of the firm, to sell its mortgage assets while also acting as its auditor.[175][176] In 2011, a House of Lords inquiry criticized PwC for not drawing attention to the risks in the business model followed by Northern Rock, which was rescued by the UK government during the financial crisis.[177][178]

JP Morgan Securities audit[edit]​

In 2012, the Accountancy and Actuarial Discipline Board (AADB) of the UK fined PwC a record £1.4m for wrongly reporting to the Financial Services Authority that JP Morgan Securities had complied with client money rules which protects client funds. The accountants neglected to check whether JP Morgan had the correct systems in place and failed to gather sufficient evidence to form opinions on the issue, and as a result, failed to report that JP Morgan failed to hold client money separate from JP Morgan's money. The £1.4m fine was at the time the greatest penalty administered to a professional accountancy firm in the UK.[179]

Water privatisation in Delhi[edit]​

PwC was found to be unethically favored by the World Bank in a bid to privatize the water distribution system of Delhi, India, an effort that was alleged as corrupt by investigators.[180] When bidding took place, PwC repeatedly failed in each round, and the World Bank in each case pressured PwC to be pushed to the next round and eventually win the bid. The effort at privatization fell through when an investigation was conducted by Arvind Kejriwal and the non-governmental organization (NGO) Parivartan in 2005.[180] After submitting a Right to Information (RTI) request, Parivartan received 9000 pages of correspondence and consultation with the World Bank, where it was revealed that the privatization of Delhi's water supply would provide salaries of $25,000 a month to four administrators of each of the 21 water zones, which amounted to over $25 million per year, increasing the budget by over 60% and water taxes 9 times.[181][182]

The Delhi Jal Board (DJB), which administers the water system of Delhi, was first approached by Parivartan in November 2004, following a report by the newspaper The Asian Age, where the scheme was revealed to the public for the first time.[181][182] The DJB denied the existence of the project, but after an appeal, the RTI request was granted. The documents revealed that the project began in 1998, in complete secrecy within the DJB administration.[181][182] The DJB approached the World Bank for a loan to improve the water system, which it approved, and the effort began with a $2.5 million consultation loan. The Delhi government could have easily provided the money, and the interest rate of 12% that was to be loaned by the World Bank could have been raised on capital markets for 6%.[181][182] Following the consultation, 35 multinational companies bid, of which six were to be shortlisted. When PwC was in 10th place, the World Bank said that at least one company should be from a developing country, and since PwC made the bid from its Kolkata office, it was dubbed an "Indian" company, and its rank was raised to 6th.[180] When PwC failed in the second round, the World Bank pressured the DJB to start over with a fresh round of bidding. Only one company succeeded in the new round that was not PwC, and the World Bank had the lowest marks from an evaluator thrown out. The contract was awarded to PwC in 2001.[183] Following the investigation by Parivartan, a campaign was waged by Kejriwal, Aruna Roy, and other activists across Delhi and the DJB withdrew the loan application to the World Bank.[180][181][182]

Cattles[edit]​

In 2013, Cattles plc brought a legal action against PwC in the UK in respect of 2006 and 2007 audits, claiming that PwC had failed to carry out adequate investigations.[184] Cattles, a UK consumer finance company, later discovered control weaknesses which caused its loan book to be materially overstated in its balance sheet; having been listed as a FTSE250 company, it subsequently lost its listing. PwC disputed this legal claim.[185] The claim was settled out of court on undisclosed terms.[186]
The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) issued a fine of £2.3m on PwC and ordered the firm to pay £750,000 costs following their investigation of the 2007 audits of Cattles and its principal trading subsidiary. PwC admitted their "conduct fell significantly short of the standards reasonably to be expected of a member firm" in respect of the 2007 financial statements. The FRC said that PwC had insufficient audit evidence as to the adequacy of loan loss provisions.[187]

Quinn Insurance[edit]​

In 2015, PwC Ireland was sued by the joint administrators of Quinn Insurance Limited (QIL) for €1bn. Having been audited by PwC for the years 2005 to 2008, QIL went into administration in 2010. The administrators alleged that PwC should have identified a material understatement of QIL's provisions for claims.[188][189]

Connaught plc[edit]​

Connaught plc, a UK former FTSE 250 Index outsourcing company operating in property maintenance for the social housing and public sector, was put into administration in 2010 after reporting material losses. In 2017, the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) severely reprimanded PwC and its audit partner following an investigation of their conduct in respect of the 2009 audit of Connaught. PwC was fined a record £5 million plus costs.[190]

