My column this weekend is about the Solyndra scandal, and why I think it should be investigated as a criminal fraud. That would include a significant securities fraud angle: President Obama's speech at Solyndra on May 26, 2010, was grossly misleading at a time when it was known that independent auditors had issued dire warnings about the failing solar-panel business's chances of survival and when Solyndra's Obama-connected backers were trying to sell the company's stock on market.
Now there's more: The Daily Caller reports that Solyndra actually sought a second federal loan in the astronomical sum of $469 million (which would have aggregated to well over $1 billion in taxpayer financing, for a company that was gushing red ink and was careening toward inevitable bankruptcy). The Daily Caller got the info from Solyndra's SEC filing — and the site reports that the filing does not make clear whether the company got the second loan … and that Solyndra did not return the Daily Caller's call to inquire.
Keep reading this post . . .
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