Here we would like to show you a collection of different corporate scandals committed around the world. It’s easier to see once you put all of the puzzle pieces together. Many of these scandals are swept under the rug so we hardly hear about them in the news.

The Dutch slave traders are the creators of corporations as it is their business plan. They own every single corporation due to the fact that the Dutch VOC was the only company able to give out loans to the private city of London Corporation. London had to pay 10% interest on loans and the Dutch only 4% or 5%. They’re all pirates with suits on.

Read all of the information on this website and if you like the Pirates of the Caribbean, watch them again and see what you think.

Over the years the information we have shared with the people was under constant attack. Pages that have been removed or articles that were changed. By copying it to this website we can also see any changes they make in the future. Mandela effect, they keep changing it over time and make out we are all crazy claiming nothing has changed.

Facts don’t lie, we just have to see the information before we believe it, which is fair enough. Full disclosure for you to make up your own mind and please take this information to the workplace and see if it matches what we have been saying about corporations or limited companies. See how many liesaretoldand think to yourself, is this doing your Karma any good? The boomerang always makes it’s way back. If you lie, you will be lied to. But there is no need for it,is there? Why not tell the truth?

The Corporation

The documentary shows the development of the contemporary business corporation, from a legal entity that originated as a government-chartered institution meant to affect specific public functions to the rise of the modern commercial institution entitled to most of the legal rights of a person. The documentary concentrates mostly upon North American corporations, especially those in the United States.

The Corporation examines and criticizes corporate business practices. The film’s assessment is affected via the diagnostic criteria in the DSM-IV; Robert D. Hare, a University of British Columbia psychology professor and a consultant to the FBI, compares the profile of the contemporary profitable business corporation to that of a clinically diagnosed psychopath (however, Hare has objected to the manner in which his views are portrayed in the film; see “Critical reception” below).

The Corporation attempts to compare the way corporations are systematically compelled to behave with what it claims are the DSM-IV’s symptoms of psychopathy, e.g., the callous disregard for the feelings of other people, the incapacity to maintain human relationships, the reckless disregard for the safety of others, the deceitfulness (continual lying to deceive for profit), the incapacity to experience guilt, and the failure to conform to social norms and respect the law.

List of major corporate collapses

The first part is from Wikipedia. Note how they only mention Great British slavery and yet slavery was against the law in England. You will a dramatic change after the 1970’s.

The following list of corporations involved major collapses, through the risk of job losses or size of the business, and meant entering into insolvency or bankruptcy, or being nationalised or requiring a non-market loan by a government.

