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- <text id=89TT0712>
- <title>
- Mar. 13, 1989: Scandals:The Looting Of Greece
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 13, 1989 Between Two Worlds:Middle-Class Blacks
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- SCANDALS
- The Looting of Greece
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For the first time, a fallen tycoon tells how he embezzled
- millions
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Ajemian
- </p>
- <p> Greeks were exhilarated in 1981 when Andreas Papandreou and
- his Socialist Party swept to power. Their enthusiasm has long
- since turned to bitterness and disbelief as the worst financial
- and political scandal in four decades engulfs Greece. The
- press, the Bank of Greece, a magistrate and Parliament are
- delving into charges of corruption, seeking to uncover how more
- than $210 million disappeared from the Bank of Crete. Charges
- of embezzlement, kickbacks and bribery, of banknotes stuffed
- into briefcases, have been leveled against high officials.
- </p>
- <p> The scandal has scorched the Socialist Party (PASOK), and
- public cynicism has increasingly focused on the party's leader,
- Papandreou himself. The Prime Minister last September was
- already the target of snickering and outrage as he conducted a
- highly public extramarital liaison with airline flight steward
- Dimitra Liani, 34. As the parliamentary investigations dug
- through testimony, the question loomed: Was the Prime Minister
- aware of the crime all along?
- </p>
- <p> Papandreou has not testified before investigators, though he
- vehemently denies any involvement in what he calls a "conspiracy
- aiming to hurt Greece." But investigators have yet to hear from
- the central figure in the case, George Koskotas, 34, a onetime
- New York house painter who vaulted to power as the
- multimillionaire owner of the Bank of Crete. Now jailed in
- Massachusetts on a variety of charges leveled just before he
- fled Greece last November, Koskotas is facing extradition to
- answer accusations of looting his own bank.
- </p>
- <p> Amid more than a dozen lawsuits, much has come out about the
- vast scandal, but most Greeks believe there is far more to be
- revealed -- by one man in particular. Given his central role in
- the affair, Koskotas' version of the dirty dealings could prove
- to be an imperfect account. Apparently nothing will be resolved
- until the public has weighed his tale. "At this point," says a
- frustrated former PASOK member, "we are all waiting to hear what
- Koskotas has to say."
- </p>
- <p> A plump man with steady dark eyes and a soft voice, Koskotas
- is no common embezzler. In addition to the Bank of Crete, he
- owned Grammi, a flourishing publishing empire that operated five
- magazines, three newspapers and a radio station. He bankrolled
- big hotels. A year ago, he bought Greece's wildly popular soccer
- team, Olympiakos. He created one of the world's most advanced
- printing plants. And until he fled Greece, Koskotas consorted
- freely with the country's ruling Socialist leaders. At 34,
- George Koskotas, the Greek wunderkind, had achieved a dazzling
- reputation in his own land.
- </p>
- <p> Now inside a Salem, Mass., prison, Koskotas has finally
- decided to talk. His chief motivation, he explains, is a fear
- that once extradited to Greece he will disappear behind bars --
- or be murdered and declared a suicide and thus be unable to
- present his own version of what happened. He figures his fate in
- Greece will be worse if Papandreou remains in power; so his
- motive for speaking may also be to wound the government.
- </p>
- <p> The Koskotas accusations are extraordinary, though difficult
- to verify. In six lengthy prison interviews with TIME, the
- banker describes a Socialist government riddled by extortion and
- criminality. Koskotas charges that millions of dollars missing
- from his bank were actually payoffs that went directly to the
- head of the government, Andreas Papandreou, and PASOK officials.
- The Prime Minister, says the banker, personally authorized the
- plan to loot the Bank of Crete. Koskotas describes as well his
- own illegal complicity in the huge swindle, one that involves
- enormous sums hard to account for adequately.
