http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=amp5wXx35fkcJune 26 (Bloomberg) -- In June 2008, U.S. Virgin Islands Governor John deJongh Jr. agreed to give London-based Diageo Plc billions of dollars in tax incentives to move its production of Captain Morgan rum from one U.S. island -- Puerto Rico -- to another, namely St. Croix.
DeJongh says he had no idea his deal would help make the world’s largest liquor distiller the most unlikely beneficiary of the emergency Troubled Asset Relief Program approved by Congress just four months later.
Today, as two 56-foot-high (17-meter-high) tanks for holding fermenting molasses will soon rise from the ground on the Caribbean island of St. Croix, the extent to which dozens of nonbank companies benefited from last October’s emergency financial rescue plan is just beginning to come to light.
The hurried legislation adopted by a Congress voting under the threat of sudden global economic collapse led to hidden tax breaks for firms in dozens of industries. They included builders of Nascar auto-racing tracks, restaurant chains such as Burger King Holdings Inc., movie and television producers -- and London’s Diageo.
TARP legislation results in nearly $3 billion windfall for a British rum co.
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TARP legislation results in nearly $3 billion windfall for a British rum co.
If any company should be supported by the taxpayer, it's the distillers and brewers (at least they produce something that does us all good)....BUT I hate the process....how was this part of TARP?!
I've never met a retarded person who wasn't smiling.