For mobiles click here

Medici BankRepublic of Florence Florence1494BankingOwned by the Medici family, it ran up large debts due to the family’s profligate spending, extravagant lifestyle, and failure to control the managers, their bank went insolvent. 
Mississippi CompanyKingdom of France FranceSep 1720ColonialismScottish economist John Law convinced the French government to support a monopoly trade venture in Louisiana. He marketed shares based on great wealth, which was highly exaggerated. A speculative bubble grew and then collapsed, and Law was expelled. 
South Sea CompanyKingdom of Great Britain Great BritainSep 1720Slavery and colonialismAfter the War of Spanish Succession, Great Britain signed the Treaty of Utrecht 1713 with Spain, ostensibly allowing it to trade in the seas near South America. In fact, barely any trade took place as Spain renounced the Treaty, however this was concealed on the British stock market. A speculative bubble saw the share price reach over £1000 in August 1720, but then crash in September. A Parliamentary inquiry revealed fraud among members of the government, including the Tory Chancellor of the Exchequer John Aislabie, who was sent to prison. 
Dutch East India CompanyNetherlands Batavian Republic31 December 1799ColonialismThis huge early publicly listed multinational company founded in 1602 fell victim of declining markets in the late 18th century, internal corruption and excessive distribution of dividends (in excess of its profits), and finally Anglo-Dutch wars. It was nationalised by the Batavian Republic in 1796 but nevertheless closed down at the end of 1799. 
Overend, Gurney & CoUnited Kingdom United KingdomJune 1866BankingAfter Samuel Gurney‘s retirement, the bank invested heavily in railway stocks. It went public in 1865, but was badly affected by a general fall in stock prices. The Bank of England refused to advance money, and it collapsed. The directors were sued, but exonerated from fraud. 
Friedrich Krupp AGGerman Empire Germany1873Steel, metalsKrupp’s business over-expanded, and had to take a 30m Mark loan from the Preußische Bank, the Bank of Prussia. 
DanatbankGermany Germany13 July 1931BankingAt the start of the Great Depression, after rumours about the solvency of the Norddeutsche Wollkämmerei & Kammgarnspinnerei, there was a bank run, and Danatbank was forced into insolvency. 
Allied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining CorpUnited States United States16 Nov 1963CommoditiesCommodities trader Tino De Angelis defrauded clients, including the Bank of America into thinking he was trading vegetable oil. He got loans and made money using the oil as collateral. He showed inspectors tankers of water, with a bit of oil on the surface. When the fraud was exposed, the business collapsed. 
Herstatt BankWest Germany West Germany26 June 1974BankingSettlement risk. Counterparty banks did not receive their USD payments, where Herstatt had received DEM earlier, prior to government forced liquidation. 
Carrian GroupHong Kong Hong Kong1983Real estateAccounting fraud. An auditor was murdered, an adviser committed suicide. The largest collapse in Hong Kong history. 
TexacoUnited States United States13 April 1987OilAfter a legal battle with Pennzoil, whereby it was found to owe a debt of $10.5 bn, Texaco went into bankruptcy. It was later resurrected and taken over by Chevron. 
QintexAustralia Australia1989Real estateQintex CEO Christopher Skase was found to have improperly used his position to obtain management fees prior to the $1.5 billion collapse of Qintex including $700m unpaid debts. Skase absconded to the Spanish resort island of Majorca. Spain refused extradition for 10 years during which time Skase became a citizen of Dominica. 
Lincoln Savings and Loan AssociationUnited States United States1989BankingFinancial institution that went bust following the Keating Five scandal. 
Polly PeckUnited Kingdom United Kingdom30 Oct 1990Electronics, food, textilesAfter a raid by the UK Serious Fraud Office in September 1990, the share price collapsed. The CEO Asil Nadir was convicted of stealing the company’s money. 
Bank of Credit and Commerce InternationalUnited Kingdom United Kingdom5 July 1991BankingBreach of US law, by owning another bank. Fraud, money laundering and larceny. Better known as BCCI. 
NordbankenSweden Sweden1991BankingFollowing market deregulation, there was a housing price bubble, and it burst. As part of a general rescue as the Swedish banking crisis unfolded, Nordbanken was nationalised for 64 billion kronor. It was later merged with Götabanken, which itself had to write off 37.3% of its creditors, and is now known as Nordea. 
Barings BankUnited Kingdom United Kingdom26 Feb 1995BankingAn employee in Singapore, Nick Leeson, traded futures, signed off on his own accounts and became increasingly indebted. The London directors were subsequently disqualified, as being unfit to run a company in Re Barings plc (No 5). 
Bre-XCanada Canada1997MiningAfter widespread reports that Bre-X had found a gold mine in Indonesia, the stories were found to be fraudulent. 
LiventCanada CanadaNovember 1998EntertainmentIn November 1998, Livent sought bankruptcy protection in the US and Canada, claiming a debt of $334 million. Garth Howard Drabinsky, co-founder of Livent, was convicted and sentenced to prison for fraud and forgery. A judgment has been obtained against Deloitte & Touche LLP in respect of Deloitte’s negligence in conducting the audit for Livent’s 1997 fiscal year. 
Long-Term Capital ManagementUnited States United States23 Sep 1998Hedge fundAfter purporting to have discovered a scientific method of calculating derivative prices, LTCM lost $4.6bn in the first few months of 1998, and required state assistance to remain afloat.$3.6 billion
FlowTexGermany GermanyFebruary 2000MachineryFlowTex operated a Ponzi scheme in which non-existing construction equipment was sold to investors in order to immediately be leased back by FlowTex. This required an exponentially growing number of investors to afford the lease payments. The fraud was the largest corporate scandal in German history and caused financial damages of about 4.9bn DM (≈€3.3bn). 
