Matt Levine discussed this in one of his posts. During the financial crises the government asked JP Morgan to acquire a failed bank, which it did, and then the government fined JP Morgan for crimes committed by the failed bank it just acquired.
EDIT:
> Lessons from the financial crisis are still seared into management’s brain at JPMorgan. After the 2008 crisis, it got slapped with the label of a bailed-out bank profiting from taxpayers’ generosity, and it eventually paid billions of dollars of fines and legal expenses after buying Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, including a then-record $13 billion penalty over mortgage lending. The irony was that it completed the takeovers partly at the request of the government, which had encouraged JPMorgan to acquire the stressed banks to prevent further instability in the financial system.
EDIT:
> Lessons from the financial crisis are still seared into management’s brain at JPMorgan. After the 2008 crisis, it got slapped with the label of a bailed-out bank profiting from taxpayers’ generosity, and it eventually paid billions of dollars of fines and legal expenses after buying Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, including a then-record $13 billion penalty over mortgage lending. The irony was that it completed the takeovers partly at the request of the government, which had encouraged JPMorgan to acquire the stressed banks to prevent further instability in the financial system.
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2023-03-15/silico... (although Levine is quoting from a different source)