9
   

Is the Head of the IMF a Sex Criminal?

 
 
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 08:35 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
I am pretty sure that the head of the IMF does not travel alone, he most likely had a posse, one of who gave him a phone to call his wife. The Port Authority Police did not need to let him do it though.

He was not in NY on IMF business, so he may have been traveling alone.

After you are arrested you must be given at least one phone call--so you can call a lawyer, if you want to. So, if the Port Authority Police didn't let him make a call, the NYPD would have let him do so.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 08:40 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
If the new IMF chief is a woman, we might not see the sort of difficulty DSK is in.


If the new head of the IMF is a woman she might be safe from some maid crying rape but her top people would not be.

If I was a high profile IMF employee I would get nerve for good reason every time I pass a maid in the hallway of a hotel in NYC.

Male or female head it still would made sense to move the headquarters out of the US.
BillRM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 08:50 pm
@firefly,
As a French citizens he also have the right under international agreements to contact the French Embassy and off hand I remember reading that they did visited him when he was in custody.
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 08:52 pm
@BillRM,
Quote:
If I was a high profile IMF employee I would get nerve for good reason every time I pass a maid in the hallway of a hotel in NYC.

It sounds like the top level at IMF needs a better ethics code.
Quote:
New York Times
May 29, 2011
At I.M.F., a Strict Ethics Code Doesn’t Apply to Top Officials
By GRAHAM BOWLEY

At the International Monetary Fund, there is one set of ethics guidelines for the rank-and-file staff and another for the 24 elite executive directors who oversee the powerful organization.

Over the last four years, the fund has tightened internal systems for catching ethical misconduct among its 2,400 staff members, establishing a telephone hot line for complaints like harassment; publishing details of complaints in an annual report; and empowering an ethics adviser to pursue allegations, which last year led to at least one dismissal.

But the fund’s board members remain largely above these controls. The ethics adviser, for example, is not able to investigate any of them.

The board is responsible for policing its own directors as well as the managing director. It has a five-person ethics committee, whose work is confidential. And the only way the board can discipline its members is to write a warning letter to them or to their home countries, or the group of countries that appointed them.

“There are a lot of controls in place when it comes to the staff, but not for the leadership,” said Katrina Campbell, a compliance and ethics expert at Global Compliance.

The I.M.F.’s ethics policy has come under intense scrutiny in recent weeks since the arrest of its managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, on charges of sexually assaulting a hotel housekeeper in New York. Mr. Strauss-Kahn, who denies the charges, has resigned his position at the fund.

In 2007, Ms. Campbell carried out a study of the fund’s ethics policies for the fund’s Independent Evaluation Office. It found that the board lacked satisfactory procedures for disciplining its own members or the managing director for ethical lapses. The report criticized the board’s code of conduct as vague, saying that it “reads, for the most part, as a set of recommendations, rather than rules” and that the board lacked effective enforcement procedures.

In contrast, it praised the staff code of conduct as detailed and offering “a plethora of policies and procedures.”

Until several years ago, the managing director’s position was ambiguous in terms of ethics policy. The person holding that post is both chairman of the executive board and head of the staff, and it was not clear which code of conduct applied, Ms. Campbell said.

But when Mr. Strauss-Kahn was selected for the top spot in November of 2007, the staff code of conduct was written into his contract, she said, although ultimately he remains answerable only to the board.

In 2008, not long after Mr. Strauss-Kahn assumed the top post, the fund was compelled to investigate him for having an affair with a staff subordinate. In that case, the fund hired an outside law firm to handle the inquiry because the ethics officer was not authorized to investigate at that high level. Although Mr. Strauss-Kahn was found not to have abused his position, he was publicly reprimanded by the board for showing poor judgment, and he apologized.

Since then, the law firm, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, has been brought in to investigate several other matters at the fund, according to a person familiar with the situation who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. None of the matters concerned Mr. Strauss-Kahn, this person said, and the cases were not related to allegations of sexual misconduct or affairs.

