Kristen Breitweiser
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This was really wrong.
We're owed back compensation, okay?
We go, takes us two years to get that through Congress, okay?
We get there, we get almost a unanimous vote in the House.
It goes over to the Senate and the bill gets hijacked.
And I use that word purposely, it got hijacked.
It got hijacked by that same group of lawyers and plaintiffs who had sold their judgments to the hedge fund.
And out of nowhere,
totally unwarranted, they asked to get this lump sum payment for themselves.
Even though they were never wrongfully excluded from the fund, they were never owed back payments from the fund, they were allowed to get what's called the Beirut-Kobar catch-up payment worth $3 billion.
The $3 billion to pay ultimately, in my opinion, some of these hedge funds in the Cayman Islands and also some victims too that didn't sell their judgments, right, comes from U.S.
taxpayer dollars.
$3 billion.
Come on.
So it gets worse.
I believe that it's definitely possible because the SEC documents talk about this particular group of victims getting approached to sell their judgments.
The SEC talks about the contractual agreements of the sale of the judgments.
And when you look at the numbers, sometimes like I'm really good at like seeing patterns and then like looking at evidence and then undoing it and like going back and trying to figure out things.
It just so happens that the groups that are mentioned in the SEC documents happen to be the highest paid groups of victims of terrorism, which first off makes no sense because they're military and military live on kind of like
humble economic damage, like their economic damages are very small as compared to civilians who were working on Wall Street on 9-11.