The collapse of First NBC Bank was not a sudden financial shock-it was a slow, concealed unraveling hidden behind regulatory filings, accounting assumptions, and public confidence. Once one of Louisiana's most prominent regional banks, First NBC appeared stable to customers and investors alike. Only after its failure did regulators, auditors, and investigators uncover the depth of its internal weaknesses.This investigative nonfiction account traces the rise and fall of First NBC Bank using publicly available regulatory reports, court records, financial disclosures, and post-closure analyses. It examines how concentrated lending, complex tax-credit financing, deferred tax asset assumptions, and governance breakdowns quietly accumulated over time-revealing how institutional vulnerabilities can persist even under active supervision.Rather than focusing solely on courtroom drama, this book follows the full lifecycle of a modern bank failure: the warning signs missed or underestimated, the FDIC receivership process, the criminal and civil proceedings that followed, and the long-term financial consequences borne by the banking system and the surrounding community. Readers are taken inside the technical realities of bank supervision, asset recovery, and regulatory oversight-where clarity often arrives only after collapse.This is not a story of a single bad decision or a single individual. It is a documented case study in how financial institutions fail gradually-through delayed risk recognition, overstretched internal controls, and systems that fail to scale alongside rapid growth. The First NBC case is placed within a broader historical and regulatory context, illustrating why similar pressures continue to challenge regional banks across the United States.Written with precision and restraint, this book avoids speculation and relies on verifiable sources to explain how financial stability can erode quietly and why transparency, governance, and oversight matter long before a bank closes its doors.For readers interested in true crime, financial investigations, banking regulation, or economic accountability, this book offers a detailed and sobering examination of institutional failure-and the lessons it leaves behind.