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Author Topic: Judge: Feds Can Access Americans Swiss Accounts  (Read 2048 times)
TahoeBlue
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« on: January 05, 2009, 07:25:57 PM »

They don't want us to know is how much money is being spread around in bribes to our faithless politicians....


http://www.blnz.com/news/2008/12/04/Lawyers_Help_US_Millionaires_Swiss_3008.html
Lawyers Help U.S. Millionaires In Swiss Bank Probe
Michael Sasso
Tampa Tribune & WFLA
Dec 03, 2008 19:00 EST
TAMPA - The practice of tax law conjures images of bookish lawyers holed up in an office poring over tax codes - not the stuff of international intrigue.
But Tampa tax lawyer William Sharp Sr. finds himself wrapped up lately in a fight between the IRS and the Swiss banking system, legendary for its secrecy.
Through some recent indictments of Swiss banking officials in U.S. courts, the IRS has gotten a glimpse behind the veil of UBS AG, one of Switzerland's biggest banks. Among those indicted was Raoul Weil, head of UBS' global wealth management business.
With court testimony that Americans are sheltering millions, perhaps billions, from taxes, the U.S. government wants UBS to turn over lists of U.S. taxpayers holding UBS accounts. Some testimony suggests they number 20,000, Sharp said.
So far, UBS has refused to surrender the documents but did promise the government it would stop servicing American clients in offshore locations.
Sharp, from the offices of Sharp & Associates in Tampa's West Shore business district, finds himself in the middle of the conflict - and in great demand.
Some wealthy American taxpayers want to come clean with the IRS. They've hired his firm to help them voluntarily report assets they have in UBS accounts. He and his partners are traveling to Switzerland twice a month to review secret bank records.
The Tampa Tribune sat down to discuss the issue this week with Sharp, 55, and one of his law partners, Larry Kemm.
The talk turned to Bradley Birkenfeld, an American and UBS executive who was indicted on tax-related charges in April by a federal grand jury in Miami. Birkenfeld has been cooperating with the government and is said to have recorded names on what's being called the "Birkenfeld list."

http://abcnews.go.com/thelaw/fedcrimes/story?id=5287897&page=1
Judge: Feds Can Access Americans' Swiss Accounts

DOJ and IRS to Investigate $20 Billion in U.S. Account Holders' Assets
By JASON RYAN
July 1, 2008
A federal judge in Miami has approved a request from the Justice Department and the IRS seeking access to information about American holders of secret Swiss bank accounts.
The accounts at UBS AG hold an estimated $20 billion that has allegedly been hidden to avoid paying U.S. taxes.
"The order clears the way for the IRS to take the next steps against wealthy individuals who don't pay their taxes," IRS commissioner Doug Shulman said in a statement. "People should take notice that the secrecy surrounding these accounts is rapidly fading."
The joint Justice Department-IRS request, filed Monday at the federal court in Miami, sought permission for the IRS to authorize "John Doe" summonses against UBS seeking information from the bank. "John Doe" summonses and subpoenas are typically used when the identities of potential suspects are not known.
The judge's order allows federal investigators to obtain U.S. taxpayer bank data from Dec. 2002 through Dec. 31, 2007, but Shulman indicated that this latest step in the investigation might only be the beginning.
"The John Doe effort may help determine future actions in other areas," his statement added. "We will be taking additional steps to ferret out offshore tax avoidance beyond today's announcement involving UBS."
UBS spokesman Kris Kagel said Tuesday that the bank is aware of the judge's order and that the bank is cooperating with federal investigators.
"UBS looks forward to working with the IRS to address the summons. As we have noted, UBS takes this matter very seriously and is working diligently with both Swiss and U.S. government authorities, consistent with Swiss law and the legal frameworks for intergovernmental cooperation and assistance," his statement said.
The federal government's request came just 10 days after former UBS banker Bradley Birkenfeld pleaded guilty to conspiracy to assist his U.S. clients to avoid paying federal income and other taxes to the IRS.
Court records submitted as part of his guilty plea indicate Birkenfeld organized numerous schemes to assist his clients, including buying jewels, artwork and luxury items with funds from the Swiss accounts, while overseas, and using Swiss bank credit cards, claiming the records could not be traced by U.S. authorities.
In one case, court documents noted, "At the request of a U.S client, defendant Birkenfeld purchased diamonds using the U.S. client's Swiss bank account funds, and smuggled the diamonds into the United States in a toothpaste tube."
Birkenfeld, who worked for UBS and offered wealth management and tax services to wealthy American clients, left the Swiss banking conglomerate in 2006 to set up a separate corporation to establish offshore accounts and move the UBS funds he managed.
Birkenfeld pleaded guilty to helping Igor Olenicoff evade paying $7.2 million in taxes, and helped him conceal $200 million in assets.
Olenicoff, a successful real estate investor, was once ranked as Forbes magazine's 286th richest man in the United States. He pleaded guilty to tax evasion charges in December, and agreed to pay $52 million in back taxes and cooperate with investigators as part of his plea.
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-771680.html
Article date:
February 10, 1996
U.S. and Argentina Probing IBM; Buenos Aires Payoff Probe Seeks Testimony From Corporation in N.Y.
Authorities here are investigating possible payoffs in a $250 million contract between IBM Argentina and the Argentine Central Bank, in a complex case involving a mysterious subcontractor, a Swiss bank account and missing millions that investigators suspect may have been paid as bribes.
The case already has cost senior Central Bank and IBM Argentina officials their jobs and spawned investigations in both Argentina and the United States.
Argentine authorities are seeking permission from U.S. officials to interview IBM officials at corporate headquarters in Armonk, N.Y. Investigators at the U.S. Justice Department, meanwhile, appear to be widening their probe to include not only the ...

http://coburn.senate.gov/ffm/index.cfm?FuseAction=LatestNews.NewsStories&ContentRecord_id=a4d3ec43-802a-23ad-49a5-40b7863dc88e
...
At the World Bank's gleaming headquarters on Pennsylvania Avenue, just two blocks from the White House, the name of Leslie Pean is well known. Once a manager in the bank's Africa region, the suave and flamboyant Pean came under scrutiny in 2001, while on leave, for allegedly taking kickbacks on bank-financed projects. Pean was later fired, a bank report says, "for accepting bribes from a consulting firm in exchange for influencing the retention of a consultant on a bank-financed project." Despite the outcome, the case remains troubling. Although kickback allegations first surfaced against Pean in 1995, the bank didn't mount an aggressive inquiry until six years later.

Pean, Haitian-born, now 56, began working full time at the World Bank in 1989, at a salary of $54,000 a year. But he was an ambitious man, friends say, with a fondness for world travel, art, expensive suits, and jewelry. Over the next few years, Pean spread money around as if he had plenty of it. In 1993, he bought a $455,000 house in a leafy Virginia suburb outside Washington, then spent more than $200,000 renovating it, according to bank records and investigators. He also financed a $300,000, two-story house a few years later for a woman he knew in Africa, investigators were told.


...
According to people familiar with the inquiry, Pean admitted to bank investigators in an interview that he had between $2.5 million and $3 million in a Swiss bank account. Pean said the money belonged to his wife, Gail, however, explaining that she had inherited it from her late father in New Jersey. Witnesses said that her father was not wealthy and left only a small estate. Pean also told investigators he had given the woman in Africa only $5,000 toward her house in Guinea-Bissau.

In the end, bank officials say, investigators obtained accounts of "illicit activity" by Pean from "many" sources and documented a $12,000 payoff on a Guinea-Bissau AGETIP project. That information, along with details on Pean's spending habits, was forwarded to the Justice Department three years ago. Prosecutors there declined to pursue the leads. "They thought the case was too small," says a bank official, "[and] that we hadn't given them enough to go on." After Wolfowitz revived the case last summer, however, federal prosecutors and FBI and IRS agents began an investigation. Wolfowitz later ordered a major review of the AGETIP program, which continues to operate in six African countries, to "find out what was really going on" during the 1990s.
...
Some estimates are mind-boggling.
A Northwestern University professor, Jeffrey Winters, an expert on Indonesia, told Congress in 2004 that he believed the World Bank had lost $100 billion to corruption over the years. Old bank hands ridicule the number but say they can't estimate how much has actually been stolen; they just don't know. But Steve Berkman, a former manager of World Bank projects in Africa who later worked as a bank investigator, says the $100 billion figure is probably conservative. Berkman has seen it all--corruption, big and small--but it is a tiny bit of graft that sticks in his mind. One day, in the 1990s, while reviewing an education project in Nigeria, he came across an invoice for $2,200. "We paid $2,200 for 18 cups of tea,'' he recalls. "The bank did nothing." It makes no sense, Berkman says, that an institution with so much financial acumen can't estimate its losses due to corruption. "They can tell you how many steps a woman takes from a hut to the village water well,'' he says, "but they can't tell you something like that?"

Some links...
LAS VEGAS RJNEWS Prosecutors allege payoffs, death t...
http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/1998/Aug-07-Fri-1998/news/7989379.html
Joe Conforte is accused of setting up Swiss bank accounts to keep secret his ownership of a bordello.
The indictment said Conforte transferred $800,000 to a Swiss bank account in August 1990 and an additional $1 million in November 1990 to help finance the shell companies that fraudulently purchased the Mustang Ranch property -- Mustang Properties Inc. and A.G.E. Corp. -- as fronts for his ownership.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,918068,00.html?promoid=googlep
Of Envelopes and Packing Grates
After a corporation has agreed to make a payoff, the problem arises of how to transfer the money. Speed and secrecy are the obvious requirements for such exchanges, but sometimes the methods are astonishingly unsubtle.
...
For the big money, the delivery systems are less direct and personal. The preferred method is still the numbered Swiss bank account. It can be used by the company making payoffs as an anonymous distribution point, or company agents can set up Swiss accounts for the receivers.
http://books.google.com/books?id=uNM9ybnZxj8C&dq=%22Swiss+Bank+account%22+payoffs&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0
Corporate Crime, originally published in 1980, is the first and still the only comprehensive study of corporate law violations by our largest corporations. The book laid the groundwork for analyses of important aspects of corporate behavior. It defined corporate crime and found ways of locating corporate violations from various sources. It even drew up measures of the seriousness of crimes. Much of this book still applies today to the corporate world and its illegal behavior
http://books.google.com/books?id=uNM9ybnZxj8C&pg=PA175&lpg=PA175&dq=%22Swiss+Bank+account%22+payoffs&source=bl&ots=2ZDWOud1my&sig=bjonq1YDm8QPm-4nWUX_hnvEFkM&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result

Politicans "on the Take" generally designate a numbered Swiss Bank account as the depository for a payment, ...

Prince Bernhard's 1.1 million "commission" -- he had originally solicited a $4 million payment to facilitate a contract from the Dutch government to Lockheed -- was channeled through a Swiss lawyer and deposited in installments during 1960 and 1962  in a numbered Swiss Bank account...

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TahoeBlue
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« Reply #1 on: January 05, 2009, 07:49:40 PM »

Makes me think back to the Inslaw - PROMIS affair ...
the good ol' days...

http://www.conspiracybomb.com/normanthesis.htm

Back around March 4th, 1995, Mr. Sherman Skolnick of the
Citizens' Committee to Clean Up the Courts came out with a story
about a company called Systematics and alleged high-tech spying
being done on foreign banks. (This was covered in CN 4.22 and, so
far as I can tell, Skolnick's phone message, Hotline News at 312-
731-1100, was first to break the story.)

Here is how Skolnick's story appeared in Conspiracy Nation:

A telephone company in Arkansas is called ALLTEL. They have
a subsidiary called Systematics which is a proprietary
espionage operation of the National Security Agency [NSA].
Developed was a highly refined version of the Inslaw
software called PROMIS. Originally designed to keep track of
the caseloads of federal prosecutors, it was adapted to be
used by spy agencies to track people worldwide, by
satellite. The software has a "trapdoor" built into it. So,
the NSA arranged to sell it or give it to supposedly
friendly or other spy agencies: France, Sweden, Israel, and
others. The "trapdoor" was a sort of "Trojan Horse",
enabling U.S. espionage to spy on other spy shops.
Systematics [allegedly] adapted it to be used through low-
orbit satellites, to spy on the computers of central
banks...

...

Perhaps a better word than "trapdoor" would be "backdoor". The
software sold or given to the unsuspecting banks is said to have
had a hidden "door" through which prying eyes could enter
unannounced. This is worth emphasizing, because some have said it
would be impossible for a hacker or group of hackers to get into,
for example, a Swiss bank
. What these critics are neglecting to
factor in is this "backdoor" through which electronic burglars
possessing the "key" could easily enter. This last has not, to my
knowledge, been refuted.

...

The late White House aide Vince Foster is said to have had about
$2.73 million stashed away in a Swiss bank account. CIA hackers,
perhaps taking advantage of a "backdoor" in the bank's software,
are said to have stumbled across not only Foster's hidden account
but also hidden accounts belonging to members of Congress and
other high government officials. This, it seems, is where these
"public servants" were hiding bribe money they had illegally
received.

...
It is beyond dispute that a record number of Senators and
Representatives are suddenly announcing their respective
retirements from public office. What is more, the Norman article
which appeared in the December 1995 Media Bypass is on record as
predicting many of these retirements *before* they actually
occurred. If Jim Norman's name was Jean Dixon or Irene Hughes, he
would be everywhere on the talk shows by now, hailed for his
amazing "psychic" abilities. Yet we hear nary a word of this
remarkable story in our "free" press. To me, the very fact that
this story is not being allowed into the public dialogue -- that,
in itself, says something. Aren't the networks at least hungry
for ratings? Why won't they draw in viewers with these intriguing
and widely-believed allegations? Why too aren't members of
Congress furiously demanding the opportunity to defend their
impugned "honor"? The silence is deafening.