Tesco[edit]​

In 2014, Tesco, a UK retailer, announced that it had overstated profits by £263m by misreporting discounts with suppliers. The Financial Reporting Council started an investigation into accounting practices at Tesco and into the conduct of PwC in carrying out its audits in 2012, 2013 and 2014.[191] Two members of Tesco's Audit Committee, responsible for monitoring Tesco's relationship with its auditors, had themselves previously worked for PwC, including its chairman, Ken Hanna; he later stood down.[192] In 2015 PwC were replaced as auditors of Tesco, ending a 32-year engagement, following a tender process to which they did not participate.[193] In June 2017, the Financial Reporting Council said there was no "realistic prospect" that a tribunal of the UK's accountancy watchdog would rule against the auditor PwC concerning its involvement in Tesco's 2014 case.[194]

Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ[edit]​

In 2014, The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ was investigated by New York banking regulators over its role in routing payments for Iranian customers through its New York branch in violation of U.S. sanctions. It was found that PwC had altered an investigation report on the issue; PwC itself was fined $25 million in relation to the matter.[195]

Luxembourg Leaks[edit]​

Main article: Luxembourg Leaks


One of the tax rulings of Luxembourg Leaksnegotiated by PwC

The firm helped multinational companies obtain 548 legal tax rulings in Luxembourg between 2002 and 2010. The rulings provided written assurance that the multinational companies' tax-saving plans would be seen favorably by the Luxembourg authorities. The companies saved billions of dollars in taxes with these arrangements. Some firms paid less than one percent tax on the profits they shifted to Luxembourg. Employees or former employees of PwC provided documentation of the rulings to journalists.[196][197] In 2013 and 2014, PwC UK's head of tax was called before the UK's public accounts committee and was questioned about lying regarding the marketing of these tax avoidance schemes. He told the committee the financing, investments, and tax structure is legal and well known to the British government. "If you want to change the Lux tax regime, the politicians could change the Lux tax regime."[198] The disclosures attracted international attention and comment about tax avoidance schemes in Luxembourg and other tax havens. The revelations later led to a series of EU-wide measures aimed at regulating tax avoidance schemes and tax probes into several EU companies. In 2016, PwC initiated charges against the two whistleblowers that revealed the LuxLeaks tax controversy, and they were convicted and sentenced with suspended prison sentences and fined. In March 2017, a Luxembourg appeals court upheld the convictions of the two whistleblowers, but with reduced sentences.[199]

Petrobras Brazil[edit]​

In 2015, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation of Microsoft founder Bill Gates sued oil company Petrobras and accounting firm PwC's Brazil arm over investment losses due to corruption at the Brazilian oil company. The filings also alleged that PwC's Brazil affiliate, PricewaterhouseCoopers Auditores Independentes, played a significant role by attesting to Petrobras financial statements and ignoring warnings.[200]

Gay marriage in Australia[edit]​

In 2016, Luke Sayers, then CEO of PwC Australia,[201][202] had the firm prepare a report projecting the excessive cost of a plebiscite on gay marriage.[203] Mark Allaby, a senior executive at PwC, left the board of the religious lobbying organisation Australian Christian Lobby, a group campaigning against same-sex marriage, following public outrage and pressure from PwC Australia.[204]

Centro Properties Group[edit]​

In 2007, shopping center giant Centro understated its liabilities by more than $3 billion and almost collapsed when it was unable to refinance its debt during the global financial crisis.[205] PwC was Centro's auditor and admitted negligence. In 2012, Centro and PwC paid a $200 million settlement to resolve the shareholder class action, the largest ever in Australia.[206]

BHS[edit]​

In 2016, PwC in the UK was investigated by the Financial Reporting Council over its conduct in relation to the audit of BHS for the year to 30 August 2014. PwC completed their audit of financial statements in which BHS was described as a going concern days before its sale for £1 to a consortium with no retail experience. BHS collapsed the following year with a substantial deficit in its pension fund.[207]

MF Global malpractice lawsuit[edit]​

In 2016, a United States federal judge rejected PwC's bid to dismiss a $3 billion lawsuit accusing the accounting firm of professional malpractice for helping cause the October 2011 bankruptcy of MF Global, a brokerage once run by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine.[208][209][210]

BT Italy[edit]​

BT Group (British Telecom), a client of PwC, reported in 2017, that profits in its Italian subsidiary had been over-stated by £530 million. BT reportedly sought the immediate replacement of PwC as auditors following a breakdown of trust, but had existing commercial relationships with the other Big 4 firms which would have prevented their early appointment.[211] BT subsequently stated that its audit would be put out to tender to identify a replacement for PwC,[212] In June 2017, the Financial Reporting Council began an investigation of PwC's audits of BT covering the years 2015 through 2017.[213]

