According to an article published by the Orange County Register on June 6, 2012 http://taxdollars.ocregister.com/2012/06/06/lawsuit-settled-over-little-saigon-bank-failure/156261/ A federal lawsuit alleging fraud at failed First Vietnamese American Bank was quietly settled last week.
The settlement ended a three-way dispute among the bank, key customer AmeriNet LLC and Chatsworth businessman Masih Madani.
A detailed settlement agreement says that the bank’s insurer, Travelers, will pay $750,000 to AmeriNet and $100,000 to the attorneys for former bank officers Benjamin P. Palma-Gil and Robert Flores. The agreement says Travelers already “has paid $595,841.24 in excess of the $50,000 retention for defense fees and costs.”
Madani who has always denied any wrongdoing seems to have been exhonorated by the fact that the bank's insurers paid so much to settle.
The parties dismissed the case with prejudice,meaning it cannot be refiled. With the dismissal, those accusations go away.
Information about First Vietnamese American Bank, aka FVAB, Westminster, California from various published articles and the FDIC.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Lawsuit settled over Little Saigon bank failure
Labels:
bankrupt,
Democrat,
failure,
FDIC,
First Vietnamese American Bank,
FVAB,
Innovative,
Masih Madani,
MasterCard,
merchant,
OPUS,
Orange County,
processing,
Republican,
Walter Hannen,
Westminster
Monday, June 4, 2012
FDIC having consented, FVAB insurance pays to settle case the failed bank brought against innocent customers in 2008 to distract from its lending practices
On Monday, June 4, 2012, Judge Andrew J. Guilford of the
United States District Court ordered the dismissal of the case first filed by
FVAB back in 2008. The case much publicized
by the Orange County Register http://www.ocregister.com/articles/madani-279476-bank-first.html
was filed by FVAB in 2008 as a diversion
and an attempt to blame others for its officers and directors lack of competence, its fail lending practices and failure to comply with banking regulations. The fact which resulted in the California
Department of Financial Institutions takeover of FVAB and appointing FDIC as
the receiver of the bank in November of 2010 after a multitude of Cease and
Desists and Consent Orders against the bank since it first opened its doors in 2005.
The settlement agreement which was accepted by the Judge
dismissed the consolidated case with prejudice.
The legal team representing FVAB collected more than $700,000 in legal
fees from FVAB’s insurance company while losing the case. At the end FVAB’s insurance company paid the
defendants over $1.5 million to settle the case in an effort to avoid potential larger losses.
The case against all the defendants including Masih Madani,
David Kerlin, Terry Roddy, OPUS Financials, and Amerinet was dismissed with prejudice. Although this is a vindication for the
defendants, in reality it is somewhat bitter sweet. The defendants have been living with the
negative publicity hanging over their heads for the last four years. Even though the defendants were
never proven guilty in a court, they were guilty and were punished until
proven innocent! Although the law allows
for the defendants to file claims against FVAB for the false accusations, FVAB
no longer exists as an entity, so there is no one to go after.
Meanwhile, FVAB officers and directors continued to collect fat
paychecks for the more than two years the case was pending before the banks
failure.
The whereabouts of the banks officers and directors are unknown.
This further proves how broken the American legal system not to mention the banking system are.
Labels:
bankrupt,
Democrat,
failure,
FDIC,
First Vietnamese American Bank,
FVAB,
Innovative,
Masih Madani,
MasterCard,
merchant,
OPUS,
Orange County,
processing,
Republican,
Walter Hannen,
Westminster
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