A spokesman for the fund, William Murray, declined to comment except to say ethics investigations might potentially cover complaints of abuse like intimidation or aggressive behavior. In January 2009, the executive board formally adopted procedures for ethics investigations: they would be conducted by an outside consultant who reported to the ethics committee.

The fund’s ethics adviser, currently Virginia R. Canter, a former White House associate counsel, publishes an annual report detailing staff complaints. Last year, for example, the ethics adviser pursued 30 allegations of misconduct, resulting in 10 disciplinary actions, including at least one firing.

In 2009, a complaint made to the fund’s ethics hot line involved the conduct of a member of the executive board, according to the ethics adviser’s 2009 published report.

That complaint was referred to the board’s ethics committee. It would have been up to the committee to decide whether to bring in an outside investigator to look into the allegation; it is unclear whether it did so in this case.

As an international organization, the fund’s legal status is complicated. Though it is based in Washington, not all the laws of the United States apply to it. Unlike the staff, the directors are appointed by their home governments rather than the fund and so do not have an exclusive duty of loyalty to the fund. This places great importance on its internal codes of ethical conduct.

The fund insists its codes are strong and that in matters of workplace conduct the executive directors are held to the same high standards as the staff. The code for the board for instance says that directors are expected “to maintain the highest standards of integrity.” They should also “treat their colleagues and the staff with courtesy and respect, without harassment, physical or verbal abuse.”

This month, the ethics rules for lower-level staff members were tightened, making a close personal relationship with a subordinate a potential conflict of interest that had to be reported. Other updates included protections for staff members against retaliation when they allege misconduct.

But the executive board’s code has not been modified since 2003. It does not state specifically whether a close personal relationship with a staff member poses a potential conflict of interest that must be reported.

The board’s ethics committee was established in 1998. But the internal report found that by 2007 the committee had “never met to consider any issues other than its own procedures.” The fund said it could not disclose whether the committee had met since then, because its work is confidential.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/30/business/global/30fund.html?_r=2&hpw
BillRM
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 09:01 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
It sounds like the top level at IMF needs a better ethics code.


This is different from any other large organization including likely the NYC DA office and special victim unit for that matter?

With special note of all the leaks of informations to the press that occur in the first week or so of DSK arrest.


0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 09:16 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
He was not in NY on IMF business, so he may have been traveling alone.
Doubtful on both counts....DSK flew from Turkey and was headed back to Europe for the conference, he was in NYC for only one day which was listed as personal yet no one knows why he went to so much trouble. Was he doing all that flying because he wanted to call some NYC sluts to his room to play? Can the man not get any action in Europe? Most likely what happened is that DSK was deep into negotiation on solving the Euro mess, and he needed to do some wheeling and dealing with somebody on WallStreet. I am remembering that one of the banks was intimately involved with Greece financing over the last few years. Because it was a secret negotiation DSK can not give out the reason he was in NY for the day. And because he was doing IMF work and not in NY chasing slut he might have brought an assistant with him.
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 09:28 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
And because he was doing IMF work and not in NY chasing slut he might have brought an assistant with him.

The IMF denied he was in NYC doing work for them that weekend. There has been no mention of anyone being with him.
Quote:
Because it was a secret negotiation DSK can not give out the reason he was in NY for the day

DSK has made no public statements since his arrest, other than to say he is innocent of the charges. I am sure his lawyers have told him not to make statements about anything else. That makes more sense than your "secret negotiations" theory.

Maybe he wanted to see his daughter--she lives in NYC. He had lunch with her before he was arrested. He might also have spent time with her prior to that.


hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 09:52 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
The IMF denied he was in NYC doing work for them that weekend. There has been no mention of anyone being with him.
If he listed the trip as personal to cover for secret negotiations then yes, the IMF would say that he was not doing IMF work. That however does not mean that he was not working. Some reports have had it that he was traveling with at least one member of his staff, but accounts have been sketchy on this.
Quote:
I am sure his lawyers have told him not to make statements about anything else. That makes more sense than your "secret negotiations" theory.

