Whoops! According to a state official, they seem to have been perfectly legal after all. More: Ragamuffin Studies doesn't think Richard Blumenthal has much in common with Friedrich Hayek on the Rule of Law question.
Connecticut law and those AIG bonuses
Related Entries:
- Stress Tests and Managerial Distraction
- Letting Nonbanks Be Nonbanks
- Suing for Settling
- AIG, Government Rescues, and Billion Dollar Copiers
- Financial Crisis Lessons for Prosecutors
- Treasury's Coloring Book
- Supreme Court Ethics Act of 2013
- Recklessly Jailing Bankers
- Are big-bank prosecutions following in the troubled footsteps of FCPA enforcement?
- New Podcast: What's wrong with Dodd-Frank?
- Maybe that AIG case isn't so crazy?
- AIG's Attitude of Gratitude
- Dodd-Frank Disappointments
- This Week's Dodd-Frank Implementation Hearings
- MetLife fires 4,300 citing uncertainty and overregulation
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Rafael Mangual Project Manager, Legal Policy rmangual@manhattan-institute.org |
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Communications Manhattan Institute communications@manhattan-institute.org |