and he's driving a Ford Taurus?
In banks everyone is a vice president. The database admin at a bank I consulted at once was an "assistant vice president".
The title is meaningless in banking.
>>vice president of J. P. Morgan Chase
>>>and he's driving a Ford Taurus?
Speaking from experience, all too much of it, I can attest to this: he is driving a Taurus because he is house poor. All his assets are meathooked by a house befitting his station. There may be a good car, but if there is, his wife or his mother is driving it. 105% of his creditworthiness is tied up in having a house he can invite his rivals into, without being shamed.
Besides, he is only living on the Jersey side because he can't afford to live on the NY side. Meanwhile he is telling his associates that he does it because he's smart, too smart to pay NYC prices for real estate. They all believe it because they all do it.
As for the sex angle, well sure. If you lived the way they do, you'd be kinky too. It has to come out somewhere.
In another article it explains that he actually drives a limo to work. He went out and rented the Ford for the assault. In fact, he has a history of renting cars, and they are investigating if he has been assaulting other women.
and he's driving a Ford Taurus?
It was a rental.
Anyhow, banks with lots of branches and many accounts are extravagent with the "Vice President" title.
They do it for marketing reasons. Some small business owners are greatly impressed if Bill the manager at the local Chase branch who personally deals with their loan application has "Vice President" on his card.