Reporting on the phenomena of the disappearing Congress critters,
the Washington Times, National Weekly Edition (Jan. 8-14, 1996)
declares that "Congress is going through a shakeout." There have
been, says the Times, 49 announced retirements or resignations
since the November 1994 elections. And, it adds, a dozen of them
have bowed out just recently, since Thanksgiving. Well, Times,
here are two more names to add to your "trickle that has grown
into a stream" of retirements: Associated Press reports ("Clinger
to Retire", Jan. 15, 1996) that Rep. William Clinger "said Monday
he will leave Congress after serving 18 years." The AP story
adds, as if it is an afterthought, that Rep. Pat Williams,
Montana Democrat, announced retirement plans on Saturday, Jan.
13th. Clinger says, "It's probably time for me to move on." Says
Williams, "he's homesick." The AP article also notes that the
high number of congressional retirements is the "most in a
century."

...

"For many years," he says, "[Vince Foster] had been a behind-the-
scenes go-between between the NSA, the National Security Agency,
and a company in Arkansas called Systematics -- a bank and data
processing company now owned or controlled by a telephone
conglomerate called ALLTEL... He may have had access to very
high-level code, encryption [and] other kind of computer
intelligence systems."
...
"Plus the fact," adds the controversial but respected journalist,
"that we have documented evidence of Foster making periodic, one-
day trips to Geneva. Over every 6 or 8 months he had been making
a one-day trip to Geneva. And multiple sources have confirmed
that he had at least one, if not several, Swiss bank accounts
...

According to Mr. Norman, *significant* national security issues
are lurking beneath the surface of the otherwise dropsical
Whitewater hearings. "Vince Foster, as problematic as his death
is, it's small potatoes compared to what we discovered... In
fact, former intelligence people who have been involved in
computer surveillance of foreign accounts have found *hundreds*
of Swiss, [Grand] Cayman [and] other off-shore bank accounts,
coded bank accounts, maintained on behalf of high-level U.S.
political figures. Both parties. *Many* members of Congress.
Elected officials. Appointed officials. Military officers.
Intelligence community big-shots. Wall-streeters. Bankers."
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TahoeBlue
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« Reply #2 on: January 06, 2009, 04:34:57 PM »

http://www.wehaitians.com/aristide%20secret%20bank%20accounts.html

Former hell-sent dictator Aristide secret offshore accounts and other crimes

By LUCY KOMISAR

Originally, how Haiti was looted with the help of Shell Companies and Secret Bank Accounts and U.S. corporations.

(Lucy Komisar is a New York journalist who since 1997 has written about offshore bank and corporate secrecy and money-laundering and how the offshore system enables international financial crime and corruption as well as drug and arms trafficking, corporate fraud, terrorism, dictatorship, and tax evasion. She is a founder and member of the steering committee of the Tax Justice Network, an international NGO that opposes offshore tax evasion by corporations and the wealthy.)

Add former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to the long list of corrupt and repressive officials who have used western banks and companies and offshore tax havens to plunder their countries and launder the stolen money.

Aristide and his associates looted government coffers, wrote checks to front companies for nonexistent purchases, padded invoices to get kickbacks from vendors, secretly owned companies that cheated Haiti of taxes, and laundered the money they stole through shell companies and secret bank accounts set up in the U.S. and the offshore tax havens of Turks and Caicos and the British Virgin Islands.

Aristide's corruption is documented by incorporation papers, copies of bank checks, bank transfer documents, invoices, company payment statements, and sworn testimony.

Nearly $20 million has been documented as stolen between 2001, when Aristide took office as president for the second time, and 2004, when he fled or was forced out of the country according to varying accounts.

An administrative commission of inquiry says that at the beginning of the chain of transfers, ex-director general of the government bank Rodnée Deschineau moved $19 million in government funds through the accounts of Aristide's governmental "Private Secretary Account." I have copies of twelve checks drawn on that account from 2001 to 2002 and cashed by the Bank of the Republic of Haiti for sums of $100,000 to $600,000, and totaling $4,662,000.

The information, including the private secretary checks, was collected by the Central Unit of Financial Information (UCREF), an agency set up, as in other countries in recent years, to investigate money laundering, and by the Administrative Commission on Inquiry (Commission d'Enquete Administrative) headed by former Haitian senator Paul Denis. Denis was charged by the current government with investigating corruption during the Aristide years. His report says Aristide and his collaborators transferred $17,489,415 abroad.

The Haiti investigators' mandate till now has been to look at events during Aristide's second term. However, the attorneys in the lawsuit have the option of using the discovery process to look into earlier practices, including during the 1990s when Aristide was in exile, when he continued his first term (1994 to 96), and when his close associate Rene Préval was president (1996 and 2001). This would likely considerably increase the amounts involved.

The documents are the basis of a Haitian government lawsuit filed in Miami Nov. 2, 2005, under the U.S. RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) statute. The defendants are listed at the end of this report. The Haitian government seeks to recoup the stolen money plus penalties allowed by the law. Allegations also appear in a New Jersey lawsuit filed by a former employee of IDT, a U.S. telecommunications company accused of paying kickbacks to Aristide.

Payoffs to Aristide or his associates were also made by drug traffickers, according to the testimony of half a dozen Haitians indicted by the U.S. for helping the transit of cocaine through Haiti to the United States.

Ira Kurzban, Aristide's Miami lawyer, declined to discuss any of the facts or allegations in this report.

This investigation raises questions beyond the corruption of the Aristide administration. It is a case study in how corrupt individuals use the offshore banks and corporate secrecy system and easily-incorporated shell companies at home, offshore and elsewhere to loot their countries' treasuries and facilitate international crime.

There are about 70 offshore jurisdictions around the world. Among the most famous are Switzerland, Grand Cayman, Luxembourg, British Virgin Islands, Jersey, Liechtenstein. Offshore centers allow companies and bank accounts to keep their records, including owners' names, secret even from regulators and law enforcement. Some of them give this secrecy right only to foreigners.
Offshore financial centers are the parallel financial services system for criminals: for corporate crooks and fraudsters, tax evaders, drug and arm traffickers, terrorists and for government officials who steal from their countries. The big international banks all have offshore subsidiaries where they can hide the money of clients who are evading taxes at home or committing other crimes. And in many countries, including the U.S., it is relatively easy to set up companies and bank accounts without providing documentation about the true owners.

Corrupt Western business people, negligent or complicit bankers and offshore tax havens – all the enablers of corruptionmake a lot of money by helping the world's crooks. And provide the capital for those crooks to stay in power, and they tilt the playing field against the interests of firms and individuals who do business honestly.

The U.S. was involved in the Aristide case in two ways. The offshore system was used to collect kickbacks or divert payments from American companies that should have gone to the Haitian government. U.S. banks moved large amounts of money for shell companies set up in the U.S., Haiti and offshore.

Haiti's Telecom Sector is estimated at 400 million minutes a year, valued at $48 million.

Foreign phone companies that provide calling services to other countries must pay for routing of their calls on the switching equipment of the receiving country, which records the time of calls. Foreign companies routinely pay a per-minute rate for these calls.

Teleco, Télécommunications d'HaVti, the Haiti national telephone company, made agreements with telephone companies, including IDT (Newark, NJ), Fusion Telecommunications (New York), Skyytel (Montreal), Cinergy (Miami) and IPIP/Terra (Miami), granting them rights to connect to Haiti phone lines. A suit by the Haiti government filed in Miami Nov. 2 says that payments to Teleco were diverted or kicked back to Aristide's group through companies and bank accounts in the offshore Turks and Caicos Islands and the British Virgin Islands. The offshore companies, described as "agents" or "consultants" for Teleco, were used for the benefit of Aristide and his associates.

The suit focuses on the years of Aristide's second term, but according to a report by Christopher Caldwell in the July 1994 American Spectator, kickbacks or diverted payments were nothing new. He says that when Aristide was in exile in Washington, 1991-1994, he ordered that the proceeds from Haiti's international phone traffic handled by the Latin American division of AT&T be moved to a numbered bank account in offshore Panama. He says Aristide used the settlement accounts of Teleco in the US to finance his return to power in 1994 and that the practice continued after he was returned to office in 1994.

The Caldwell report was cited by reporter Mary O'Grady in an article about the telecom scandal in the Wall Street Journal last year. Asked if it was true, Jim Byrnes, head of AT&T Corporate Media Relations, told me, "AT&T declines to comment on a characterization in a media report from 1994, or a paraphrasing of that characterization in The Wall Street Journal." Caldwell did not respond to phone and email messages asking for more details.

The recent case with the most evidence of Aristide corruption involves IDT, a telecommunications company founded in 1990 and headquartered in Newark, NJ. A former employee says the company vice-president told him that IDT in 2003 agreed to pay kickbacks to Aristide's offshore bank account in return for a favorable phone deal in Haiti.

Michael Jewett, who in 2003 was associate regional vice president for the Caribbean at IDT, made the charges in a suit for wrongful dismissal filed in federal court in Newark in October 2005. He said that during discussions on the agreement, Teleco sought bribes in exchange for a cut-rate price and that IDT agreed to kickbacks. Under U.S. law, American companies would have to pay 23 cents a minute to Teleco for its services in completing calls from the U.S. Teleco was offering 9 cents a minute, with 3 cents kicked back.

Jewett said he'd been told that the initial Teleco proposal called for IDT to first deposit funds in a U.S. bank account. He said IDT decided that was too risky: that it might pay and get no agreement. (No honor among thieves.) He said that Jack Lerer, IDT Executive Vice President for International Business Development, went to Haiti in August 2003 and met Aristide to work out an accord. A month later, he said, Lerer met with Jewett and told him that the deal was that IDT would deposit money in an offshore account set up for Aristide under the name Mont Salem, in the offshore Turks and Caicos. Jewett said Lerer told him they had to move fast so that they didn't lose the deal.

Jewett's suit says, "Plaintiff asked defendant Jack Lerer what Mont Salem was, and he replied it was the private bank account of the President of Haiti, Mr. Jean Bertrand Aristide, that had been created by legal counsel for President Aristide, Adrian Corr, member of the law firm Miller, Simons and O'Sullivan." Jewett testified that Lerer appointed him the "go-between for all commercial correspondence between Teleco Haiti and Mont Salem." He said Lerer told him "not to reveal the details of the Teleco Haiti deal with anyone within IDT." Jewett says he repeated protested that the deal was illegal. After it was completed, he was fired.

In October 2003, IDT concluded an agreement with Teleco to pay 9 cents a minute for Teleco's services. Instead of making payments directly to the Haiti government company, it would make them to Mont Salem as Teleco's agent. Under the agreement, Teleco would actually receive only 6 cents a minute, and the other 3 cents would be kept by Mont Salem as kickback. Teleco's records were falsified to show Mont Salem as the carrier, not IDT.

In one six-month period, February to April 2004, IDT paid $302,588 in kickbacks to the Aristide group, according to the Haitian government lawsuit.

Mont Salem was in fact a shell company. Timothy O'Sullivan of Miller, Simons and O'Sullivan was listed as Mont Salem's registered agent.

One of the functions of offshore law firms is to set up shell companies – fake or front companies – that have no purpose other than to carry out phony transactions to justify the movement of money into crooks' secret accounts. Mont Salem's incorporation papers show registration in June 2000 with capital of $5,000 – not much for a real company. The owner of shares was "M & S Nominees Ltd," not the real owners, just another name for Miller, Simmons, at the same address. "Nominees" means "stand-in" or "strawman." Using nominees hides true owners, a typical offshore ploy when the real owners are up to no good.

Mont Salem was, like all such shell companies, exempt from taxation. M&S just had to promise that "the operation of the proposed Company will be conducted mainly outside the Turks and Caicos Islands." The local folks don't want corrupt companies and criminals doing business on their doorstep, but they don't care if they loot other countries and people.

If IDT did as alleged, it violated U.S. Federal Communication Commission rules. When it entered its agreement, calls from the U.S. to Haiti were covered by the ISP, International Settlements Policy, which required transparency and nondiscriminatory rates. That meant that U.S. carriers had to pay 23 cents a minute for phone calls sent to Haiti. Companies would have to inform the FCC and all competitors if they negotiated a deal for lower rates. IDT didn't do that. After November, Haiti was exempted from the ISP rules, so rates for U.S. telcoms were open to the market.

If IDT did as alleged, it also violated the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bans payment of bribes or kickbacks to get foreign contracts.

The Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the United States Attorney in Newark, New Jersey, have initiated investigations into Jewett's charges.

IDT's CEO James Courter and the company's attorney in the Jewett case, Leslie Lajewski (Grotta, Glassman & Hoffman), both declined to return phone calls and emails seeking comment. However, Courter has been quoted publicly as saying that Jewett is a disgruntled ex-employee with no evidence.

IDT, whose business plan apparently included lucrative deals with Haiti's politicians, appears to play the same political game at home. James Courter, a Republican New Jersey congressman from 1979 to 1991, is a friend of Vice President Dick Cheney. When Net2Phone, an IDT internet phone company, went public in 1999, he arranged for Cheney to buy 1,000 initial shares. Cheney paid $15,000 for the shares and sold them the same day for $26,574, a neat profit of 77.2 percent.

Republicans are prominent on IDT's board of directors, which includes Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, a former ambassador to the United Nations; Jack F. Kemp, the former New York congressman and Republican vice presidential nominee; James S. Gilmore III, a former governor of Virginia; and Rudy Boschwitz, a former senator from Minnesota.

Pete Wilson, the former governor of California, is on the board of its IDT Entertainment subsidiary. And until he resigned in fall 2005, William F. Weld, the former Massachusetts governor who plans to run for governor of New York, was a director of the IDT board and chairman of its governance committee. IDT corporate governance gets failing marks from the Corporate Library and Institutional Shareholder Services, which rate companies for institutional investors.

The lone IDT Democrat, Leon E. Panetta, a former congressman who was chief of staff in the Clinton administration, is on the board of the IDT Telecom unit.

After the suit, the IDT audit committee engaged the law firm Latham & Watkins to look into the matter. In September 2004, IDT proposed to Teleco that it end the agency agreement with Mont Salem and not allow any agent to make or receive payments in violation of US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. But even then, Teleco billed IDT at 6 cents rather than 9, because its records showed that the agreed price. Later an increase for all carriers in Aug. 2004 increased the IDT rate.