Him not saying anything post arrest is not related to the question of why did he fly round trip trans Atlantic for just one day in NYC. Secret negotiations makes a hell of a lot more sense than that he had the itch for NYC. You might have heard that their has been wide grumbling amongst the French Journalism community about the need for so many to spend the summer in NYC covering the DSK affair....it seems that the French dont like your city very much, consider it far inferior to European cities. I dont see DSK breaking ranks and loving it enough to spend all that time flying for one lousy day in NYC. He must have had a good reason...like he had someone he needed to talk to,
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 09:53 pm
This writer, a Wall Street whistleblower, suggests that in another era Dominique Strauss-Kahn might have gotten away.
Quote:
Strauss-Kahn: No "Friends In The Right Places" In New York
By Edward Manfredonia
05-25-11

[Policing Wall Street]

The current imbroglio involving Dominique Strauss-Kahn, ex-Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, brings to mind the striking difference between the treatment accorded to Strauss-Kahn by the office of the Manhattan District Attorney, Cyrus Vance Jr., and the treatment accorded to one Robert VanCaneghan also an alleged sexual predator by Vance’s predecessor, Robert Morgenthau.

There could not be a greater contrast.

Strauss-Kahn allegedly attacked a hotel worker at the Sofitel, a luxury hotel in New York City. The press has described her as a maid. Yes, she was a room cleaner and an immigrant. But she had one of New York City’s most powerful unions, Local 6 of the Hotel Workers Union, behind her.

Strauss-Kahn was one of the most powerful individuals in international finance. As Managing Director of the IMF he literally controlled the fate of countries- and of the Euro. This was accomplished by the power of the IMF in lending billions of dollars to countries, which are having severe economic problems- including such Western countries as Greece and Ireland.

Robert VanCaneghan was a member of the Board of the American Stock Exchange and a partner in the Amex specialist firm, Miceli-VanCaneghan. While VanCaneghan was a millionaire, he did not have the wealth and status of Strauss-Kahn. But he had friends in high places, who had raised millions of dollars for President Bill Clinton. And in the plutocracy, which rules America, it is your friends, who can save you from prison.

And while VanCaneghan admitted to the alleged rapes and sexual assaults of female employees to members of the Board of the American Stock Exchange, including such heavyweights as Paul Volcker, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve; Richard Ravitch, former Lieutenant Governor of the State of New York; Herbert Allison, current Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability; Harvey Silverman, a billionaire and former managing director of Spear Leeds and Kellogg; and other such heavyweights, Strauss-Kahn has denied the charges of sexual assault and unlawful imprisonment.

But there was one statement, I learned, which VanCaneghan made to his victims that was chilling. VanCaneghan boasted to his alleged victims that Morgenthau --then the Manhattan District Attorney-- would never charge him with rape and sexual assault. VanCaneghan even boasted that Morgenthau was a good friend of Arthur Levitt, then Chairman of the Amex.

VanCaneghan also warned that the Amex would ruin their families. One alleged victim’s father was employed by a Wall Street firm. Another alleged victim’s brother was a partner in a small Amex specialist unit, which was involved in major tax fraud. The livelihoods of their relatives would be ruined.

So having been warned that Morgenthau would not investigate the alleged rapes, I went to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Several of the alleged victims of VanCaneghan’s sex crimes assured me that they would cooperate with the FBI.

Even though I provided the name of an individual, who had witnessed one alleged sexual assault that occurred on the premises of the Amex to the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the names of six alleged victims of VanCaneghan’s predations, to United States Attorney General Janet Reno, no grand jury was empanelled to charge VanCaneghan with violation of the civil rights of these women in addition to the charges of rape and sexual assault.

VanCaneghan was never charged with the rapes. He had boasted of the influence of Levitt and Morgenthau. As revealed in one of my previous columns both also failed to investigate the alleged laundering of drug money by VanCaneghan and his partner, Louis Miceli.

