I think this is a good idea, myself.
It would put a public name and face to these folks who tanked a company and now want big bonuses.
Make them file a lawsuit to get those contractually-obligated bonuses.
I mean if you hired a contractor to build a house and the plumbing and electricity didn't work, would you still feel the need to honor that contract. No, you wouldn't.
I don't think any of them would have the guts to do it.
So, withhold the bonuses AIG. And make your executives sue you for it.
You owe that much to the American people for bailing out your corporation.
Ambinder wrote on
http://politics.theatlantic.com/2009/03/a_modest_proposal_for_aig.php:Mar 16 2009, 12:30 pm by Marc Ambinder
A Modest Proposal For AIG
AIG claims that it promised bonuses to its derivative traders and that it can't break its contracts. Sounds like AIG is using legal formalism to avoid a messy court fight. Contracts, like promises, are often broken when premises change. Financial products brought the firm down; why hasn't AIG informed the people in that unit that if they want their bonuses, they're going to have to sue to get them?
In other words, if the collapse of the company is an insufficient condition on which to base the breaking of a contract, then the contracts themselves aren't worth anything to the company.
What's the worst that could happen? The "bad guys" -- the derivative traders -- would take AIG to court. But forcing the traders to sue for the money they don't deserve turns them into the villians here, as they'd be named plaintiffs. In all likelihood, AIG would, at some point in the future, settle many of these lawsuits, but not until a good number of the plaintiffs were shamed to the point of dropping a chunk of them