- </p>
- <p> The plot was an audacious one. To create the pool of crooked
- money, PASOK leaders had for three years ordered state-managed
- corporations such as the Post Office, the Organization of Urban
- Transportation and the State Pharmaceutical Co. to transfer
- large bank deposits -- the country's money, in effect -- out of
- the big national banks into the Bank of Crete, then the smallest
- private bank in the country. There, Koskotas says, he arranged
- for the government deposits to draw an exceptionally low rate
- of interest, only 2% or 3%. Bank savings accounts in Greece
- routinely draw 15% interest. The excess interest earned on the
- government deposits was siphoned off and went straight to the
- politicians, he says. In addition, protected and encouraged by
- Papandreou, Koskotas secretly plowed Bank of Crete funds into
- his magazines and newspapers.
- </p>
- <p> In the past year, says Koskotas, some 40 shipments of money,
- in blue briefcases stuffed with 5,000-drachma notes, were carted
- out of the Bank of Crete and taken first to his own residence.
- There the banker handed the money over to a Papandreou
- confidant, Georgios Louvaris, who Koskotas says made the
- deliveries to the Prime Minister. Pickups occurred weekly and
- amounted over the year to more than 3 billion drachmas ($20
- million at today's rates). In addition, Koskotas claims he
- personally carried a total of half a billion drachmas ($3.3
- million) to the home of a Deputy Prime Minister, Menios
- Koutsogiorgas. At the Bank of Crete half a dozen other PASOK
- leaders twice a month received briefcases filled with money
- totaling 1.5 billion drachmas ($10 million).
- </p>
- <p> There was little danger of interference. Fifty different
- national audits of the Bank of Crete that might have uncovered
- the scheme were squelched over the years by PASOK officials,
- says Koskotas, twice by direct calls from Papandreou. In the
- summer of 1988, the government muscled through a special
- Secrecy Act that had the effect of guaranteeing its overdrawn
- banker financial confidentiality. Koskotas says he was directed
- to pay an additional $2 million to then Deputy Prime Minister
- Koutsogiorgas as a reward for managing the legislation.
- </p>
- <p> The dank atmosphere that nurtured this tangle of alleged
- corruption began after the Socialists' re-election in 1985.
- Papandreou was eager to tighten his grip on the country. He
- found a perfect match in the ambitious young publisher and
- banker Koskotas, who saw in PASOK a means to build an empire.
- </p>
- <p> Now, sitting in the library of the Salem prison, Koskotas
- recalled the beginnings of a relationship that led to his ruin.
- He wore a blue pullover sport shirt and blue jeans, white
- leather sneakers on his feet. Koskotas had squeezed his big
- waist into a one-armed desk chair.
- </p>
- <p> In his lap he balanced a pile of tape transcripts and
- letters he had carried out of Greece as evidence. From time to
- time he ran his finger across the pages of his old appointment
- book, picking out entries of meetings with the Prime Minister
- and other key government officials.
- </p>
- <p> He remembers the meetings with Papandreou vividly, five
- times alone in the Prime Minister's home at Kastri, once at the
- home of a Papandreou intimate, Michalis Ziangas. At the first
- meeting in early 1986, Koskotas recalls, the Prime Minister had a
- proposal: Koskotas should start a daily newspaper to provide
- positive coverage of the Papandreou family. Koskotas later put
- up the money, and the first issue of the paper, called 24
- Hours, appeared in February 1988.
- </p>
- <p> The Prime Minister always seemed to possess inside
- information. Papandreou, says the banker, taps the home and
- business telephones of such rivals as the head of the political
- opposition, New Democracy's Constantine Mitsotakis, and
- unfriendly publishers. "I know all their plans," he proudly
- told Koskotas.
- </p>
- <p> Papandreou came to assume that Grammi's national magazines
- and newspapers really served him. Certain Papandreou favorites
- were hired as editors. Says Koskotas: "All our editors were
- instructed never to criticize the Prime Minister personally,
- not even a single cartoon." Papandreou urged Koskotas to
- neutralize hostile newspapers by buying them up gradually. At
- their second meeting in early 1987, Papandreou pressed Koskotas
- to buy Kathimerini, the country's most respected paper; he did,
- using Bank of Crete funds.
- </p>
- <p> Another time Papandreou had an unexpected idea: Koskotas
- should purchase the Olympiakos football team. Papandreou,
- according to Koskotas, wanted the banker to build up the team,
- so that just before the 1989 election the government would
- agree to build Olympiakos a new stadium, an announcement certain
- to be highly popular. Koskotas laid out 4 billion drachmas for
- the plan.