Best Picture announcement error[edit]​

See also: 89th Academy Awards § Best Picture announcement error
At the 89th Academy Awards in 2017 La La Land was incorrectly announced as the winner of Best Picture after PwC partner Brian Cullinan gave presenters Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway the wrong envelope. PwC was responsible for tabulating the results, preparing the envelopes, and handing them to presenters.[214] It was called "as bad a mess-up as you could imagine."[215] The firm took "full responsibility" for handing the presenters the wrong envelope and apologized for the error,[216] acknowledging that Cullinan and PwC partner Martha Ruiz did not follow protocols for correcting the error quickly. In March 2017, the board of governors for the Academy voted to retain the services of accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, despite the mix-up, saying "new protocols have been established including greater oversight from PwC's U.S. chairman Tim Ryan."[217]

Lezo Case[edit]​

In 2017, PwC Spain was investigated by the Spanish National Court as part of the Lezo Case for participating in and profiting from the embezzlement of public funds to illegally finance the People's Party (PP) political party in the Community of Madrid.[218]

PrivatBank[edit]​

PwC Ukraine had its audit license removed by the National Bank of Ukraine in July 2017 for its alleged "verification of misrepresented financial information" leading to a $5.5 billion balance-sheet hole in PrivatBank.[219] The government of Ukraine had had to rescue PrivatBank by nationalisation in 2016 to protect its 20 million customers.[220]

Colonial Bank audit[edit]​

In 2017, the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama held PwC liable for professional negligence in its audit of Colonial Bank, which failed in 2009, after filing materially false financial information with the SEC. In 2018, a federal judge later ordered PwC to pay the FDIC $625 million, the largest-ever judgement against a U.S. audit firm.[221] The FDIC reached a $335 million settlement with PwC in March 2019.[222]

Age discrimination lawsuit[edit]​

In 2018, PwC was accused of disproportionately hiring younger workers and fostering "an age-conscious workplace in which youth is highly valued."[223] Plaintiffs estimated that younger applicants are over 500% more likely to be hired than candidates over age 40. In March 2019, a collective action related to the case was certified by a federal judge in San Francisco.[224]

Luke Sayers' AVP investment review[edit]​

In 2018, PwC Australia CEO Luke Sayers was connected to perceived conflict of interest issues on a related to a personal investment in Australian Visa Processing (AVP),[225] a company part-owned by PwC that was submitting a tender to redesign and run Australia's visa processing system that is potentially worth billions of dollars, which would result in a significant financial advantage for its investors.[226] This investment led to a "storm inside the firm",[227] interjection by PwC Global and a review by PwC Australia of its personal investment policy for partners.[227] The option to invest had not been offered to all partners or even the entire firm.[225] A review was announced around the way partners make personal investments.[225][228]

Improper audit services in US[edit]​

During 2019, PwC's US affiliate agreed to pay more than $7.9 million to the US regulator, SEC, to settle allegations that it improperly performed IT and other non-audit services for several audit clients.[229]

Angola corruption[edit]​

In 2020, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) leaked over 700,000 internal documents revealing that PwC had facilitated multiple dealings in which Isabel dos Santos, the daughter of the former president of Angola, made a fortune while in charge of the state oil company, Sonangol. Dos Santos established a network of over 400 companies to facilitate tax evasion and the steering of millions of dollars of Angolan state contracts to companies under her control.[230] Her husband, Congolese businessman and art collector Sindika Dokolo, made millions from a suspiciously one-sided partnership with the state diamond company, Sodiam, to buy a stake in Swiss luxury jeweler De Grisogono.[231] After ICIJ's revelations, PwC indicated it would terminate its relationship with Dos Santos.[230]

Watchstone[edit]​

In August 2020, a £63 million-worth suit was filed by Watchstone (formerly known as Quindell) against PwC. PwC is sued for conspiring against a former client; according to the suit, the company released information about the client to a competitor in the course of a takeover approach.[232]

MBC Group[edit]​

During November 2017, PwC was engaged in due diligence and valuation of the media company, MBC Group, owned by Saudi businessman, Waleed bin Ibrahim Al Ibrahim, who was allegedly held against his wishes at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh as part of an attempt to coerce him into selling it to the Saudi Crown Prince.[233]

JD Classics[edit]​

In July 2021, PwC was sued by administrators Alvarez and Marsal on behalf of JD Classics, a UK-based car dealership, for negligence related to audits in 2016 and 2017.[234] A failure to identify fraud at the company led to losses of £41m. PwC responded with a statement that "this claim [lacks] merit and [we] will be vigorously defending it."[235]

