In filing for bankruptcy, Chrysler will be able to avoid paying back a $7 billion bailout debt owed to US taxpayers. You can read a segment of an Examiner.com article examining the topic below, or read the full post here.
You know when the sentence begins with  the words, "This revelation was buried within Chrysler's bankruptcy  filings," it can't be good news.
And it certainly is not good news for  the Obama administration or for Chrysler.
CNN is reporting that, "Chrysler  LLC will not repay U.S. taxpayers more than $7 billion in bailout money  it received earlier this year and as part of its bankruptcy filing."
 
The story goes on to detail how Chrysler  recent bankruptcy was structured, and I fear you can probably guess  the rest.
The rest being that a deal that was struck  in some back rooms in Washington leaving the U.S. tax payer with pretty  much nothing to show for the $7 billion bailout given to Chrysler so  far.
"The reality now is that the face  value [of the $4 billion bridge loan] will be written off in the bankruptcy  process," said the official, who added that the 8% equity stake  that Treasury will be receiving as part of the company's reorganization  is meant to compensate taxpayers for the lost money," CNN goes  on to report.
If you do the math, and as a journalist  I must confess that I'm really bad at math, you'll eventually arrive  at the number 350,000.
That's the number of Chrysler cars the  Federal government could have purchased with $7 billion dollars---if  you consider that each car costs $20,000.
It is hard not to wonder what 350,000  more car sales would have meant to Chrysler's business had the Fed decided  to use the money to buy cars instead of underwrite questionable---no  make that---bad loans.
It might have meant that Chrysler would  not be in bankruptcy as 350,000 car sales would have represented a serious  boost to its bottom line.