According to the Haiti lawsuit, a similar kickback deal was worked out for Skyytel, a Montreal company. Its 2003 agreement with Teleco provided for payment of 9 cents a minute to Mont Salem as Teleco's agent. Again, Teleco would get only 6 cents a minute, with the rest sent as bribe and kickback to the Aristide group. The Teleco records were falsified to show Mont Salem as the carrier, paying Teleco 6 cents a minute. The difference of $872,371 was paid as kickbacks.

Skyytel president Colin Povall denies that kickbacks were paid. He explained how the deal was made. "Mont Salem approached us. I heard they were going to go after IDT and not give us the original deal they made. They [Mont Salem] were very secretive as to how they got their license to do this. They said we're a licensed carrier." He told me, "Mont Salem had the direct contact, we never met anybody in Haiti. Fred Beliard is the only one I met. He was dealing with some powerful people." Beliard, a Haitian is accused in the lawsuit of participating in a scheme to misappropriate Teleco profits by granting telecoms reduced rates in exchange for kickbacks.

Povall said, "Beliard had promised us a tremendous amount of capacity, but I think they gave it to IDT. Our prices were between 7.2 and 8 cents; we made a margin of a half to a penny, which is reasonable in this business. We were reselling Mont Salem's capacity. What deal they had, they kept it very secretive. They always told us they were paying 6 cents. They had their partnership; they didn’t reveal it was through Aristide. Adrian Corr, we only heard about him when it came to sign the contract; his name was on the contract." Why didn't Skyytel go directly to Teleco? Povall said, "In a perfect world that would be great. You have to have the contacts. The way they fast track is they had someone, Aristide placed people inside. Instead of Teleco approaching and making a bid, they sought out telecommunications companies to facilitate deals. Any teleco on earth would die at the chance of selling minutes to Haiti. There are a lot of minutes. If you have a decent margin. It doesn’t make sense that Teleco would bother making those payouts." He said, "When the FBI called us, we were more than cooperative. They asked us to be witnesses, and we agreed on it. I told FBI I'll give the entire file and you can check what we paid. We asked them to give us immunity. We did nothing wrong, but how they construe it…." He added, "Mont Salem, whatever they were paid, they must have paid their partners. Their partners are not legitimate partners but government partners." One of Skyytel's advisors is Ron Beliard, who acknowledged by phone that he is related to Fred Beliard.

Corr and Fred Beliard are defendants in the Haiti government suit

Where did the money go? Who really owns Mount Salem?

I phoned Adrian Corr. I asked him who the real owners are. He said, "As in Delaware, you can have nominee directors." [Delaware. Hmmm. It is true that Delaware is the American "offshore" venue, where crooks from around the world can set up companies, secure in the knowledge that Delaware authorities will not fuss if the names of verifiable owners are not listed. Delaware just collect the profitable registration fees.] Were there nominees (fake owners) in this company? "I don’t know: you put me on the spot," said Corr. "I don’t want to answer any questions about this. I have lawyers retained; it's better you speak with them. It's [former New Jersey] Governor Byrne's law firm." His attorney Kerrie Heslin at Carella Byrne in Newark did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

Neither did Mont Salem's Newark lawyer, Michael Weinstein (Podvey, Meanor, Catenacci, Hildner, Cocoziello & Chattman). I told him, "I'd like to know more about Mont (Mount) Salem: who owns it (the real owners, not the nominees), what its business is, how it got involved with Teleco." His reply was, "No comment." The Haiti government lawsuit charges that IDT is not the only American company that appears to have paid kickbacks or diverted payments. Fusion, a telecommunications company run by former high-level Clinton Administration officials, is said in the lawsuit also to have made a suspect deal. Fusion's politically well-connected board has included Marvin Rosen, former finance chair of the Democratic National Committee; Massachusetts Congressman Joseph P. Kennedy II; and Thomas "Mack" McLarty III, Clinton special envoy to Latin America. Kennedy and McLarty resigned, and John Sununu, chief of staff for former President George H.W. Bush, joined the advisory board.

The Clinton administration played an important role in offering asylum to Aristide when he was forced out of the country by a military coup and used its influence to get him restored to power in 1994.

Fusion Telecommunications (New York) began operating in Haiti in1999 and provided services to Teleco until June 2002. The Haiti government lawsuit says Fusion made some payments to CW Holdings, a company with a bank account in Florida.

Fusion, through its representative, Howard Rubenstein Public Relations, told me that in mid-2001, "Teleco notified Fusion Telecommunications that Teleco had assigned its âAccounts Receivable to a factor identified as CW Holdings." The money was "less than $1 million a month." Howard Rubenstein Public Relations said, "Fusion was instructed to make payments that it owed to Teleco to the account of CW Holdings in a bank in Florida. In invoices that Fusion received from Teleco, Teleco accounted for Fusion’s payments to CW Holdings as payments made to Teleco. Fusion made payments to CW Holdings for three months until Teleco instructed Fusion to make all future payments directly to Teleco. CW Holdings acknowledged to Fusion that its factor agreement with Teleco had ceased. Consistent with the instructions Fusion received from Teleco, CW Holdings directed Fusion to make payments directly to Teleco going forward. Fusion complied with this request." Howard Rubenstein PR said, "At no time has Fusion Telecommunications ever made improper payments or engaged in any improper activity. More specifically, during the time Fusion Telecommunications did business with Teleco, Fusion Telecommunications did nothing improper and made no illegal payments." Fusion did respond to a query about the cost of the minutes it paid to CW Holdings and Teleco or about the location of CW Holdings.

Turks and Caicos may not have been the only offshore center used to siphon off kickbacks. The lawsuit says that Cinergy (Miami) made payments through Toscana Telcom, in the offshore British Virgin Islands. Asked about that, Washington Cruz, owner of Cinergy, said on the phone, "I have nothing to comment to you." IPIP Communications (Henry Frandzi) and Terra (Joel Esquenazi), which took up the IPIP contract, are also named as having made suspicious contracts. James Dickey, attorney for both Miami companies, said he could not discuss the matter. He said, "It is our practice that we do not comment on any lawsuit at any time." An interesting footnote is that the lawsuit says that in this period, AT&T refused to divert payments offshore. AT&T spokesman James Byrnes was more comfortable commenting on this than about the past story of diverted payments. He said that he could not provide any details of what had occurred, but emailed that, "AT&T has a firm policy against making payment that can end up being used as bribes of foreign government officials. Such payments would violate AT&T's internal code of conduct as well as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act." Another case involves shell companies set up in Haiti, and not offshore. They were Digitek, owned by Lesly Lavelanet, brother-in-law of Aristide's wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, and VJLS Computer Services and Accessories, owned by Marie Alice Valin and Sonia Jean Louis, Haitians who were evidently nominees. UCREF discovered that VJLS was a fictitious corporation with a fictitious place of business but that it nevertheless received more than $16 million in public funds. Lavelanet is a defendant in the Haiti government suit.

The lawsuit raises questions about payments that Digitek received from Sam Ash, the New York musical instruments store. It says that on Jan. 28, 2002, VJLS wired $467,171 from its account at the Bank of the Republic of Haiti to the account of Sam Ash Music Store at Chase Manhattan Bank in New York to buy a stadium sound system. The system was apparently delivered. The suit says that there was a commission of $67,650 for Digitek and return of an overpayment of $24,850. On Feb. 26, Sam Ash sent Digitek a check for $92,500 for the commission and refund.

David Ash, the company attorney, told me, "We didn’t know that the Haitian government was involved. It is not uncommon for us to deal with contractors. Contractors typically receive a profit on the materials and labor they put into whatever project they are involved in. Digitek placed an order. They said it had something to do with some festival. We filled the order and delivered the merchandise. We delivered an invoice." He said, "It was correct, there was an overpayment. They put too much money in my account. It can happen that a contractor says the bill is going to be "x" amount, that includes my commission and profit on labor and materials. We asked for instructions on what to do with the excess money. The instructions were to send the money to Digitek." Asked why the wire transfer had come from VJLS instead of Digitek, Ash replied, "I don't know the relationship between them; it may have been as client-contractor or as related companies. That is why we requested instructions on where to send the check for the remaining funds." He added, "If we were going to do a kickback, which I would not permit in this company, we would have written an inflated invoice and given the money under the table to someone." He pointed out that it was the initial payment by Digitek, not the invoice by Sam Ash, that was inflated. The question of what Digitek did with the $92,500 refund must be asked of Lavelanet.

Aristide and his group were sophisticated users of the world's money laundering techniques, one of which involves correspondent banking. A correspondent account is an account that a bank has in the bank of another country so that it can move its clients' money to and from that country. Until the U.S. Patriot Act passed in 2001 after the discovery that Al Qaeda had moved money via correspondent accounts, American banks could accept "bundled" transfers from foreign banks that didn't indicate the senders. That has changed, but the system still makes it easy for U.S. banks to accept dirty money whose senders are vouched for by a corrupt sending bank and passed off as clean.

The group also used the money laundering technique called layering, in which illicitly obtained cash is transferred numerous times to obscure its origins and finally placed where it can be accessed without any trouble.

Digitek and VJLS were part of money movements that involved correspondent accounts and layering. This is how that worked.

The Denis report says that from Sept. 2001 to Nov. 2003, Digitek received more than $8 million for purchase of cell phones and modernization of the communications network of the National Palace and police. But current government investigators could obtain no bid information, no contract, or any proof that the goods were delivered. Where did the money go?

On February 27, 2003, Digitek was paid $239,000 by a check drawn on the government bank's correspondent account at Citibank (NY) for equipment for Telco. The suit says it never delivered that equipment. Instead, it allegedly bought a CD for Global Spectrum, another shell company Lavalanet controlled. In October, Global Spectrum transferred $256,000 – the CD plus interest – to an account in the name of Trujillo & Sons at the Bank of the Republic of Haiti. The money was then wired to a Trujillo account at Ocean Bank in Miami.

Trujillo & Sons is a Miami company that deals in rice and other foodstuffs. It is family owned company run by Alberto Trujillo and Lucas Trujillo Jr. and has packaging plants and a warehouse in Northwest Miami and distributes to the U.S., Caribbean and South America. Alfonso Perez, lawyer for the company, said Trujillo & Sons does $100 million of sales a year. He said that some of the Haitian merchants mistrusted local banks and did not have accounts through which they could transfer payments to the U.S., so that they The lawsuit says that funds moved through front companies were used to buy rice and other products from Trujillo to resell in Haiti. The fronts were used to obscure transactions with paper work and to provide a rationale for siphoning "commissions." The check register of the Bank of the Republic of Haiti shows fifty-five checks from October 25, 2001 through August 12, 2003, totaling $16,447,795 made out to VJLS, which between October 2001 and March 2004 wire-transferred nearly $14 million to the Ocean Bank, Miami, account of Trujillo & Sons.

Sometimes the money was run through other shell companies. VJLS transferred about $3.6 million in public funds to the front company Se Pa'n and Quisqueya accounts at the Bank of the Republic of Haiti. Se Pa'an and Quisqueya were purportedly run by Ricardo Sanon, who was listed as managing director in 2002 although he was a 25-year-old student. At least $2.3 million moved from front companies to Trujillo.

There is no indication of illegal activity by Trujillo

Offshore corruption goes hand-in-hand with tax evasion. Corporations and the wealthy use shell companies and secret bank accounts to evade taxes and shrink the treasuries of the developing world. The rice purchase scam is a small example of this. According to the Denis report, the provisions shipped by Trujillo were imported without the importers, Josesph Dieuseul Tchakounté and Global Spectrum, paying customs duties of $1,346,706.

Sometimes, says the suit, the illicit funds went to the U.S. banks accounts of U.S. shell companies, among them Southborder Enterprises and Giovanna of Miami.

Southborder

According to the lawsuit, Aristide and his group set up Southborder Enterprises in Florida, listing it at 1362 NW 58 Street, Miami, an address that does not exist, with phones that were not working numbers. Still, checks from the Private Secretary account of the Bank of the Republic of Haiti paid it $965,836 for hand-cranked AM/FM radios, T-shirts, bumper stickers and pins.

Giovanna of Miami is listed at a Miami phone number that does not answer. Its owner Michelle Cardozo has an unlisted phone. But Giovanna of Miami was a very active company when it came to receiving Haiti cash. On Jan. 24, 2002, about $169,000 in government funds was wired to the company's Richmond, VA, Bank of America account for equipment for the Security Police for the National Palace. About $204,000 was paid April 11, 2002 to the company at the Bank of America for musical instruments for the Presidential Security Unit's brass band. About $162,000 was sent to the company at Bank Atlantic July 11, 2003 for equipment for the Security Police for the National Palace. Some $208,000 was sent to the company at Bank Atlantic July 30, 2003 for equipment for the Presidential Security unit. Another $143,000 wired Oct. 30, 2003 for more equipment. Nov/ 12, 2003 the $283,000 transfer was for musical instruments. Nov. 24, 2003 some $270,000 was wired for equipment. And then another $146,000 sent for equipment. The invoices continued, and they were paid; the total came to more than $2 million.

The address listed for the company so active in providing equipment and musical instruments to the Haitian Security Unit was a rented mailbox at a UPS store. The 2005 Dun and Bradstreet report for the company could not figure out its "line of business," noted that its employees were "undetermined," it had no banking or finance record, and was located at a residence owned by Cardozo. Bank of America corporate headquarters was asked what kind of due diligence was done on Giovanna of Miami and if these transfers had been scrutinized. There was no response.

