jewish bankster Fred (the shred) Goodwin embarrasses his gangster cousin

Started by yankeedoodle, March 25, 2023, 03:41:32 PM

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yankeedoodle

Here is a excerpt from an Aangirfan article about Sir Fred Goodwin, a jewish bankster who fucked up the Royal Bank of Scotland, and, it turns out, he is a cousin of 'one of Scotland's most feared gangsters', 'ruthless crime kingpin' Grant Mackintosh.

Excerpt:
QuoteBANKERS; TSB; HENRY DUNCAN; RBS; FRED GOODWIN; BCCI
http://aanirfan.blogspot.com/2018/04/bankers-tsb-henry-duncan-rbs-fred.html

And what about Sir Fred Goodwin?



Sir Fred Goodwin (left), who has German Jewish origins, helped to damage the Royal Bank of Scotland.

On 7 June 2009, the Sunday Mail revealed that shamed banker Sir Fred Goodwin is a Scots gangster's cousin

Sir Fred Goodwin, former boss of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), is a cousin of 'one of Scotland's most feared gangsters', 'ruthless crime kingpin' Grant Mackintosh.

The pair grew up less than a mile apart in Paisley, in Scotland.

Goodwin presided over the loss of £24.1billion while running RBS – the biggest loss in British corporate history.

Mackintosh's uncle Archie was Goodwin's grandad, making the pair cousins.

Mackintosh has been 'a leading figure in Scotland's criminal underworld' for 25 years.

He is a convicted drugs baron and was at one time the biggest cannabis distributor in the country.

Mackintosh was a suspect in the gangland execution of John Hall and David McIntosh who were found dead in Larkhall, Lanarkshire, in 2001.

During Goodwin's tenure, RBS became the world's fifth-largest bank, and Goodwin became very rich indeed.



Goodwin grew up in the notorious Ferguslie Park, in Paisley (Ferguslie_P)

Sir Fred Goodwin was chief executive of the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) from 2001 to 2008.

His mother was of German Jewish heritage. (Fred Goodwin - Wikipedia)






Ex-crime lord Grant Mackintosh says ex-RBS banker cousin is now the family black sheep
Former crime boss Grant Mackintosh says he has former RBS chief Fred Goodwin to thank for no longer being the black sheep of the family.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/crime/ex-crime-lord-grant-mackintosh-9846053

He was one of the most feared crime bosses in Scotland with a reputation for ruthless violence and arson attacks.

But reformed hood Grant Mackintosh has claimed he is no longer the black sheep of the family.

The 60-year-old convicted drug baron said he's been usurped by his cousin – disgraced ex-Royal Bank of Scotland chief Fred Goodwin.

This month marks 10 years since the start of the financial crisis which led to the £45billion bailout of RBS by taxpayers.

The family connection was revealed by the Sunday Mail in 2009 but neither party has been willing to discuss it – until now.

Mackintosh said: "I was no angel and ended up in jail.

"I come from a close family and I gave my loved ones some worrying times.

"But what Fred was responsible for was on a different scale.

"I think the family will be more embarrassed with him than me now – he almost wrecked the entire economy."

Goodwin, nicknamed Fred the Shred, presided over RBS's loss of £24.1billion in 2008 – the biggest in UK corporate history.

Goodwin resigned in disgrace and was stripped of his knighthood four years after the debacle when a forfeiture committee said he was an "exceptional case".

Mackintosh – nicknamed Mr P – and Goodwin grew up within a mile of each other in Paisley's Ferguslie Park.

Fed Goodwin presided over RBS's loss of £24.1billion in 2008
The former crook's uncle Archie was Goodwin's grandad – making the pair first cousins once removed.

One went on to forge a controversial career as the banking industry's toughest boss while the other ended up at the centre of the town's notorious drug wars in the 90s.

Mackintosh was one of the country's biggest cannabis importers and counted footballers as his friends.

At the same time, Goodwin was living up to his Fred the Shred moniker as a cost-cutter, briefly making RBS the world's largest bank before their sudden collapse.

Mackintosh, who was accused of firebombing a local newspaper because he didn't like its coverage, was sentenced to seven years for supplying drugs in 1985 and was jailed again for three years in 1993.

He added: "I haven't seen Fred since we were both teenagers. We'd only ever see each other at family get-togethers.

"He was quiet and didn't really say much. I was proud when I saw how well my cousin was doing in banking.

"Most of the guys I knew were only interested in robbing banks, not running them.

"But I cringed when I saw the role he played in the RBS collapse. His recklessness overshadowed anything I've ever done – millions of lives were affected.

"I could've done a better job than him.