Perhaps we should start a pool on how long until The Morgue turns the state of Kentucky's finances into a replica of Jefferson County, Alabama. 
On July 1, JP Morgan Chase became the Commonwealth’s bank .  As the  state’s official depository, J.P. now receives all deposits, writes all  checks and makes all wire transfers on the $12-15 billion that flow  through Kentucky state government in the course of a fiscal year. It  will cut payroll checks, receive federal and other funds earmarked for  the state, and disburse educational or transportation or any other funds  to their appropriate monetary endpoints. For its trouble, the bank will  receive $1.3 million in state fees and the ability to re-lend idle  state funds out to customers for private gain.
Yes, you should be worried.
A global corporation with more than $2 trillion in assets and  operations in 60 countries, JP Morgan Chase has been a major figure in  the ongoing global financial crisis. As one of the largest private banks  in the U.S., the bank made incredible amounts of money by underwriting  many of the questionable loans (sub-prime, zero down, adjustable rate)  that fueled the American housing bubble.  It then made even more money  by packaging hundreds of these shitty loans into a single “product,” a  mortgage backed security, which it sold like Twinkies to pious religious  non-profits, filthy-rich hedge fund managers, municipal fire-fighters,  retired auto-workers, and the like, each security effectively putting  these groups on the hook—and not J.P.—for the sh**ty loans that it had  helped create.
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