Though a Miami resident, Cardozo in October 2004 made a $500 contribution to Rep. Maxine Waters, a California congresswoman active in the defense of Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

One shell company with a U.S. account could not be found registered in either Haiti or the U.S., which leaves the possibility that it was incorporated offshore. A wire Jan. 24, 2002 transferred $1.7 million from VJLS to an account of the Haffey Corporation at HSBC Bank, Miami. Haiti investigators could find no evidence that a company called Haffey exists either in the U.S. or Haiti. Kathleen Rizzo Young, spokesperson for HSBC, said, "We do not provide information on particular customer accounts as to do so would be in violation of the laws requiring customer privacy. I can tell you, however, that HSBC maintains strict anti-money laundering policies and procedures. We obtain KYC (Know Your Customer) information on all accounts, conduct due diligence on customers as required, and in particular do enhanced due diligence on customers determined to be of higher risk. We monitor transactions, and, as necessary, report any transactions deemed to be suspicious as required by law and regulation." Nevertheless, the Haffey transaction apparently came in under the radar.

Americans should be concerned that shell companies are being set up in the U.S. to facilitate corrupt transactions. They must also be concerned about an American bank that provides an account to a shell company with such little due diligence that it doesn't discover that companies that receive transfers of large sums of money are offshore companies whose true owners cannot be verified or are registered at mail boxes and lack working phones.

Drug traffickers were among the earliest satisfied patrons of the offshore money-laundering system. U.S. indictments and testimony in the cases of half a dozen Haitians charged and convicted of cocaine trafficking show that Aristide government officials protected and participated in moving the illegal drug through Haiti to the United States. By 2004, about 8 percent of the cocaine entering the U.S. came through Haiti, a major increase during Aristide's time in office.

Beaudouin Jacques Ketant, the most notorious drug dealer in Haiti, told a U.S. court that Aristide controlled 85 percent of the cocaine flow through Haiti. Ketant, who was originally a customs employee at the Port-au-Prince airport, said at a February 2004 sentencing hearing that he had paid up to half million dollars a month in bribes to Aristide and Oriel Jean to allow planes with cocaine to land on National Route 9 near Port-au-Prince. He had smuggled cocaine to Ft. Lauderdale, Miami, West Palm Beach, New York and Chicago.

Oriel Jean, who headed Aristide's Presidential/National Palace security from 2001 to 2003, testified that he and other Haitian law enforcement officials got hundreds of thousands of dollars from Serge Edouard, who ran an operation that imported cocaine from Colombia to Miami and New York. He said that Aristide approved a national security badge for Edouard so he could travel in the country without police searches. He said Edouard kicked back money to Fondation Aristide.

Other traffickers indicted by the U.S. include:

•Jean Nesly Lucien, former chief of police, who admitted money laundering. He worked with Ketant, helping to move drug shipments into Haiti from where they would go to the U.S. He had his police delay and divert DEA agents from interdicting ships and got $50,000 and 5 kilos of cocaine for each shipment.

•Romaine Lestin, former head of police at Port-au-Prince airport, who took kickbacks to provide security for drug flights. He was part of Ketant group. He pleaded guilty to importing cocaine.

•Rudy Therassean, former commander of national police Brigade of Research & Investigation, pleaded guilty to accepting protection money from drug traffickers in 2001-2002.

•Evans Brilliant, former head of national police anti-narcotics brigade, allowed a Colombian plane with over 1,000 kilos of cocaine to land on a highway near the capital. He routinely took bribes for this and other traffic.

•Fourel Celestin, former president of Haitian Senate, leader of the Lavalas party, and advisor to Aristide, received tens of thousands of dollars to ensure transport of cocaine through Haiti.

Under U.S. law, anyone who moves money of illicit origins – the profits of crime – into U.S. bank accounts violates the U.S. statute against money laundering. Anyone who offers bribes or kickback to get a foreign contract violates the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. That means that the evidence of this lawsuit ought to prompt an investigation by the Justice Department into whether U.S. law has been violated.

The offshore system protects crooked clients by refusing to provide information about shell companies and bank accounts to private parties. However, the U.S. Justice Department can request information under mutual legal assistance treaties. Even then, getting information is problematical, since while the legal niceties are going on, the culprits usually move their registrations and accounts to other venues.

Americans also need to care because the collection of bribes and kickbacks from foreign companies and the use of shell companies and secret accounts in tax havens helps looting by dictators and corrupt officials in all parts of the world and provides the funds that help keep them in power. It is the same system that Saddam Hussein ran in the Oil for Food program. It is the system used by dictators Sani Abacha in Nigeria, Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan, Omar Bongo of Gabon, Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, Carlos Menem of Argentina, the rulers of Angola and Equatorial Guinea, and of course Francois Duvalier in Haiti.

American business people who offer bribes or kickbacks to get foreign contracts violate the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and are liable to prosecution by the U.S. Justice Department. Bankers who fail to do "know your customer" investigations or report suspicious transactions violate the U.S. anti-money laundering law.

Aristide was elected president of Haiti for a five-year term from February 1991 to February 1996. In September 1991, he was forced into exile by a military coup. In September 1994, a U.S.-led force acting under a U.N. resolution invaded Haiti to oust the military regime and restore Aristide to the presidency. He returned to Haiti to serve the remainder of his first term, until February 1996.

Then, until February 2001, former prime minister Rene Preval, a man close to Aristide, served as president. Aristide returned to office in February 2001, in elections which, because of evidence of fraud, were not certified by the Organization of American States' electoral observation mission.

In February 2004, Aristide resigned and flew first to the Central African Republic and then to South Africa.

The accused, as cited in the Haitian government lawsuit, are:

•Former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. He lives in South Africa in a secret location.

•Faubert Gustave, minister of the Economy and Finance 2201-4. He lives in Sarasota, FL •Rodnée Deschineau, General Manager of the Banque Populaire Haitienne, owned by the government from 2001-4. He lives in Dorchester, Mass.

•Lesly Lavelanet, the brother-in-law of Aristide's wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide. He controlled several companies, including Digitek SA and Global Spectrum SA. He lives in Coral Springs, FL.

•Fred Beliard, who participated in schemes to misappropriate Teleco profits. He lives in Cooper City, FL.

•Alphone Inevil, Director of Planning at Teleco from 1997 to 02, then Director General to 04. He participated in scheme to misappropriate Teleco profits. He lives in Lakeland, FL.

•Jean Rene Duperval, Director for International Affairs for Teleco from 2003 to 04 and participated in the scheme. He lives in Miramar, FL.

•Adrian Corr of the law firm of Miller, Simons and O'Sullivan in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Links Haitian government lawsuit (English)

UCREF report (French)

UCREF is the Haitian Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU).

Commission d'EnquPte Administrative (Paul Denis) report (French)

Jewett suit against IDT (English)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Lucy Komisar is a New York journalist who since 1997 has written about offshore bank and corporate secrecy and money-laundering and how the offshore system enables international financial crime and corruption as well as drug and arms trafficking, corporate fraud, terrorism, dictatorship, and tax evasion. She is a founder and member of the steering committee of the Tax Justice Network, an international NGO that opposes offshore tax evasion by corporations and the wealthy.

She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a past board member of PEN American Center, the writers organization, and a past Vice President of the National Organization for Women.

Her books are Corazon Aquino: The Story of a Revolution (New York: George Braziller, 1987), political biography of former president of the Philippines.

Down and Out in the U.S.A.: A History of Public Welfare (New York: Franklin Watts, 1973 and 1977), history of the American welfare system from colonial times to the present.

The New Feminism (New York: Franklin Watts, 1972; Paperback Library, 1972), primer on feminism, including history, law, work, education and origins of contemporary movement.

She was a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation grantee and a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation fellow. She has received research grants from The Nation Institute, The Fund for Investigative Journalism, The Fund for Constitutional Government, The United Church Board for World Ministries and other organizations.

Her articles have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Christian Science Monitor, Wall Street Journal, Miami Herald, Chicago Tribune, Newsday, Boston Globe, Baltimore Sun, Atlanta Journal and Constitution, San Francisco Chronicle, St. Louis Post Dispatch, San Diego Union, Philadelphia Inquirer, Arizona Republic, Toledo Blade, Sacramento Bee, Toronto Star, Minneapolis Star, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, The Progressive, The Nation, The New Republic, Salon, Corpwatch, Alternet, Pacific News Service, In These Times, The Observer (London), and El Pais (Madrid). 

EDITOR's NOTE: Citing Thomas Hobbes, a 17th-century English philosopher, "Unrestrained desires such as greed render life poor, nasty, brutish and short."   

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« Reply #3 on: January 06, 2009, 04:40:10 PM »

http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39085

CORRUPTION: Another Lead in Siemens Bribery Probe?
By Lucy Komisar

NEW YORK, Aug 30 (IPS) - U.S. officials from the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Justice Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation met with Munich prosecutors this week regarding the 1.3-billion-dollar bribe fund run by Siemens, the German multinational technology company.

After talking to the Germans about tracking the financial flows of the largest illicit slush-fund ever discovered, the U.S. investigators would do well to visit Luxembourg on Germany's western border.

There they could seek information from Clearstream, the international financial clearing house, that might tell them how Siemens moved so much money and where it went. That is because Siemens has the unusual status of being one of only four non-financial companies among 2,500 Clearstream members. It gained membership on the insistence of a former CEO who was fired after a scandal.

Siemens bribe money, according to German investigators, was transferred through a network of front companies, mostly in offshore Liechtenstein, Switzerland, the British Virgin Islands and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. But it would have had to get there via "onshore" banks in Germany or other countries where Siemens operated.

Banks might have questioned multi-million-dollar transfers lacking credible paperwork. Siemens would have needed to skirt the due diligence that banks are supposed to apply. It would have wanted to avoid scrutiny by law enforcement agencies that receive banks' reports of suspicious activities. Siemens could have gone offshore, to Clearstream, in Luxembourg, which has built its wealth on bank secrecy.

Clearstream is one of two international clearing houses that move financial paper -- stocks, bonds, derivatives, etc., between members representing buyers and sellers. The other is Euroclear in Brussels. Members are banks and brokerages or other financial institutions.

However, Clearstream spokesperson Bruno Rossignol told IPS that there are four non-financial members: Siemens, the Shell Petroleum Group, the Dutch agricultural multinational Unilever, and Capital Lease Plan, which leases cars.

A large number of Clearstream exchanges are of cash, not financial paper. With their own accounts, companies can avoid passing through banks or exchange agents -- or Swift, for cash transfers, which the U.S. monitors.

Ernest Backes, manager of Cedel customer services until 1983, told IPS, "Siemens tried to have direct accounts with us. Gerard Soisson [Cedel general manager] and I always refused" based on rules that allowed "only banks and other financial institutions."

Clearstream was called Cedel before its 2000 merger with Deutsche Börse, owner of Frankfurt's stock exchange.

Backes said, "It is only after [CEO] André Lussi came to power in 1990 that he gave way to the opening of Siemens accounts." Backes said management told employees that Siemens' admission was negotiated at the highest level.

Backes said, "Please note that in the interview Lussi gave [journalist] Denis Robert in May 2000, shown in the film 'Les Dissimulateurs' [The Deceivers], Lussi insists that 'Siemens-type industrial or commercial companies' cannot have accounts in the system."

The film was shown on French television in 2001, the year of the Paris publication of "Révélations" by Backes and Robert.

That book charged Clearstream with running a system of "unpublished" accounts that didn't appear in the public books. Backes said, "There were more unpublished than published accounts, and a [large] proportion were not sub-accounts of a principal account, which is what the system was supposedly for. The owners of these accounts were not inscribed on the official list of the clients of the firm."

Some of the Siemens accounts were "unpublished".

After "Révélations" came out, six prominent European judges called Clearstream "the black box" of illicit international financial flows. The scandal made headlines in European newspapers. The French National Assembly's financial crimes committee held a hearing.

Lussi was suspended two months after publication and did not return to his job. André Roelants, named CEO on Lussi's departure and now honourary chairman, told the writer that Lussi did not leave because of "Révélations," but because of anomalies such as improper personal use of credit cards and unauthorised commitment of company resources.

The Luxembourg prosecutor conducted an investigation which reported no finding of money-laundering by Clearstream. However, the book had not accused the clearing house of laundering money, but of setting up a system that facilitated laundering by members or customers. Clearstream auditor KPMG also pronounced its client clean. Clearstream commissioned a special audit by Arthur Anderson, which found no illicit cash flows.

Florian Bourges, a young French intern just out of business school, worked in the Arthur Anderson investigation. In 2004, he provided information secretly to a French investigating judge.

In Paris in July, he told IPS, in remarks not published before, that the audit had been a whitewash. He said that a Luxembourg member of the Arthur Anderson team had asked him to erase some of his findings. He said, "He told me they didn’t want to annoy Clearstream. There were many anomalies. I can't discuss it because of judicial problems."

Bourges, who kept audit documents, provided account lists to Robert and to Imad Lahoud, a French security services asset he met through Robert. Lahoud gave the lists to then Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin, a conservative party rival of Economy Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, now the French president.

Somewhere between Lahoud and de Villepin, the files were doctored to implicate Sarkozy and others as holding personal Clearstream accounts. After the story exploded in the French press, Bourges's role was revealed, and he was charged by Clearstream with violation of bank secrecy and other civil infractions and by French magistrates with "stealing and abuse of trust." De Villepin, ally of former President Jacques Chirac, is also being investigated.

Bourges said law enforcement agents could see unpublished transactions if they plugged into the system. "They are just not in the public directory. If the FBI or European justice want to investigate a transfer, they have just to plug into the Clearstream system, and they will find all the transactions. I found them," he said.

Detailed information is listed on daily "security statements" -- stored on microfiche to prove that financial paper or cash has been sent. These statements are kept 10 years for companies and 15 for banks.

A curious connection between Siemens and Clearstream is Andrew Wang, wanted in Taiwan for having managed and laundered payoffs for the French company, Thomson (now Thalès) for sales of six frigates to Taipei in the early 1990s.

Joël Bûcher, who had been deputy director of the Taipei branch of the French bank, Société Générale, told IPS that SocGen sent frigates kickbacks to French influentials through Clearstream. Wang is charged with corruption, money laundering, fraud and the murder of a Taiwan Navy captain who reported the bribe scheme and was found floating in the China Sea. Wang fled Taiwan after the death. Swiss authorities froze 12 Wang accounts with 800 million dollars.