Equitable Life Assurance SocietyUnited Kingdom United Kingdom8 Dec 2000InsuranceThe insurance company’s directors unlawfully used money from people holding guaranteed annuity rate policies to subsidise people with current annuity rate policies. After a House of Lords judgment in Equitable Life Assurance Society v Hyman, the Society closed. Though never technically insolvent, the UK government set up a compensation scheme for policyholders under the Equitable Life (Payments) Act 2010. 
CINARCanada CanadaMarch 2001AnimationMicheline Charest and Ronald Weinberg, the co-founders of this animation studio, were accused of transferring over $120 million to the Bahamas without the approval of its board of directors.[1] The company was later sold in 2004 to a consortium that includes Nelvana founder Michael Hirsch and was subsequently renamed Cookie Jar Group.[2] Cookie Jar in turn was acquired in 2012 by what is now called WildBrain. In 2016, Weinberg was sentenced to 8 years and 11 months in prison, and is currently on parole.[3] 
HIH InsuranceAustralia Australia15 March 2001InsuranceIn early 2000, after increase in size of the business, it was determined that the insurance company’s solvency was marginal, and a small asset price change could see the insurance company become insolvent. It did. Director Rodney Adler, CEO Ray Williams and others were sentenced to prison for fraudulent activity. 
Pacific Gas and Electric CompanyUnited States United States6 April 2001EnergyAfter a change in regulation in California, PG&E determined it was unable to continue delivering power, and despite the California Public Utilities Commission‘s efforts, it went into bankruptcy, leaving homes without energy. It emerged again in 2004. 
One.TelAustralia Australia29 May 2001TelecommsAfter becoming one of the largest Australian public companies, losses of $290m were reported, the share price crashed, and it entered administration. In ASIC v Rich[4] the directors were found not to have been guilty of negligence. 
SwissairSwitzerland Switzerland2 Oct 2001AviationOverexpansion in the late 1990s and the aftermath of the September 11 attacks led to a dramatic fall in share prices. In 2007, several of the company’s board members were charged over the airline’s bankruptcy.[5] Assets were taken over by subsidiary Crossair which became Swiss International Air Lines, eventually purchased by Lufthansa of Germany. 
EnronUnited States United States28 Nov 2001EnergyDirectors and executives fraudulently concealed large losses in Enron’s projects. A number were sentenced to prison.[6][7]$63.4 billion
Chiquita Brands IntUnited States United States28 Nov 2001FoodAccumulated debts, after a series of accusations relating to breaches of labour and environmental standards. It entered a pre-packaged insolvency, and emerged with similar management in 2002.[8] 
KmartUnited States United States22 Jan 2002RetailAfter difficult competition, the store was put into Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, but soon re-emerged. 
Adelphia CommunicationsUnited States United States13 Feb 2002Cable televisionInternal corruption. The Directors were sentenced to prison.[7][9] 
Arthur AndersenUnited States United States15 June 2002AccountingA US court convicted Andersen of obstruction of justice by shredding documents relating to the Enron scandal. 
WorldComUnited States United States21 July 2002TelecommsAfter falling share prices, and a failed share buy back scheme, it was found that the directors had used fraudulent accounting methods to push up the stock price. Rebranded MCI Inc, it emerged from bankruptcy in 2004 and the assets were bought by Verizon. 
ParmalatItaly Italy24 Dec 2003FoodThe company’s finance directors concealed large debts. 
MG Rover GroupUnited Kingdom United Kingdom15 April 2005AutomobilesAfter diminishing demand, and getting a £6.5m loan from the UK government in April 2005, the company went into administration. After the loss of 30,000 jobs, Nanjing Automobile Group bought the company’s assets. 
Bayou Hedge Fund GroupUnited States United States29 Sep 2005Hedge fundSamuel Israel III defrauded his investors into thinking there were higher returns, and orchestrated fake audits. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a court complaint and the business was shut down after the directors were caught attempting to send $100m into overseas bank accounts. 
RefcoUnited States United States17 Oct 2005BrokerAfter becoming a public company in August 2005, it was revealed that Phillip R. Bennett, the company’s CEO and chairman, had concealed $430m of bad debts. Its underwriters were Credit Suisse First Boston, Goldman Sachs, and Bank of America Corp. The company entered Chapter 11 and Bennett was sentenced to 16 years in prison. 
Bear StearnsUnited States United States14 Mar 2008BankingBear Stearns invested in the sub-prime mortgage market from 2003 after the US government had begun to deregulate consumer protection and derivative trading. The business collapsed as more people began to be unable to meet mortgage obligations. After a stock price high of $172 a share, it was bought by JP Morgan for $2 a share on 16 March 2008, with a $29bn loan facility guaranteed by the US Federal Reserve. 
Northern RockUnited Kingdom United Kingdom22 Feb 2008BankingNorthern Rock had invested in the international markets for sub-prime mortgage debt, and as more and more people defaulted on their home loans in the US, the Rock’s business collapsed. It triggered the first bank run in the UK since Overend, Gurney & Co in 1866, when it asked the UK government for assistance. It was nationalised, and then sold to Virgin Money in 2012. 
IndyMacUnited States United States11 July 2008BankingIndyMac invested heavily in Alt-A mortgages and reverse mortgages. After many of these loans failed and couldn’t be sold during the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis the company had to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. 
Lehman BrothersUnited States United States15 Sep 2008Banking