So it is here that the most important difference between VanCaneghan and Strauss-Kahn must be emphatically stated. Strauss-Kahn was not a friend of powerful people on Wall Street who could help him or in the Manhattan DA's office.

So in the U.S. we have the worst kind of crony capitalism- one in which millionaires can get away with practically all sorts of crimes.

So much for lecturing Muslim countries about democracy and women’s rights.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manfredonia was a trader on Wall Street who was ousted after he became a whistleblower.
http://blackstarnews.com/news/123/ARTICLE/7395/2011-05-25.html
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 10:04 pm
@hawkeye10,
If the IMF said he was not in NYC on business, why are you trying to manufacture intrigue?
It may come out eventually why he was in NYC, if it is relevant to the case. But, otherwise, what difference does it make why he was there? It's not related to whether he assaulted the hotel maid.

Had he been with an assistant, that person would likely have been staying at the Sofitel Hotel--and you would have heard about that person. He appears to have gone to the airport without anyone accompanying him.
Quote:
...it seems that the French dont like your city very much, consider it far inferior to European cities.

My city? What are you talking about? You really are anti-American, aren't you?
hawkeye10
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 10:15 pm
@firefly,
Quote:
My city? What are you talking about
My memory is that it is established that you are from NYC.
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jun, 2011 10:17 pm
@hawkeye10,
Quote:
My memory is that it is established that you are from NYC.

Your memory is wrong.
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 12:58 am
@firefly,
firefly wrote:

Quote:
My memory is that it is established that you are from NYC.

Your memory is wrong.
**** happens.....
0 Replies
 
hawkeye10
 
  0  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 02:49 am
Quote:
Forums: News, Men With Grudges Against Women, Another Gold Digging Woman, Money Hungry Women, Creepy Men
We now have a nearly 2000 post long thread with not a single good tag......You gotta love the Jr High tactics of the small minded who feel the need to protect their ignorance.
spendius
 
  0  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 06:13 am
@hawkeye10,
How about "Stir to thicken" hawk?
0 Replies
 
engineer
 
  1  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 07:15 am
@hawkeye10,
hawkeye10 wrote:

Quote:
Forums: News, Men With Grudges Against Women, Another Gold Digging Woman, Money Hungry Women, Creepy Men
We now have a nearly 2000 post long thread with not a single good tag......You gotta love the Jr High tactics of the small minded who feel the need to protect their ignorance.

You created the thread. Why didn't you tag it the way you wanted from the start?
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 07:48 am
@hawkeye10,
hawkeye10 wrote:

Quote:
Forums: News, Men With Grudges Against Women, Another Gold Digging Woman, Money Hungry Women, Creepy Men
We now have a nearly 2000 post long thread with not a single good tag......You gotta love the Jr High tactics of the small minded who feel the need to protect their ignorance.


It's all a matter of perspective of what makes a tag good. I thought it was an entertaining discovery to wake up to.
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  1  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 09:42 am
Quote:
The New York Times
May 28, 2011
French System Tints View of the Strauss-Kahn Case
By SCOTT SAYARE

PARIS — The sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, which continues to crowd out much other news here, is becoming something of a civics lesson in American justice — one that has inspired both biting criticism and some respect.

Legal experts say much of the consternation here over what many consider rough treatment in the news media and the courts is rooted in a general unfamiliarity with an American justice system that differs profoundly — in procedure, tone and philosophy — from the French model.

“There is an aspect of pageantry that we don’t have in our country,” said Judge Marie-Blanche Régnier, who is national secretary of a French magistrates trade union.

While the American justice system has its origins in British common law and involves ordinary citizens at almost every level, the French judicial system is rooted in the Napoleonic Code and is largely conducted behind closed doors. Suspects are typically ushered into courthouses through discreet side entrances, out of view of the public.

