This is an email that was sent to me by John M Ogilvie, the bank’s disgruntled former IT manager, who had recently been terminated by the bank. In his email he cites a long list of grievances that he has with the bank’s president and vice president, and offers me his advice on what to do about it. What’s significant is that none of his criticisms relate to lax compliance, or any concerns related to the bank’s customers, money laundering or tax evasion. Yet Grieve and Mckenzie used quotes from this email to falsely imply that Ogilvie had concerns with the bank’s AML compliance. The Age article included “The chickens will come home to roost” and “You will have to deal with the problems within Euro Pacific Bank Ltd. at some point.” They implied these quotes related to his concerns over the bank’s “high-risk clients” and AML violations, thus confirming the bank’s guilt and my foreknowledge of those crimes. Yet it’s obvious to anyone who reads the full email, that those comments have nothing to do with the bank’s clients or AML violations.