Lehman Brothers’ financial strategy in from 2003 was to invest heavily in mortgage debt, in markets which were being deregulated from consumer protection by the US government. Losses mounted, and Lehman Brothers was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after the US government refused to extend a loan. The collapse triggered a global financial market meltdown. Barclays, Nomura and Bain Capital purchased the assets which were not indebted.

 
AIG[7]United States United States16 Sep 2008InsuranceOut of $441 billion worth of securities originally rated AAA, as the US sub-prime mortgage crisis unfolded, AIG found it held $57.8 billion of these products. It was forced to take a 24-month credit facility from the US Federal Reserve Board. 
Washington MutualUnited States United States26 Sep 2008BankingFollowing the sub-prime mortgage crisis, there was a bank run on WaMu, and pressure from the FDIC forced closure. 
Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS)United Kingdom United Kingdom13 Oct 2008BankingFollowing the takeover of ABN-Amro, and the collapse of Lehman Bros, RBS found itself insolvent as the international credit market seized up. 58% of the shares were bought by the UK government. 
ABN-AmroNetherlands NetherlandsOct 2008BankingAfter a takeover battle between Banco Santander, Fortis and RBS, ABN-Amro was split up and divided between the banking consortium. Fortis and RBS were found to be heavily indebted due to the sub-prime mortgage crisis. Fortis was split and the Dutch part of Fortis was taken under government ownership by The Netherlands, thus reinstating the company in ABN-Amro The Belgian part was taken over by BNP-Paribas. RBS was taken under government ownership by the UK. 
Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLCUnited States United StatesDec 2008SecuritiesTricked investors out of $64.8 billion through the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

Investors were paid returns out of their own money or that of other investors rather than from profits.

Bernie Madoff told his sons about his scheme and they reported him to the SEC. He was arrested the next day.