Lobbying revolving door[edit]​

In 2021, an investigation by the New York Times found that PwC staff sought employment at the Treasury Department where they pursued policies that helped PwC clients. After completing their time at the Treasury Department, the staff were promoted to partner at PwC.[236]

Evergrande[edit]​

In October 2021, the accounting regulator in Hong Kong announced an investigation into PwC's audit of Evergrande, a Chinese property company. PwC had signed off the 2020 accounts of Evergrande without reference to its uncertainties as a going concern. The company itself reported concerns as to its ability to continue operating in its half-year accounts for 2021.[237][238]

South African Airways[edit]​

The Zondo Commission report on state capture in South Africa uncovered several instances of alleged corruption, fraud and mismanagement at South African Airways (SAA). The report found that PwC effectively enabled capture of SAA by failing to adequately audit its financial and accounting processes between 2012 and 2016.[239]

Kier and Galliford Try[edit]​

In June 2022, the UK's Financial Reporting Council fined PwC and a former partner, Jonathan Hook, over audit failures relating to construction firms Galliford Try and Kier Group. PwC was fined just over £3m for failing to adequately challenge revenue and costs recognised by Galliford Try's management on large, complex long-term construction contracts during 2018 and 2019 audits, and fined £1.96m for similar failures during the 2017 audit of Kier. Both fines were reduced (from £5m and £3.35m respectively) to reflect PwC's cooperation with the investigation.[240]

Americanas (AMER3) controversy[edit]​

In January 2023, the firm was involved in a controversy when it approved Americanas' (AMER3) balance sheets with accounting inconsistencies of around US$4 billion. This caused volatility to company's price on the Brazilian stock exchange and losses to the company's shareholders. After verifying the impacts caused, the CVM (Brazilian body that regulates the stock exchanges) opened investigations against the company's auditors to determine responsibilities.[241][242][243]

Australia tax leak scandal[edit]​

Main article: PwC tax scandal
In 2023, it was revealed that a PwC partner, who was a member of consultation groups set up by the Australian Treasury to improve tax laws, had been leaking confidential government tax plans to PwC. The data leaked by the PwC partner included new taxation rules to close loopholes which allowed multinational companies to avoid paying tax.[244]
After PwC completed an internal investigation in July 2023, eight partners, including former chief executive Tom Seymour, were removed from the partnership.[245][246] In July 2023 PwC sold its Australian government consulting business to Allegro Funds for $1 with the business rebranded Scyne Advisory.[247][248]

Aiding Russian oligarchs[edit]​

PwC's Cyprus unit helped dozens of Russian oligarchs to shuffle their wealth and evade sanctions after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[249][250] PwC helped Alexey Mordashov transfer a $1.4 billion investment out of his name in order to elude EU sanctions.[249] PwC also helped two oligarchs who were instrumental to the waging of Russia's war in Ukraine to hide $100 million.[249]
After the start of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, on March 7, 2022, PwC stated that "under the circumstances, PwC should not have a member firm in Russia and consequently PwC Russia will leave the network." On April 29, PwC Russia announced the withdrawal of the brand from the PwC network, and on June 30, a legal agreement was signed on the withdrawal of the firm in Russia from the network.[251] A week later, on July 5, 2022, PwC Ukraine announced the final exit of the company from Russia: "PwC no longer has a firm in Russia: on 4 July 2022 all aspects of the departure of the former PwC firm in Russia have been completed".[252] In addition, PwC member firms outside of Russia have refrained from doing any work for sanctioned Russian entities or individuals. The company said that any sanctions against specific Russian entities or individuals imposed anywhere in the world would be applied everywhere in the world. However in 2023 it emerged that PWC helped Russian Oligarchs to avoid sanctions.[253] PwC also stopped working in Belarus, where its staff consisted of 25 people.[254]

Curacao fraud[edit]​

PwC helped billionaire Hushang Ansary allegedly defraud a pension fund in Curacao by setting up shell companies that drained the fund.[255]
 

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I think I made an error earlier by theorizing this picture might have been original metadata from June 1st, 1996. I just checked to see if there was an embedded obit and there was, meaning that they created this date of June 1st, 1996 when they created this picture of Jessica Sachs. One of the Price Waterhouse 5. This obit was embedded in the picture when they created the file, meaning nothing is original in Sachs picture. My guess is they probably made all 5, Jessica Sachs included, on 9.13.2001. This also indicates they were aware of the Metadata on the pictures and intentionally left it on, all of it being manipulated. Why they didn't just scrub all the pictures of all Metadata Exif/IPTC data? That's a good question.

sachs.jessica.jpg the.Price.Waterhouse.Five.jpgsachs.jessica.911.OBIT.embedded.Metadata.jpg
 

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