State-appointed magistrates prosecute and pass judgment in most trials without the oversight of citizen jurors, who serve only in the most serious cases. In such cases, formal charges come — if they come — only after a lengthy inquest by an investigating judge, who collects evidence on behalf of both the prosecution and defense before determining if a trial is warranted.

And in further contrast to the American system, investigating magistrates are legally bound to secrecy during an inquest.

All too often, critics say, the French system allows cases against well-known people to go nowhere or result in reduced charges without explanation. “For the powerful,” Judge Régnier said, “there is a treatment that can be different.”

Because the magistrates are considered impartial investigators, and are tasked with seeking the truth without bias, the defense typically does not conduct a separate investigation.

Building their arguments primarily on evidence collected by investigating magistrates, and only rarely introducing significant evidence of their own, French lawyers seldom attack the credibility of witnesses or plaintiffs, a common tactic in American court cases.

“We’re going to see the man who could have been the embodiment of the French left obligated — because it’s the American judicial system that wants it — to crush this woman,” Jean-Dominique Merchet, a deputy editor at the weekly magazine Marianne, said on France Info radio. “It’s going to be terrifying.”

Much also has been made here of the 74-year sentence that Mr. Strauss-Kahn, who stepped down as the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, could face if convicted on all counts. American audiences pay little heed to such numbers. But French law puts far stricter limits on sentencing, and discrepancies between maximum terms and sentences as they are handed down are often less drastic.

Noting that the Manhattan district attorney is elected, many French also see the influence of politics in the muscular approach taken toward Mr. Strauss-Kahn, accused by a hotel housekeeper of attacking her in his room.

The “deliberate destruction” of Mr. Strauss-Kahn would probably be a “very winning” electoral strategy, Robert Badinter, a Socialist senator and former justice minister, said on France Inter radio.

Bradley D. Simon, a New York defense lawyer and former federal prosecutor, said some American lawyers also disliked the “theatrics of the criminal justice system.”

But he rejected French assertions that Mr. Strauss-Kahn had been unfairly singled out. Rather, Mr. Simon said, he is being “treated as badly as everyone else.”

The European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly criticized the French judiciary as lacking independence.

Writing on his blog after Mr. Strauss-Kahn was arrested, the respected Paris magistrate Philippe Bilger praised the diligence of an American system that “does not hesitate to apprehend even the most emblematic personalities with lightning speed.”

In France, he said, such people “would have had the time to prepare their truth or their lie.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/29/world/europe/29france.html

I really was not aware of how significantly the American criminal justice process differs from the French. I did not realize that the French system lacks the strong adversarial (prosecution vs defense) nature on which our criminal justice process rests, nor to what extent the French system lacks citizen involvement,nor to what extent it is shrouded in secrecy--not just in sexual assault cases, but all criminal matters.
So, I found this article very illuminating and helpful in increasing my understanding of the French system, and in explaining why the French reacted so strongly, and negatively, to the way things are done in this country. If a very prominent American had been similarly accused in France, I also might well have reacted with shock or horror about the way they were handling the case, simply because these radical differences would be so unfamiliar to me, and might, therefore, strike me as being wrong.
engineer
 
  3  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 11:11 am
@firefly,
It seems like the French system would routinely miss physical evidence just because it is so slow to act. Assuming some of the media reports are true, the NYPD got physical evidence from the hotel room including blood and sperm and was able to investigate DSK for injuries while they were still fresh. It seems like a system like described in the article would have been unable to arrest DSK in time to evaluate his back injury nor would the judge have acted quickly enough to collect evidence from the hotel room. In a "he said, she said" case, that evidence could make all the difference.
BillRM
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 4 Jun, 2011 11:37 am
@engineer,
You mean they would not have pull DSK off a plane just on the word of a maid alone.

They would have to investigated a little bit first!!!

Shame on them as any man freedoms should depend on any woman word.

Footnote there would be no need to get a warrant to search/examine a hotel room as long as the Hotel management grant the police permission as after DSK check out he would have no rights concerning the room at least under US law.
 

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