Wang also worked for Siemens, becoming an agent of the firm in 1967. Cedel was founded in 1971. If he used Clearstream to move the frigates money, that would suggest a familiarity with the system which he might have employed for Siemens.

Wang is now living comfortably in London, the exile home of choice for many international financial criminals, with easy access to their money via The City (financial centre) of London through secret accounts in British offshore dependencies such as the British Virgin Islands.

*Lucy Komisar is an investigative journalist in New York. Her articles appear on http://thekomisarscoop.com/.

(END/2007)
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« Reply #4 on: January 06, 2009, 07:51:42 PM »

Well when you look into Nobel Peace Prize winners , what do you find?
A Nazi sympathizer and Albanian Billionaire mafia money...

A little background first...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martti_Ahtisaari

Martti Oiva Kalevi Ahtisaari  (born 23 June 1937) is a former President of Finland (1994–2000), 2008 Nobel Peace Prize laureate and United Nations diplomat and mediator, noted for his international peace work.

Ahtisaari was a UN Special Envoy at the Kosovo status process negotiations, aimed at resolving a long-running dispute in Kosovo, which declared its independence from Serbia in 2008. In October 2008 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize "for his important efforts, on several continents and over more than three decades, to resolve international conflicts".[2]The Nobel statement said that Ahtisaari has played a prominent role in resolving many conflicts in Namibia,Indonesia,Kosovo and Iraq,among other areas.[3]

...

http://www.byzantinesacredart.com/blog/2007/06/bnd-slaves-and-millions.html

BND: White Slaves and Millions of Heroin Dollars for Ahtisaari’s Plan

Fifty Million Dollars and Up for Dismembering a Medium-Size Sovereign State
Former Finnish president and one of the world’s most respected living Nazis Martti Ahtisaari (i.e. Adolfsen) is a very busy man these days. Turkey — correctly noting Ahtisaari’s strong pro-Muslim bias, undoubtedly a result of historically sound and productive fascist/Muslim alliances — wants Ahtisaari to help them break into the EU. In Northern Ireland, where Ahtisaari was meddling before, he was appointed an “international advisor” to a reconciliation group.

Let’s hope they can afford the 70-year-old whore with a steep price list.

According to the June 21 article by the Banja Luka daily Fokus, titled “Albanian Mafia Bought Ahtisaari,” German Federal Intelligence Service BND (Bundesnachrichtendienst) has recently sent a report to the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon revealing that Albanian separatists and terrorists in Serbian Kosovo-Metohija province have literally purchased Ahtisaari’s plan which suggests independence for the Serbian province and its severing from Serbia.

German Secret Service has found that 2 million Euros (2.68 million USD) have been transfered directly to Ahtisaari’s personal bank account, and that amounts of multi-million Euros were given to the UN envoy in cash on at least two occasions, totaling up to 40 million Euros (over 53 million U.S. dollars).

According to the Fokus’ source, the German BND Secret Service Brigadier Luke Neiman was directly appointed by the German government to designate part of the German Secret Service apparatus to the United Nations Mission in Kosovo, after the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon requested such service. It was, therefore, the UN Secretary-General who received the detailed report about the corruption of his special envoy Martti Ahtisaari.

Reportedly, the BND agents have immediately discovered clear connection and regular contacts between the leading figures of Kosovo Albanian mafia, their subordinates and Martti Ahtisaari. The agents have also established that Ahtisaari has had frequent telephone communications with the Albanian billionaire, mafia boss living in Switzerland Behgjet Pacolli.

Price of the “Supervised Independence:” Two Million Via Bank, Four Coffers of Heroin Cash and Couple of White Slaves

One of the recorded conversations was pertaining to a transaction in the amount of 2 million Euros from the Swiss bank in Basel, the account No. 239700-93457-00097, protected as an offshore account under the code XS52-KOLER. The account owner is Exhet Boria, the right hand of the Albanian mafia boss. Two million Euros were transfered from this to the account No. 3459346699004533, code VOLANND, in the Cyprus bank. In order to withdraw the money from these accounts, all that was needed was to give the codes to a bank teller.

German Intelligence Service agents have made a note that on February 12, 2007, at 6:23 a.m., jeep with the registration plates PR-443-22CD, which belongs to the Kosovo Albanian provisional “government”, arrived in front of the UN Special Envoy Martti Ahtisaari’s building. Two men carrying two silver-color briefcases went in, handing the briefcases to Ahtisaari. A source in the building later confirmed that the briefcases were filled with cash and given to the UN envoy.

Twelve days later, at 5:44 p.m. the exact same thing took place, only this time it was Exhet Boria personally who exited the black Mercedes Benz with no plates, followed by the two bodyguards carrying two silver-color briefcases.

BND agents found that all four briefcases, later protected with the diplomatic labels, safely arrived to Finland without check-ups and were delivered to Martti Ahtisaari’s home address.

On the last day of February, at 11:47 p.m., German Secret Service agents made a note about the arrival of the KFOR (NATO troops stationed in Serbian Kosovo province, Kosovo FORce) jeep which brought two young women over, followed by Boria’s bodyguard. The girls were in Ahtisaari’s quarters until 5:17 a.m., when they were driven away by the same vehicle.

Posted by Svetlana on June 23, 2007 09:50 AM

A nazi you say?

http://serbianna.com/blogs/savich/?p=38

Marti Ahtisaari and the Waffen SS

In 1999, when he was the President of Finland, Marti Ahtisaari’s government wanted to honor and to commemorate the 3,000 Finnish Nazi Waffen SS volunteers that served in Heinrich Himmler’s SS. Why would any governemnt, indeed, why would anyone, want to honor and commemorate SS troops? Why would anyone want to honor and commemorate Nazis and Nazism? This is the question that has remained unanswered in the US and Western media about Marti Ahtisaari. As a sock puppet for the US, NATO, and EU, Ahtisaari’s role in honoring and commemorating the Nazi Waffen SS has been suppressed.  As a Chairman Emeritus of ICG he is regarded as part of the globalist elite. His government’s honoring of Finnish Nazi SS troops is a controversial subject that did not register on the radar screen of the mainstream media.

How substantial was the connection between Marti Ahtisaari’s Finland and Nazi Germany? What role did Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler play in Finland? Were the 3,000 Finnish volunteers in the Waffen SS just regular soldiers or were they Nazi shock troops who had sworn their allegiance to Adolf Hitler and to Nazism? These are questions that the mainstream media will not address. They are, nevertheless, meaningful questions that will help us to understand Marti Ahtisaari’s position on Kosovo.
Â
The Finnish SS troops swore a personal oath to the Supreme Commander “Hitler” of the German Armed Forces. The Finnish government recruited these Finnish SS troops. The recruitment was done in secret. The formation of the Finnish Waffen SS unit was organized on March, 1941, three months before the German invasion of the USSR. There was pre-meditation, and planning. Finland was engaged in an unprovoked act of aggression with Finnish ally Nazi Germany. Finland was not occupied by Nazi Germany. Finland allowed Germany to launch land, sea, and air attacks against the Soviet Union from bases in Finland. In other words, the Finnish government and the Finnish people freely chose or decided to be allies with Adolf Hitler and with Nazi Germany.

The name of the formation that was created was the Finnishe Freiwillige Battaillon der Waffen SS, the Finnish Volunteer Battalion of the Waffen SS. The Finnish Nazi SS troops were issued their own national insignia. The Finnish Army even had its own version of the swastika, which was blue in color and discarded after World War II. The secret SS recruitment in Finland went under the name Engineer Bureau “Ratas”.  The Finnish recruits came from Helsinki, the capital, where 1,200 were assembled.  The Finnish troops were sent to Nazi Germany for training, where they joined several Nazi Waffen SS formations: The 5th SS Division Wiking, the SS Freiwilligen Battalion “Nordost”, their own Finnish Waffen SS unit, and the II SS Regiment “Nordland”, which was part of the Wiking SS Division.

The Finnish Freiwillige Battalion der Waffen SS consisted of three infantry companies and one motorized company and was commanded by German SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Hans Collani. In total, approximately 3,000 Finnish troops were part of SS Reichsfuehrer Heinrich Himmler’s Waffen SS.
Â
The Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal found all SS members to be war criminals who committed crimes against humanity. We then have to ask: Why is Marti Ahtisaari honoring and commemorating war criminals? These Finnish Nazi SS troops were involved in the Holocaust and in genocide. Â Why isn’t this even news? Why doesn’t Marti Ahtisaari know what the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal held regarding the Waffen SS? Why is he so ignorant or indifferent?
Â
The Finnish rationalization is that Finnish Nazi Waffen SS troops were just regular soldiers. They did nothing wrong. They did swear an oath to Adolf Hitler. They were part of Heinrich Himmler’s Waffen SS, the organization responsible for the Holocaust and the genocide committed against Jews and Gypsies. The Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal did find all SS members to be war criminals. Nevertheless, the Finnish rationale is that they were just regular soldiers. This is a salient case of self-delusion and self-interested rationalization that approaches psychopathology. There is almost a total disconnect here with reality as we know it.
What are the facts?
Â
Finland was an ally of Nazi Germany during World War II, part of the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, Operation Barbarossa. On June 4, 1942, Adolf Hitler made a visit to Finland to coordinate joint efforts by Finland and Nazi Germany to launch renewed attacks against the Soviet Union. The occasion was the 75th birthday of Finnish commander in chief Carl Mannerheim, a former decorated Russian commander. Hitler flew to the Immola air base on a Focke-Wulf FW-200 Condor flown by his personal pilot, SS Gruppenfuehrer Hans Baur. Joining Hitler on the mission was Wilhelm Keitel, the chief of the German Military Command. Hitler met with Finnish President Risto Ryti and with Finnish and German military commanders, including German General Eduard Dietl, the commander of German forces in Finland.

Hitler then had a long conversation with Mannerheim in a railroad car, a conversation that was recorded. German newsreel cameras filmed this historic visit.

Hitler gave Mannerheim a gift of three Steyr-Daimler 1500 A Kommandeurwagen field cars. Hitler personally thanked Mannerheim for Finnish support of Operation Barbarossa.

Finnish “historiography” and Finnish “historians” claim that Mannerheim was not particularly fond of Adolf Hitler or Nazism. But Mannerheim was fond enough of Hitler and Nazism to visit Hitler and Nazi Germany in late June, 1942 on an official state visit. Mannerheim would himself visit Nazi Germany in the summer of 1942 on an official visit where he met with Hitler again and Hermann Goering, the chief of the German Air Force or Luftwaffe, in the presence of Himmler, Alfred Jodl, and Franz Halder, as broadcast in the July 8, 1942 Die Deutsche Wochenschau newsreel. Mannerheim went hunting with Goering. Heinrich Himmler would also visit Finland in 1942 to convince Finland to deport its Jews to the concentration camps.

US Secretary of State Cordell Hull warned the Finnish government that they risked war with the US by the Finnish alliance with Adolf Hitler. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill wrote Mannerheim a letter which threatened him with prosecution after the war for war crimes: “I wish I could convince Your Excellency that we are going to beat the Nazis. I feel far more confident than in 1917 or 1918. It would be most painful to the many friends of your country in England if Finland found herself in the dock with the guilty and defeated Nazis.” Britain, like the US, was contemplating declaring war against Finland. Britain eventually declared war against Finland on December 6, 1941, followed by Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The US broke off diplomatic relations with Finland. Mannerheim ignored the warnings and continued to ally with Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany. Finland did not have to pay for its alliance with Nazi Germany and Adolf Hitler after World War II. The history of Finland, an enemy combatant during the war, was largely whitewashed and distorted. Not many people are aware of the actual role Finland played during World War II. Marti Ahtisaari was banking on this widespread ignorance.

Nazi Germany had 200,000 troops in Finland. Finnish troops participated in the siege of Leningrad that resulted in the deaths of an estimated over one million Russian civilians. Ironically, the Murmansk and the Leningrad fronts were the two Russian fronts that held during Operation Barbarossa and where the Russians achieved spectacular and brilliant military successes. There were, however, large civilian casualties, which Finland must bear some historical responsibility for. But Ahtisaari and the Finnish government have never acknowledged their role in these deaths, let alone have they made any apology for them. Those lives do not matter.

The Finnish Waffen SS troops fought fiercely and fanatically for Heinrich Himmler. Himmler himself noted that the Finnish Nazi SS troops were among the best Nazi soldiers. Gottlob Berger, the head of the SS Main Office who coordinated recruiting for the Waffen SS, praised the determination and commitment of Finnish Nazi SS troops in suport of Nazism. The Finnish SS troops fought as the advance, shock guard in the German assault on the Ukraine and in the Caucasus. It was the 256 Finnish Nazi SS troops killed during this engagement that Marti Ahtisaari’s government wanted to honor and commemorate in 1999.

Why would Marti Ahtisaari’s government want to honor these Nazi SS war criminals? It is all in how you see the question. For Marti Ahtisaari and the Finnish government, these “alleged” Nazi SS war criminals did nothing wrong. One person’s war criminal is another person’s war hero.

Is this based in any rationality or logic? Isn’t this revisionism and moral relativism of the worst sort? What kind of moral calculus is Marti Ahtisaari guided by? It is a delusional psychopathology that reflects no moral grounding. It is an amoral and unethical posture. What kind of morality is based in subjective self-interest? Marti Ahtisaari can decide what is right or wrong based solely on considerations of self-interest? What kind of morality is that? It is no morality at all. It shows a nihilistic contempt for morality and reason and the rule of law.

This tells us everything we need to know about Marti Ahtisaari. His position on Kosovo should not surprise anyone.


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« Reply #5 on: January 13, 2009, 02:49:41 AM »


See also : UBS dropping dimes on off shore accounts

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123137082138162537.html
JANUARY 8, 2009 UBS Swiss Accounts Fare Well at IRS So Far

By ARDEN DALE
NEW YORK -- A wide range of people continue to turn themselves in to the Internal Revenue Service for not reporting taxable securities in UBS-managed Swiss bank accounts, and so far seem to be avoiding serious punishment.

