A.I.G.–the insurance giant which received $182 billion in government bailout money at the height of the 2008 financial crisis–announced late Wednesday that it will not sign on to a $25 billion lawsuit being filed against the government by the company’s former CEO.
News of the lawsuit provoked widespread outrage when The New York Times first reported A.I.G. was considering joining Maurice “Hank” Greenberg’s lawsuit accusing the New York Fed of being a “loan shark” that harmed AIG’s shareholders by charging an “exorbitant” 14.5% interest rate for its taxpayer-funded loan.
“It’s honestly hard to talk about this issue on television,” the Washington Post’s Ezra Klein said, “because you can’t curse and it’s hard to talk about it without using any of the seven words you can’t say.” Instead he called Greenberg “one of the worst villains of the financial crisis,” and his lawsuit an “appalling, appalling, disgusting, ridiculous affront to decency.”