$64.8 billion
BankwestAustralia Australia2008BankingFollowing the purchase of Bankwest by the Commonwealth Bank Of Australia (CBA), there have been calls for a royal commission specifically into the conduct of bank following allegations made that the CBA engineered defaults of Bankwest customers in order to profit from clawback clauses under the purchase agreement. 
NortelCanada Canada14 Jan 2009TelecommsFollowing the financial crisis of 2007–2008, and allegations over excessive executive pay, demand for products dropped. 
Anglo Irish BankRepublic of Ireland Ireland15 Jan 2009BankingAfter the financial crisis of 2007–2008, the bank was forced to be nationalised by the Irish government. 
ArcandorGermany Germany9 June 2009RetailAfter struggling to maintain business levels at its brand names Karstadt and KaDeWe, Arcandor sought help from the German government, and then filed for insolvency. 
Hypo Real EstateGermany Germany5 October 2009BankingDepfa, one of the companies subsidiaries ran into liquidity problems in 2008 as a result of the financial crisis. This combined with heavy losses reported by Hypo Real Estate itself led to a bailout by the Deutsche Bundesbank and later to a complete nationalization of the company. 
SchleckerGermany Germany23 Jan 2012RetailAfter continual losses mounting from 2011 Schlecker, with 52,000 employees, was forced into insolvency, though continued to run. 
DynegyUnited States United States6 July 2012EnergyAfter a series of attempted takeover bids, and a finding of fraud in a subsidiary’s purchase of another subsidiary, it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. It emerged from bankruptcy on 2 October 2012. 
China Medical Technologies (CMED)Cayman Islands Cayman Islands27 July 2012Medical technologyIn 2009, an anonymous letter alleging possible illegal and fraudulent activities by management since 2007 was sent to KPMG Hong Kong, then CMED’s auditor, and investigated by law firm Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison. Since 27 July 2012, pursuant to an Order by the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands, CMED has been under the control of Joint Official Liquidators. Post-bankruptcy filing, CMED’s liquidator found itself probing an alleged $355 million insider fraud. In March 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice criminally indicted the CMED founder and CEO, as well as former Chief Financial Officer, charging them with securities fraud and wire fraud conspiracy for stealing more than $400 million from investors as part of a seven-year scheme. 
Banco Espírito Santo (BES)Portugal Portugal3 August 2014BankingAn audit performed in 2013, for a capital raise performed in May 2014, uncovered severe financial irregularities and a precarious financial situation of the bank. In July 2014, Salgado was replaced by economist Vítor Bento, who saw BES in an irrecoverable situation. Its good assets were bought by Novo Banco, a vehicle founded by Portugal’s financial regulators for that purpose, on August 3, which hired Bento as CEO, while its toxic assets stayed in the “old” BES, which got its banking license revoked by Portugal’s regulators. 
Dick SmithAustralia Australia5 January 2016RetailOn 5 January 2016, the retailer collapsed and was placed into receivership. McGrathNicol were appointed as administrators by the company’s board and Ferrier Hodgson appointed by the company’s major creditors National Australia Bank (NAB) and HSBC Bank Australia. 
TheranosUnited States United StatesSeptember 2018Health careTheranos claimed to have developed devices to automate and miniaturize blood tests using microscopic blood volumes. Theranos dubbed its blood collection vessel the “nanotainer” and its analysis machine the “Edison”. Elizabeth Holmes, founder and CEO, reportedly named the device “Edison” after inventor Thomas Edison, stating, “We tried everything else and it failed, so let’s call it the Edison.”[10] This was likely because of a well-known Edison quote: “I’ve not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” 
WirecardGermany GermanyJune 2020Banking, Money transfer€1.9 billion, which apparently never existed, were found missing in a special audit. The CEO was arrested, the board filed for insolvency, and a warrant for the missing COO was issued.

List of scandals without insolvency

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group scandal involving misleading file notes in the Financial Ombudsman Service (Australia) presented to the Victorian Supreme Court.[11]

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group allegations of racial bigotry toward billionaire businessman Pankaj Oswal and his wife. Court was presented with emails where an ANZ staff member comments to ANZ CEO Mike Smith: “We are dealing with Indians with no moral compass and an Indian woman as every bit as devious as PO (Mr Oswal).”[12][13][14]

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group toxic culture. Court case where allegations were made by ex-employees that the bank’s senior management tolerated drugs and strip clubs.[15]

Australia and New Zealand Banking Group alleged manipulation of the Australian benchmark interest rates. ANZ is currently being pursued by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, which filed an originating process in the Federal Court of Australia against ANZ in March 2016.[16][17][18]

BAE Systems bribery scandal related to the Al-Yamamah arms deal with Saudi Arabia

Bristol-Myers Squibb accounting scandal[9]

British Airways, for the “Dirty Tricks” scandal against Virgin Atlantic

Brown & Williamson, for chemically enhancing the addictiveness of cigarettes, becoming the leading edge of the tobacco industry scandals of the 1990s, eventually resulting in the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement

ChevronTexaco Lago Agrio oil field pollution scandal

Commonwealth Bank of Australia facts uncovered that showed the insurance arm of the bank denied life insurance policy holders despite having legitimate claims, resulting in calls for a Royal Commission into the Australian insurance industry.[19]

Commonwealth Bank Of Australia provision of unsuitable financial advice to a large number of customers between 2003 and 2012 and continuous delay in providing compensation to victims.[20]

Compass Group, bribed the United Nations in order to win business

Corrib gas controversy Kilcommon, Erris, Co. Mayo, Ireland

Deutsche Bank, spying scandal

Deutsche Bank Libor scandal, agreed to a combined US$2.5 billion in fines

Duke Energy[9]

El Paso Corp.[9]

Fannie Mae, underreporting of profit

Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, part of the General Motors streetcar conspiracy, labor controversies, Firestone and Ford tire controversy

Forced labour under German rule during World War II, financial enrichment by several major companies

Ford Pinto, fuel tank scandal

Financial Ombudsman Service (Australia) scandal involving misleading file notes in the Financial Ombudsman Service (Australia) presented to the Victorian Supreme Court.[11]

Global Crossing[9]

Guinness share-trading fraud

Hafskip‘s collapse

Halliburton[7][9] overcharging government contracts

Harken Energy Scandal[7]

HealthSouth reporting exaggerated earnings

Hewlett-Packard spying scandal

Hospital Corporation of America[21]

Homestore.com[9]

KBC Bank human rights scandal[22]

Kerr-McGee, the Karen Silkwood case

Kinney National Company financial scandal

Lernout & Hauspie accounting fraud

Lockheed bribery scandal in Germany, Japan, and Netherlands

Livedoor scandal

Luxembourg Leaks. Luxembourg under Jean-Claude Juncker‘s premiership had turned into a major European centre of corporate tax avoidance.[23]

Marsh & Mclennan

Merck Medicaid fraud investigation[9]

Mirant[9]

Morrison-Knudsen scandal. Led to William Agee‘s ouster

Mutual-fund scandal (2003)

Nestlé

Nugan Hand Bank

Olympus Scandal

Options backdating involving over 100 companies

Pacific Gas and Electric Company, 2017 California wildfires, 2018 California wildfires

Panama Papers International. Leak of hundreds of thousands of confidential documents pertaining to the bank accounts and companies held by politicians, High-net-worth individuals and other people, some in off-shore tax havens.[24] The focus was Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca.

Paradise Papers leak

Peregrine Systems[7][9] corporate executives convicted of accounting fraud

Phar-Mor[7] company lied to shareholders. CEO eventually sentenced to prison for fraud and company eventually became bankrupt

Qwest Communications[9]

RadioShack CEO David Edmondson lied about attaining a B.A. degree from Pacific Coast Baptist College in California

Reliant Energy[9]

Rite Aid[7] accounting fraud

Royal Dutch Shell overstated its oil reserves twice, it downgraded 3,900,000,000 barrels (620,000,000 m3), or about 20 percent of its total holdings.

S-Chips Scandals, Singapore

Satyam Computers, India

7-Eleven Australia. Allegations of bullying tactics, underpayment of wages and entitlements.[25]

Siemens Greek bribery scandal, involving cases of bribery on behalf of Siemens towards the Greek Government

Société Générale, derivatives trading scandal causing multibillion-euro losses

Southwest Airlines, violations of safety regulations

SunTrust Banks, “claims of shoddy mortgage lending, servicing and foreclosure practices.”[26]

Tesla Inc., involving “420 funding secured” private buyout scheme resulting in fraud charges against CEO Elon Musk[27]

Tyco International, executive theft and prison sentence[7][9]

Union Carbide, the Bhopal disaster

ValuJet Airlines, loading live oxygen generators into cargo hold of passenger jet causing fatal crash

Volkswagen emissions violations, fraud in diesel motors pollution measurements

David Wittig “looting” scandals

Xerox[7][9] alleged accounting irregularities involving auditor KPMG, causing restatement of financial results for the years 1997 through 2000 and fines for both companies