However, some may ultimately face civil or criminal penalties for evading taxes as the IRS and the Department of Justice review the accounts, according to a tax attorney.

The DOJ is looking into whether a group of 19,000 UBS clients evaded U.S. tax-reporting requirements through Swiss bank accounts. The probe centers on UBS's cross-border business, which allowed U.S. residents to bank with UBS AG bank branches in Switzerland. (UBS is closing the business, and began that process before the DOJ started investigating the firm.)

Getting a Pass
"Just because you get a pass from the IRS does not necessarily mean you will get a pass from the DOJ," said Edward M. Robbins Jr., a partner at the law firm Hochman, Salkin, Rettig, Toscher & Perez in Beverly Hills, Calif.

Doctors, lawyers, financial-services executives and others have been caught up in the UBS matter, as owners of the Swiss accounts. Many are older people who inherited accounts from relatives. At issue is whether account holders failed to report U.S. securities they held in the accounts to the IRS, and in that way avoided paying tax on them.

The DOJ is investigating whether UBS advisers helped clients evade paying tax on U.S. securities held in the Swiss accounts. The Securities and Exchange Commission is also probing whether UBS Swiss brokers engaged in activities that required them to be registered with the SEC.

The IRS has seen a steady increase in voluntary disclosures, most of them involving taxpayers with undisclosed foreign accounts, according to IRS spokesman Bruce I. Friedland. Tax attorneys estimate that hundreds of taxpayers have turned themselves in recently. The DOJ declined to comment.

Get There First
Voluntary disclosures work only if the person approaches the IRS before the agency has identified the problem. To qualify, he must meet four conditions. First, the IRS or DOJ mustn't be auditing him already; second, the money in question must be from a legal source (in the case of UBS, this would be money held in the account); third, he must reveal any other tax improprieties he has committed, such as underreporting business income or overstating expenses; and last, he must pay all back taxes and any penalties, or make good-faith arrangements to pay.

Bryan Skarlatos, a partner at Kostelanetz & Fink LLP, a New York law firm that specializes in tax controversy and tax penalties, said he isn't "aware of any criminal indictments or even any civil penalties being assessed" so far.

A number of taxpayers have been successful with their voluntary disclosures to the IRS, according to Mr. Skarlatos. In these cases, the agency acknowledges the person qualifies provided he pays owed taxes or arranges to pay taxes, penalty and interest. The IRS can still assess civil penalties, but the criminal exposure "is greatly reduced or eliminated," said Mr. Skarlatos.

UBS said it is continuing to cooperate with the investigations.

But UBS didn't like Bobby Fischers business....

Also search: BAE Systems Bandar 9/11  ---> HSBC
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rawiron1
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« Reply #6 on: January 13, 2009, 09:58:43 AM »

So the arrogant US Gov. now thinks that they have jurisdiction over Switzerland?

Those folks should have bought British Pound Notes, then transfered those to UBS.  Pound Note is worth more and then the IRS could not go after you for shelter US currency if you are sheltering British currency.
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« Reply #7 on: February 19, 2009, 07:26:05 PM »

Selective prosecution ahead....

Less then a billon? No we did nothing wrong....

http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1202428390609

UBS to Pay $780 Million Fine in Tax Case Settlement

Brian Baxter
The American Lawyer
February 19, 2009

Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz litigation partner John Savarese represented Zurich-based banking giant UBS as it entered into a deferred prosecution agreement on Wednesday with federal prosecutors that ends an investigation into whether UBS helped U.S. clients avoid paying taxes.

Under the terms of its agreement with the government, UBS will pay a $780 million fine and disclose the names of certain account holders to the Internal Revenue Service. While the government's indictment states its interest in the identities of between 17,000 and 20,000 UBS cross-border clients, the deferred prosecution agreement does not specify how many client names will be turned over to U.S. authorities.

UBS received permission from the Swiss Financial Markets Supervisory Authority (FINMA) to move forward with the agreement, which has been approved by U.S. District Judge James Cohn in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

As part of its agreement with the government, UBS also settled an SEC suit filed on Wednesday in Washington, D.C., that claims the Swiss bank had received more than $380 million in profits by advising U.S. clients as an unregistered brokerage.

The settlement is a coup for the Justice Department and the IRS, whose ongoing probe into whether UBS had helped U.S. clients hide assets in overseas accounts in order to avoid paying taxes was stymied by secretive Swiss banking laws. (A Swiss newspaper is reporting that the Swiss government may lift its banking secrecy law to allow UBS to turn over confidential client data.)

The investigation itself gained steam after the government unveiled a 12-page indictment in May of former UBS private banker Bradley Birkenfeld and the co-founder of a Liechtenstein-based bank. Birkenfeld pleaded guilty to fraud charges in June and began cooperating with prosecutors.

UBS turned to Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom litigation partners David Zornow and Lawrence Spiegel to represent Martin Liechti, the head of the bank's wealth management unit in the Americas, when Liechti was detained in Miami last April and hauled before a permanent Senate subcommittee on investigations the following month. (Liechti took the Fifth but was later allowed to leave the country.)

But in November prosecutors announced a grand jury indictment of Raoul Weil, the former chairman of UBS's global wealth management and business banking division, on charges that the 49-year-old executive helped UBS clients in the U.S. avoid income taxes on overseas accounts.

Weil retained former Covington & Burling white-collar defense partner Aaron Marcu, but subsequently failed to show for a hearing and was declared a fugitive by Judge Cohn. Charges against Weil were not dropped as part of the government's agreement with UBS. (Marcu later skipped out on Covington, defecting to Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer in late January.)

"It is extremely disappointing that the indictment of Raoul Weil was not dismissed as part of the bank's settlement with the United States," Marcu said in a statement. "Mr. Weil is an innocent victim of a political dispute between the United States and Switzerland over Swiss bank secrecy. [An extensive investigation by FINMA] expressly found in a report released today that there was no evidence that Mr. Weil was aware of or participated in any conspiracy to violate U.S. law."

The government's investigation was led by U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida R. Alexander Acosta, acting assistant U.S. attorney general John DiCicco, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kevin Downing and Michael Ben'Ary of the tax division at Main Justice, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Neiman in Fort Lauderdale.

"UBS executives knew that UBS's cross-border business violated the law," Acosta said in a statement released by the Justice Department. "They refused to stop this activity, however, and in fact instructed their bankers to grow the business. ... This was not a mere compliance oversight, but rather a knowing crime motivated by greed and disrespect of the law."

 It has been a rough year legally for Switzerland's largest bank, which turned to Debevoise & Plimpton's Mary Jo White and Andrew Ceresney to help negotiate a $19.4 billion auction-rate securities settlement in August. The ARS investigation resulted in the resignation of David Aufhauser, the former general counsel of the bank's investment banking subsidiary, who later agreed to his own ARS-related settlement with state prosecutors in New York.

 With all of these legal entanglements, perhaps it's no surprise that UBS chief executive Peter Kurer, a former general counsel at the company, has spoken openly of trimming the bank's legal bills.


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« Reply #8 on: February 19, 2009, 07:29:42 PM »

Holy summary batman  Shocked
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« Reply #9 on: February 19, 2009, 07:30:47 PM »

OH GOOD, well i would suggest starting with George Soros considering he owns the Democratic Party and Obama.

Then go on to Rockefeller and the rest of the U.S. Traitors.

Soros calls himself an American, he was a f**king Nazi. He helped Nazi's confiscated Jewish peoples valuables during the Holocaust, and has been a Nazi ever since.
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"Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate … It will purge the rottenness out of the system..." - Andrew Mellon, Secretary of Treasury, 1929.
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« Reply #10 on: February 19, 2009, 07:34:31 PM »

They obviously want ONE centralized global banking system.
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War Is Peace - Freedom Is Slavery - Ignorance Is Strength

The history of liberty is a history of resistance. The history of liberty is a history of limitations of governmental power, not the increase of it. - Woodrow Wilson Speech in New York, September 9, 1912
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« Reply #11 on: February 19, 2009, 07:36:06 PM »

OH GOOD, well i would suggest starting with George Soros considering he owns the Democratic Party and Obama.

Then go on to Rockefeller and the rest of the U.S. Traitors.

Soros calls himself an American, he was a f**king Nazi. He helped Nazi's confiscated Jewish peoples valuables during the Holocaust, and has been a Nazi ever since.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

good joke!


...no but seriously, i'm sure the government would select them in their "selective prosecution"  Grin

ps - i know you were being sarcastic. so am i  Cool
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« Reply #12 on: February 19, 2009, 07:51:12 PM »

UBS to Squeal, gets  a deal.... U.S. officials will not prosecute the bank on charges of conspiring to defraud the United States.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090218.wrubs19/BNStory/Business
UBS to pay fine, reveal U.S. clients
PAUL WALDIE
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
February 18, 2009 at 8:01 PM EST

In a stunning blow to the long-held secrecy of Swiss bank accounts, Swiss banking giant UBS AG  [UBS-N]has agreed to pay a $780-million (U.S.) fine and reveal the identity of roughly 20,000 American clients as part of a settlement with U.S. justice officials.

The unprecedented agreement ends years of investigation by U.S. officials over allegations the bank courted thousands of American clients between 2000 and 2007 and helped them set up offshore accounts to avoid paying taxes. Two UBS managers in the U.S. have been indicted over the allegations and one has pleaded guilty.

Under the deal, which was approved by a federal judge in Florida, the bank must also exit the cross-border business in the U.S., change many of its banking policies, appoint new executives to oversee its tax compliance, and hire an auditor approved by U.S. officials to ensure compliance with the agreement. In return, U.S. officials will not prosecute the bank on charges of conspiring to defraud the United States.

"The veil of secrecy has been pulled aside and we will continue to aggressively pursue those who shirk their federal tax obligations or assist others in doing so," said John A. DiCicco, the acting head of the Justice Department's tax division.

UBS chairman Peter Kurer said in a statement that the company regretted its compliance failures and accepted "full responsibility for these improper activities."

"Client confidentiality, to which UBS remains committed, was never designed to protect fraudulent acts or the identity of those clients, who, with the active assistance of bank personnel, misused the confidentiality protections," Mr. Kurer said.

In court filings unsealed yesterday, prosecutors alleged the bank's conduct began in 2000 shortly after it bought brokerage firm Paine Webber. At the time, UBS allegedly agreed to comply with regulations that required it to withhold income tax from U.S. clients who set up offshore accounts. However, prosecutors allege UBS helped U.S. clients set up nominee accounts, or "sham accounts," and moved the money around in order to evade tax reporting rules. According to the court filings, UBS had 60 managers in charge of the business and ran it out of several locations in Switzerland.

Prosecutors allege UBS officials aggressively marketed the service, making 3,800 trips to the U.S. in 2004 alone. UBS employees used encrypted laptops and other "counter-surveillance techniques" to conceal the identity of their clients. According to an agreed statement of facts filed in court, UBS had 20,000 U.S. clients with roughly $20-billion in total assets. Roughly 17,000 concealed their identity "and the existence of their UBS account from [the Internal Revenue Service]."

"Many of these clients willfully failed to pay tax to the IRS on income earned on their UBS accounts."

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« Reply #13 on: February 19, 2009, 09:02:20 PM »

Just read a list of politicians - should be the same as the list of Swiss bank accounts in question.

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« Reply #14 on: February 23, 2009, 02:33:06 PM »

Swiss party wants to punish U.S. for UBS probe 21/02/09 :
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=88401.0
Swiss party wants to punish U.S. for UBS probe
21 February 2009, Reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssFinancialServicesAndRealEstateNews/idUSTHO15017420090221


http://www.evb.ch/en/p25002822.html

Break the Silence: Switzerland must stop assisting tax evasion  (17.02.04)
Switzerland’s role in the aiding and abetting of tax evasion

A Swiss speciality
Helping rich individuals to evade tax payment is the Swiss finance markets’ real speciality.
Switzerland is the world leader in “offshore private banking” – private banking outside the clients’ country of residence. Swiss banks, or rather increasingly branches of foreign banks in Switzerland, manage about a third of the wealth in this bank sector worldwide. This is more than 2000 billion francs, with a yearly growth rate estimated at 6 to 6.5 percent.

«How fortunate that no-one knows..»
What share of the foreign private wealth in Switzerland was never taxed in its country of origin?
A French parliamentary delegation report (the Montebourg report) quotes Geneva bankiers and estimates that 90 percent of foreign capital is untaxed. The Deutsche Bank assumes at least 70 percent. Swiss sources on this question are even scarcer. Victor Füglister, former acting managing director of the Swiss Bankers Association answered to the question “How much money smuggled past tax authorities lies in Swiss bank accounts?” with the answer, “I cannot answer that question, there are no statistics available”. “But it must be a significant share of the private capital?” “It could be a quite big share, yes.”

The banking secrecy plays no role
The banking secrecy is not the reason why Switzerland is so attractive for tax evasion. The Swiss financial lobby and politicians like to emphasise the banking secrecy in order to distract from the banks’ role in assisting tax evasion. The crucial factor for foreign tax evaders is the Swiss legal peculiarity in differentiating between tax fraud and tax evasion.

The banking secrecy primarily protects the clients’ private sphere, curious business partners or investigating journalists should rightly not have any access to his or her financial situation. But the Swiss banking secrecy has not been absolute for some time now. It is revoked when money laundering, insider trading or corruption is suspected, in the search for fortunes stolen by dictators/politicians from their countries, and when terrorist financing is suspected. The obligation of banks to provide information to tax authorities could be legally defined without having to abolish “banking secrecy”.

The Swiss peculiarity
The real reason why foreign tax evaders invest their money in Switzerland is the unique Swiss differentiation between tax evasion and tax fraud. Tax evasion is not a crime, only tax fraud with falsified documents carries a criminal punishment.
This legal division has consequences. It also applies to legal and regulatory cooperation – that means that Switzerland only assists other countries to investigate when an act is considered a crime in Switzerland. In Swiss law on international legal assistance tax evasion is explicitly excluded. Without legal and regulatory assistance thanks to the separation of tax evasion and tax fraud, foreign tax evaders are safe here.

Who pays the cost?
European countries are the first losers to Switzerland’s’ assistance to tax evasion. The Banca d’Italia estimates that 500 billion Euros are moved out of Italy untaxed. When Italy recently carried out a tax amnesty, almost 60 percent of the returned money came from Switzerland. If the money that was not returned is distributed similarly, then around 270 billion Euros from Italy still remain in Swiss bank accounts. In January 2003 the German finance ministry learned that the German tax evasion money invested in Swiss, Liechtenstein and Luxembourg bank accounts was estimated at 450 to 550 billion Euros. This is equivalent to a quarter of Germany’s gross national product.

Unsatisfactory compromise
The EU has tried for a long time to harmonise its taxation of capital, based on the mutual exchange of information. In order to prevent even more money draining untaxed into Switzerland, the EU negotiated with Switzerland (as well as with the USA and several tax havens) about participation in this information exchange. With support from Luxembourg, Belgium and Austria from inside the EU, Switzerland managed to obtain an agreement whereby it collects a source tax on the interest gained by EU citizens’ bank accounts. The tax rate will increase from 11 percent in the year 2005 to 35 percent in 2011. Three quarters of this money kept back from interest payments goes to the country of origin, the rest is kept by Switzerland.

...
Their tax evasion is our tax burden
The ways and means to “optimise the tax declaration” are only available to the very rich and transnational companies. Normal working citizens and small and medium sized companies pay more tax, consumers more VAT to compensate. At the same time the beneficiaries of tax evasion are the ones who are saying that our welfare state and public services are to expensive to be maintained.

Our demands
The Berne Declaration and the Swiss Coalition of Development Organizations demand that Switzerland ceases to assist tax evasion. The Swiss hair-splitting that differentiates tax evasion and tax fraud should be abolished. Switzerland should offer legal and regulatory assistance to countries also in straightforward cases of tax evasion.
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« Reply #15 on: March 04, 2009, 08:41:02 PM »

Now the Fed's are going after "The City"

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/12/02/business/02tax.php
U.S. to expand tax inquiry to include Credit Suisse and HSBC

The Justice Department has expanded its criminal investigation into foreign banks that sell offshore private banking services to include Credit Suisse and HSBC, according to people briefed on the matter.

The investigation into the two European banks is an outgrowth of an inquiry by U.S. prosecutors and regulators into UBS, the Swiss bank giant, over its sale of offshore banking services to wealthy Americans. U.S. prosecutors, who are focusing on senior and midlevel executives and bankers at UBS, contend that UBS illegally helped American clients hide up to $20 billion in secret offshore accounts, thereby evading $300 million a year in taxes from 2000 to 2007.

HSBC, which is based in London and is Europe's largest bank, is a global financial giant with large retail, private, asset management and investment banking operations across the United States and Asia. Credit Suisse, which is based in Zurich, is also one of the world's largest private banks, with significant operations in the United States.

The investigation into HSBC and Credit Suisse began about September and is focusing on whether the two banks helped wealthy American clients hide up to $30 billion in offshore accounts that went undeclared to the Internal Revenue Service, the people briefed on the matter said. Prosecutors are examining whether the two banks illegally helped their American clients use those offshore accounts to evade United States taxes and whether the clients themselves violated United States laws.

The investigations are at an early stage and have not focused on any executives, these people said, though they added that could change as the investigations unfolded.
...
A spokeswoman for HSBC declined to comment on Monday on whether the bank had been swept up in a larger investigation stemming from the scrutiny of UBS. "We are not aware of any investigation in that context," Jan Vonder Mühll, a spokesman in Zurich for Credit Suisse, said Tuesday. "Credit Suisse adheres to the highest compliance standards, regulations and policies," he added. A Justice Department spokesman could not be reached late Monday for immediate comment.

...
Like the investigation into UBS, the scrutiny of HSBC and Credit Suisse is focused on potential crimes committed in the United States with American clients, even though the banks are based abroad.

Like UBS, HSBC and Credit Suisse are registered broker-dealers in the United States, but those licenses, which are overseen by the Securities and Exchange Commission, do not apply to banking or investment services provided by their overseas affiliates or overseas subsidiaries.

http://householdwatch.com/monitor/news/no-tax-cheats-among-uk-banks
No tax cheats among UK banks

Taxes and tax havens are an issue in England. TUC, the national trade union center in the UK, said its research showed that Barclays, Lloyds, HSBC and RBS have over 1,000 subsidiary companies in tax havens dotted across the world. All four banks said that they comply with all relevant tax laws. TUC said tax havens are not necessarily used for tax avoidance.


HSBC said that it did not take any money from the government and added that it “does not seek to avoid taxation and has an excellent relationship with HMRC and the other regulators and authorities under whose guidance and rules we operate.”

Did anyone really expect any of the banks to climb on the Queen’s shoulders for a public admission as tax cheats? The union did say that tax avoidance results in shortfalls made up by everyone else.

After HSBC pointed out for the thousandth time that HSBC did not take any money from the UK or US, HSBC was politely told that the bank benefits from extra liquidity pumped into the banking sector.


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« Reply #16 on: March 13, 2009, 10:01:30 AM »

Almost nothing you do electronically is safe. Your money which is nothing more than 1's & 0's (the binary system) is no more safe from the Fed's long reach than a free meal from a starving man. The only wealth you will probably accumulate will be that you hide as in gold, silver and other items that you wish to leave to your children, just remember to hide them and let one or two trusted associates know where the are so they will not be lost forever when you are no longer around.
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« Reply #17 on: March 13, 2009, 10:17:57 PM »

UBS is already caving in, there is no way they can hold this off till the end of the year.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gnnlwDLNqBf_LBYoI-pR0r0_YBSAD96TBSLG0

Switzerland breaks with tradition on tax evasion
By BRADLEY S. KLAPPER and ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS – 6 hours ago

GENEVA (AP) — Switzerland's days as a safe haven for the world's tax evaders are numbered.

Under pressure from the United States and other troubled economies, the Swiss government announced Friday that it will cooperate in international tax investigations, breaking with a long-standing tradition of protecting wealthy foreigners accused of hiding billions of dollars. Austria and Luxembourg also said they would help.


"Against the background of the financial crisis, international cooperation has grown stronger particularly against tax crimes," Swiss President Hans-Rudolf Merz said.

But he insisted that the secrecy of Swiss banks would remain intact except when other countries provide compelling evidence of tax evasion.

The decision was a hard one for the Swiss, whose renowned discretion has long attracted famous foreigners as well as refugees from political or religious persecution.

Swiss banks hold an estimated $2 trillion of foreign money, and financial services add about 12 percent of GDP to the national economy. According to the Boston Consulting Group, those holdings amount to one-fourth of the world's foreign-owned assets.

The famed "numbered accounts" that do not bear the owner's name will still be available for clients willing to pay for added anonymity. But the government will now be able to demand account holders' identities in cases of suspected wrongdoing and share that information with foreign authorities.

Switzerland's move comes ahead of a meeting next month in which world powers will discuss stepping up their fight against tax cheats.


The greatest pressure has been on Switzerland, which has been embroiled in a dispute with the United States over wealthy Americans who have stashed money in its biggest bank, UBS AG.


Hoping to avoid being blacklisted as uncooperative tax havens, other countries have also announced plans to open their books to foreign tax inspectors.

Austria and Luxembourg said Friday that they would offer more help on tax investigations. Over the past month, leaders have made similar promises in Singapore, Liechtenstein, Bermuda, the British islands of Jersey and Guernsey, and tiny Andorra on the border between France and Spain
.

For generations, the Swiss have guaranteed depositors that they and their assets would be protected from oppressive governments.

French Protestants poured in during the 1600s, at the same time that Geneva's banks were funding Louis XIV's wars to expand the borders of Catholic France. When the French Revolution came a century later, nobles and other refugees found a shelter in Switzerland for themselves and their property.

In World War II, Switzerland accepted numerous Jews and other persecuted minorities from Nazi Germany. After the war, refugees arrived from communist-controlled Europe. Hundreds of thousands of people from the former Yugoslavia lived in Switzerland during the Balkan Wars of the 1990s.

But criminals and dictators have also taken advantage of the secrecy rules. The Swiss have had to return to governments hundreds of millions of dollars deposited by the late Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos, Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha and others.

It is still unclear how the new commitment to fighting tax evasion will translate into practice.

Merz said the Swiss wanted "assistance to be restricted to individual cases to prevent fishing expeditions" in which prosecutors without evidence seek to uncover wrongdoing.

And other "offshore" banking centers are still available in the Caribbean, Panama, Dubai and elsewhere.

Swiss authorities have already provided the U.S. with the banking details of up to 300 wealthy Americans suspected of tax fraud. But Switzerland has refused to identify about 50,000 more U.S. account holders Washington wants.

UBS and Swiss officials have said further cooperation would violate national law, which makes an unclear distinction between the serious crime of tax fraud and the minor offense of tax evasion.

Switzerland toughened its secrecy laws in 1934 during a worldwide depression and under the threat of espionage by France and Nazi Germany.

Strict penalties were imposed on Swiss bank employees for disclosing client information, including a life sentence given to one in 1943 for providing the Nazis with details of 74 account holders. German citizens at the time risked the death sentence for depositing money abroad.

Since then, secrecy standards have eroded somewhat. In addition to disclosing dictators' cash, the Swiss cracked down on money laundering in the 1990s. After the 2001 attacks on the United States, they made it easier to freeze assets and investigate suspected financiers of global terrorism.

Merz said the latest change means Switzerland will adopt standards set in 2000 by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development for countries working together against tax evasion.

"Banking secrecy does not protect tax crimes," Merz said.

The Swiss Bankers Association said it supported the decision, but now wants "an end to all improper international criticism of Switzerland" and an end to threats to put Switzerland on the black list of uncooperative tax havens.

The industry group said it expects all agreements to refrain from retroactively punishing banks or clients for past infractions.

Associated Press writers Balz Bruppacher in Bern and Frank Jordans in Geneva contributed to this report.
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« Reply #18 on: March 13, 2009, 11:34:33 PM »

They are making a list and checking it twice...

There's going to be alot of electronic money flying to the "new" remaining "havens"... maybe even trunks of cash like what happened at Riggs Bank...

Out of the "30" we know of 11:

Switzerland, Luxembourg, Austria, Singapore, Hong Kong, Panama, Gibraltar, and Bahrain, which already includes such well-established havens as Andorra, Liechtenstein and Monaco.

Drug Money Laundering under Government Cover
...
A "New" EOCD "Blacklist" to be unveiled at G20 summit, April 2: All frauds must be controlled frauds...

http://www.loc.gov/lawweb/servlet/lloc_news?disp0_767_text
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development: Tax Havens Targeted

On October 21, 2008, at a conference to combat international tax evasion and avoidance, representatives of 17 leading economies that are Member States of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) made a recommendation to the OECD that it compile a new blacklist targeting uncooperative tax jurisdictions. The current list targets only Andorra, Liechtenstein, and Monaco.
...
The planned release date of the blacklist, along with a "green list" of countries that are making progress in tackling tax fraud, is mid-2009. Other potential candidates for the blacklist are Panama, Gibraltar, and Bahrain, which reportedly "have promised to comply with OECD standards but with no discernible results." (Nouel, supra.)

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4070617,00.html
Taxes | 03.03.2009
France, Germany Want Global Black List for Tax Havens

In the future, no country, no institution and no financial product should be allowed to remain beyond regulation. That was the conclusion after the French and German finance ministers met in Paris on Tuesday, March 3.

This is interesting on Panama banking.... Guatemala ?

http://www.panamalaw.org/lichtenstein_bank_secrecy_scandal.html

Let’s look at Panama in light of this criminal act. Could this or would this be likely to happen in Panama. NO!!! Why? Read on.

Panama has about 17% of its workforce employed by the banks. Figure another 10% of the work force is in related industries – law firms, stockbrokers, and people providing services to the banks like IT, security, janitorial, communications etc. Panama has an 8.5% unemployment level now. If something like this happened in Panama and the government stood still for it the banks would be gone (most of the 150 and many of these 150 have 30 or more branch offices around Panama) and the country would have a very unacceptable level of unemployment in a few months, which could deal Panama a devastating blow that it may not recover from at all.

Panama has teeth and can retaliate. If a nation played illegal games with Panama, Panama could block their ships/goods from crossing the Panama Canal. Ouch that would hurt. It is not nice to play games with the nation that controls the Panama Canal. Panama also holds a seat on the UN Security Council. Ouch more doom and gloom on the way for breaking International Law. Can someone say Hague Court? So rest assured this is not going to happen to a nation like Panama, which is a far cry from Lichtenstein with its 35,000 population.

Rest assured bank security measures have been in place for years to guard against anything like this. No one person at a Panama Bank can go and do a general download of all account holders’ records. My gosh never happen. Such a download would take swipe cards from at least two key executives (think executive vice-president or higher) and their respective passwords. This would also generate a visible and audible alarm at the IT security station who would be on the phone verifying what the heck is going on and probably notifying the president and/or security director. This would be a major event in the IT department, not a casual everyday thing.

The banks are civilly and could even be criminally liable for such security breeches and the compromised clients would be able to sue the banks for damages, which could be treble damages for negligence, and the people who actually did the crime as well could be sued civilly. Warrants would be put out and the people brought to justice as in go to jail. Panama is a major player in international affairs controlling the Panama Canal and holding a seat on the UN Security Council. Panama is more than just a little country land locked in Europe, not in the EU controlled by a royal family, sort of a left over from the past. Countries are not going to be flippant about violating the laws of the Republica de Panama since there would for sure be a price to pay for such actions and that price might be painful as in your country cannot use the Panama Canal anymore and no shipments can go through destined for you and they do read shipping manifests of ships passing through.

Other Strong Banking Privacy Solutions – The real answers for those who are not trusting of the banks and the bank secrecy laws are below:

Guatemala does not treat money laundering as strongly as other countries view it. Conspiracy laws are also very much weakened in Guatemala. Guatemala is a very free and privacy oriented country

Trust Agreement Banking – Details on Trust Agreement Banking can be found here in detail. Essentially there is a trust agreement between you and the Guatemala Law Firm. The law firm forms a Guatemala Corporation, which has a Guatemala Bank Account where the law firm is the signatory/beneficial owner. The bank has no idea who you are never ever seeing any id from you. If anyone at the bank compromised the account holders, so what all that comes up is the name of an anonymous Guatemala Corporation and the data on the Guatemala Law Firm, never you.

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« Reply #19 on: March 13, 2009, 11:44:39 PM »

Beginning of the end for tax havens
Swiss to hand over details of evaders
Saturday 14 March
Full article:- http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/mar/13/switzerland-tax-evasion-fight

Gordon Brown last night hailed the ­beginning of the end for tax havens, as Switzerland opened up its ­legendary system of bank secrecy and agreed to hand over information on wealthy clients suspected of tax evasion.

The move, described as historic by anti-poverty campaigners, came as ­international pressure, including action from Brown and Barack Obama, forced the world's tax havens to hand over previously undisclosed data on account holders.

In a remarkable week, Europe's secrecy jurisdictions – Liechtenstein, Andorra, Austria, Luxembourg, Jersey and ­Switzerland – all entered into international information sharing agreements.

Swiss ministers said the government caved in after learning the country was going to be included this month on a ­blacklist of uncooperative tax havens drawn up by the Organisation for ­Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Having agreed to sign up to the OECD protocol on tax, Switzerland will hand over information on account ­holders suspected of tax evasion by another country.

Until now tax evasion was not illegal in Switzerland and secrecy has been the bedrock of its economy.

Hans-Rudolf Merz, Swiss president and finance minister, said yesterday: "Co-operation on taxes has become more important given the globalisation of ­financial markets and in particular against the background of the financial crisis."

Switzerland is the world's biggest tax haven. The world's rich hide at least $1.89 tn (£1.35tn) of the estimated $7trn of ­private wealth there according to the Swiss Bankers Association, though others put the figure much higher.

The world's tax havens have been ­rattled by a series of events that have forced them to come into the open. The global banking collapse revealed that many of the most complex debt instruments were based in offshore ­centres such as Jersey.

Obama has made cracking down on secretive jurisdictions central to his ­economic justice programme. ­

The fresh concessions by tax havens will not lead to full disclosure of the true ­beneficiaries of the complicated maze of sham trusts designed to confuse ­international tax authorities.

Campaign groups from all over Europe marched through Jersey's capital, St Helier yesterday. In a statement the aid groups demanded "a systemic change … to allow developing countries to get hold of the information they need … so they can stop the tax evasion".
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« Reply #20 on: April 03, 2009, 02:27:05 PM »

This is totally selective enforcement. Given a name they will investigate individual "Tax" fraud and nothing else.  This leaves the corporate-government money skimming-laundering to continue as usual.

G20 EOCD new - Blacklist
http://www.oecd.org/document/57/0,3343,en_2649_34487_42496569_1_1_1_1,00.html

02/04/2009 - Following the G20 meeting and communiqué , the OECD Secretariat has provided a detailed report on progress by financial centres around the world towards implementation of an internationally agreed standard on exchange of information for tax purposes. The report available here consists of four parts:

jurisdictions that have substantially implemented the internationally agreed tax standard.

tax havens that have committed to the internationally agreed tax standard but have not yet substantially implemented it.

other financial centres that have committed to the internationally agreed tax standard but have not yet substantially implemented it.


jurisdictions that have not committed to implement the internationally agreed tax standard. Welcoming the outcome of the G20 meeting, OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria said “recent developments reinforce the status of the OECD standard as the international benchmark and represent significant steps towards a level playing field. We now have an ambitious agenda, that the OECD is well placed to deliver on. I am confident that we can turn these new commitments into concrete actions to strengthen the integrity and transparency of the financial system”.

http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/38/14/42497950.pdf

Jurisdictions that have not committed to the internationally agreed tax standard

Costa Rica
Malaysia (Labuan)
Philippines
Uruguay

Jurisdictions that have committed to the internationally agreed tax standard, but have not yet substantially implemented

Andorra
Anguilla
Antigua and Barbuda
Aruba
Bahamas
Bahrain
Belize
Bermuda
British Virgin Islands
Cayman Islands4
Cook Islands
Dominica
Gibraltar
Grenada
Liberia
Liechtenstein
Marshall Islands
Monaco
Montserrat
Nauru
Neth. Antilles
Niue
Panama
St Kitts and Nevis
St Lucia
St Vincent & Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Turks and Caicos Islands
Vanuatu


Other Financial Centres
Austria5
Belgium5
Brunei
Chile
Guatemala
Luxembourg5
Singapore
Switzerland5

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7980848.stm

OECD names and shames tax havens  
 
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has published its blacklist of non-cooperative tax havens.
Costa Rica, Malaysia, the Philippines and Uruguay are the countries listed as not having agreed to tax standards.

The list is part of efforts agreed by the G20 to clamp down on tax havens, which may involve using sanctions. Three of the blacklisted countries have said that they should be removed from the list.

There is also a list of 38 places that have agreed to improve standards but not yet done so, such as Gibraltar, Liechtenstein, Andorra and San Marino.

On Thursday, G20 leaders agreed to take sanctions against tax havens using the OECD list as its basis.

In their communique, they agreed, "to take action against non-cooperative jurisdictions, including tax havens".  "We stand ready to deploy sanctions to protect our public finances and financial systems. The era of banking secrecy is over."

Pressure

Angel Gurria, secretary general of the OECD, said that the G20 summit had helped to focus minds on the issue of tax havens.

"We've had more progress in the last two weeks on this matter than we've had in the last 10 or 12 years," he told the BBC.
He added that the progress had come despite the leaders not specifying what sanctions they would take.

"[Non-cooperating countries] will move because they know the question of sanctions, however ill-defined that was, is going to affect them somehow."

The Philippines is already reported to be taking steps to remove itself from the blacklist.

"The Philippine government would take the necessary steps to ensure we meet their expectations," Trade Secretary Peter Favila told the Associated Press news agency.

"It is really up to us to prove them wrong."

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said that his country should not be on the blacklist at all.

"We should not be in that category as, in practice, we have been committed to OECD requirements," he said in a statement.

Uruguay has also objected to its inclusion on the list.
"In Uruguay, we are not a tax haven," President Tabare Vazquez said.
"Uruguay may not be a monastery, but it is not a casino," he added.
 
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« Reply #21 on: July 16, 2009, 12:24:59 PM »

Now that the economic breakdown dust has settled....

This is more about keeping middle-class American's wealth on-shore then anything else. I.E. selective enforcement...

http://www.upi.com/Business_News/2009/07/08/Swiss-bank-accounts-remain-secret/UPI-67011247065053/
Swiss bank accounts remain secret
Published: July 8, 2009 at 10:57

WASHINGTON, July 8 (UPI) -- A new U.S.-Swiss treaty on bank secrecy may not help the Internal Revenue Service catch tax evaders, a Swiss official says.

Swiss Vice President Doris Leuthard said under the amended treaty, the United States will have to supply the names of suspected tax evaders to obtain information about their Swiss bank accounts, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

"This is basic, basic information they will need to give us," Leuthard said.

But U.S. authorities don't necessarily have the names, the Post reports.

Attorney Jack Blum, who specializes in international tax and money-laundering matters, said he doesn't think the change will solve the problem.

The U.S. government has asked a federal court to order Switzerland's largest bank, UBS, to turn over the names of thousands of Americans suspected of hiding money from the IRS.


http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1910389,00.html
U.S. vs. UBS: A Fight Over Secret Swiss Bank Accounts
By Helena Bachmann / Geneva Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2009


Switzerland — the land of chocolate, watches and neutrality — isn't known for flexing its muscles in a heated standoff with another country. But now it finds itself pitted against the U.S. in a David and Goliath–style imbroglio that could damage diplomatic and economic relations between the two for years to come. On one side, the U.S. Department of Justice is accusing Swiss banking giant UBS of helping wealthy Americans hide billions of dollars from the tax man and insisting that the bank reveal their identities. On the other, the Swiss government is threatening to step in to protect the country's famous secrecy laws. The two have until Aug. 3 to come up with an agreement — or continue the fight in court.

UBS has been under investigation by the Department of Justice since last summer for allegedly helping wealthy Americans hide $200 billion in undisclosed offshore accounts to evade taxes. To absolve itself of criminal charges, the bank, one of the world's largest wealth managers, agreed to pay a $780 million penalty and release the names of 250 clients whom the Internal Revenue Service suspected of evading taxes.

But that wasn't enough to end the bank's troubles. In February, the Department of Justice filed a civil lawsuit against UBS seeking the identities of 52,000 more Americans suspected of stashing a total of $15 billion at the bank. This time, the Swiss were having none of it. Citing bank-client confidentiality guaranteed in the Swiss constitution, Switzerland's government has forbidden UBS from complying. It has also threatened to "take control of the data at UBS" to prevent the bank from handing the accounts over to the Americans.

The Swiss claim that the U.S. proceeding against UBS breaks the terms of the treaty between the two countries that permits an exchange of information on tax matters only in individual cases where a specific and justified request is made. "The blocking order that the Swiss government is prepared to issue would be a first, but it's a reasonable step to take in light of the IRS's threatened disregard for international treaties and provisions of Swiss law," says James Nason, spokesman for the Swiss Banking Association (SBA), a trade group for Switzerland's financial institutions.

The case was due to reconvene in Miami on July 13, but an eleventh-hour temporary reprieve was granted over the weekend, with a U.S. federal court postponing the ruling until Aug. 3 to allow both countries to negotiate a settlement.

In the meantime, the U.S. government's insistence on enforcing its laws on foreign soil doesn't sit well with the Swiss. "The U.S. seems to prefer the role of an increasingly obnoxious tyrant," says Andy Sundberg, a retired businessman and founder of the Geneva-based American Citizens Abroad, an advocacy group for expatriate U.S. citizens. "It is obsessed with humiliating this small country, forcing it to betray the principles of its own constitution."

Sundberg says that with the IRS intensifying its hunt for alleged tax evaders, Swiss banks, fearful of potential legal problems, are closing the accounts of resident Americans and refusing to open new ones. Both UBS and Switzerland's second largest bank, Credit Suisse, have told Americans to move their money into specially created units registered in the U.S., or lose their accounts. Many smaller Swiss banks are simply turning away Americans.

While the long-term damage to UBS may be difficult to gauge, experts say its reputation as a reliable institution has taken a beating. "Clients worldwide have lost trust in UBS's ability to protect their privacy," says Teodoro Cocca, former professor of asset and wealth management at the Swiss Banking Institute in Zurich. "This will affect UBS's attraction for wealthy clients — the main franchise of the bank."

But others are confident that the damage will be limited to UBS. "We don't foresee any negative impact on the Swiss banking industry as a whole," says Martin Naville, CEO of the Zurich-based Swiss-American Chamber of Commerce, an organization that helps Swiss companies in the U.S. and U.S. companies in Switzerland expand their businesses. "It's the cleanest system in the world, with strict laws on money laundering, terrorist finances, corruption and other illicit activities."

The future of Swiss banking secrecy, long a bone of contention among Switzerland, the U.S. and the European Union, also looks to come through this scandal unscathed. In a recent SBA poll, 91% of respondents favored the protection of their privacy in financial matters. "It's an expression of mutual trust between the Swiss state and its citizens," SBA's Nason says. "The government is able to secure its tax revenues without having to trample on privacy by demanding an automatic right of forced entry into bank accounts. The Swiss take great pride in this arrangement and reward it with a very high level of taxpayer honesty."

The U.S., however, has warned Switzerland that if a deal is not reached in the UBS case, it will "vigorously pursue" the matter and may even seize the bank's American assets. But such an aggressive response "might destabilize UBS and have a major impact on the American economy, so the U.S. government should proceed at its own risk and peril," says the Swiss-American Chamber of Commerce's Naville, who points out that both countries have "a lot at stake" in each other's economies. Switzerland is the U.S.'s 15th largest export market and, with almost $149 billion spent in 2008, its fourth largest recipient in terms of direct investment. Switzerland, for its part, invested nearly $195 billion in the U.S. last year.

As the clock ticks toward the Aug. 3 deadline, the Swiss are hoping that the future of their secrecy laws is something they can still bank on.
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« Reply #22 on: August 21, 2009, 01:06:44 PM »

US preparing to prosecute 150 Top UBS account holders

http://rawstory.com/08/news/2009/08/14/us-preparing-to-prosecute-150-ubs-account-holders/
US preparing to prosecute 150 UBS account holders
By Agence France-Presse Published: August 14, 2009

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US authorities are building cases for possible criminal prosecution of some 150 wealthy American clients of Swiss banking giant UBS as part of a probe into tax evasion, the New York Times reported Friday.

The daily, which cited a person briefed on the matter, said the likely prosecutions were part of a crackdown on tax evasion using offshore accounts.

Earlier this week, the US government and UBS finalized a long-delayed out-of-court settlement to end a diplomatically sensitive tax secrecy case aimed at forcing the bank to turn over names of America account holders.

Details of the settlement were not available and it was unclear how many of the estimated 52,000 Americans with UBS offshore accounts would be named.

The Times noted that federal investigators received 285 names from UBS in February as part of a settlement when the Swiss bank agreed to pay a fine of 780 million dollars to settle charges that it had helped in tax evasion.

The Times, which quoted a source familiar with the UBS case, said the most recent settlement will require the bank to turn over names of clients who set up offshore entities to evade taxes and those who had contact with Swiss-based UBS bankers, in person, by telephone or by e-mail.

Accounts over a certain dollar amount would be included, the source added.

The Internal Revenue Service was to release the criteria next week, but the dollar threshold will not be publicly disclosed, the Times sources said.
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