- </p>
- <p> Koskotas' first ambition, he says, was to enlarge the Bank
- of Crete. Private banks routinely had to wait at least a year
- for authorization to open a single branch. But the Bank of
- Crete opened about 50 branches in four years, and licenses were
- granted for an additional 20. Sure of his political shield,
- Koskotas was unafraid to violate banking laws and withdraw huge
- sums of cash at will. If Koskotas worried aloud about audits,
- Papandreou was always reassuring. "So long as I am here,"
- Koskotas says Papandreou told him, "you never have to worry."
- </p>
- <p> Koskotas said little of his early years, but he was a young
- man drawn to risk. Born in 1954 in Greece, he came to America
- with his parents in 1970. "George was very ambitious," says his
- wife Kathy, whom he married in 1973. "His mind was always
- working."
- </p>
- <p> At New York University, that overactive mind seemed to be
- hunting for angles. Koskotas ordered a batch of N.Y.U. and
- Fordham University stationery from a printer. He said he wanted
- to send reprimanding letters to some student friends as a
- prank. The university believed he intended to create fake
- transcripts. He was arrested, fined $200 and asked to leave
- school.
- </p>
- <p> Not satisfied with all his claimed wealth, he continued to
- indulge his compulsion for risk taking, and it backfired badly.
- Koskotas obtained fake Social Security numbers for several of
- his painters who were illegal aliens -- federal prosecutors
- charge that he created fictitious names -- and then used them in
- efforts to collect unemployment insurance claims and income tax
- refunds. In 1979, before Koskotas was indicted by the U.S.
- Attorney, he returned to Greece with his wife and four
- children. A year later, in 1980, the U.S. formally charged him
- with stealing $40,000. In the years that followed, Koskotas
- traveled back and forth numerous times to America, always
- unaware he was under indictment, he claims. Long after, the
- incident would rise up to haunt him.
- </p>
- <p> Back in Greece, still only 25, he landed a job as an
- administrative officer at the Bank of Crete. Five years later,
- in late 1984 when the Bank of Crete came up for purchase at $9
- million, Koskotas somehow produced a bankroll big enough to buy
- it. He knew exactly where he wanted to go. The Socialists were
- immersed in an election and Koskotas was determined to curry
- favor. Within a few months he hired as bank general manager a
- PASOK veteran, Panayotis Vakalis, whom he knew to be a longtime
- friend of Andreas Papandreou's. The connection eventually
- brought the young banker and the Prime Minister together. The
- great swindle was under way.
- </p>
- <p> For two years, says Koskotas, payoffs went to the party,
- none to Papandreou himself. Then a pivotal event occurred. In
- October 1987, Koskotas traveled to Washington to attend a White
- House luncheon at which Vice President George Bush was the
- host. Secret Service agents, checking invitations, were
- surprised to discover that the guest from Greece was under a
- six-year-old federal indictment. They arrested Koskotas at his
- Washington hotel. The banker posted bail of $1 million. A few
- days later, to get home, Koskotas lied to Greek embassy
- officials and obtained a travel document.
- </p>
- <p> Only three weeks later, Koskotas says, he was summoned by
- Papandreou. It was apparent to Koskotas that something was
- wrong. Sternly the Prime Minister warned that because of the
- passport violation, Koskotas might have to go to jail.
- Eventually Papandreou declared Koskotas need not worry. But
- there were certain requirements. An election was coming, the
- Prime Minister stressed, and PASOK needed 5 billion drachmas
- ($33 million). Thereupon, says Koskotas, Papandreou bluntly
- described a much expanded plan for kicking back interest
- payments. Koskotas, he directed, should work out the details
- with Deputy Prime Minister Koutsogiorgas. Says Koskotas,
- sounding surprisingly disingenuous: "I realized it was outright
- blackmail." Until then he had rationalized that the stolen
- interest payments to PASOK were simply the political cost of
- doing business in Greece.
- </p>
- <p> Two weeks later, Koskotas says, the first direct request for
- money came by telephone from Papandreou. The Prime Minister
- wanted 200 million drachmas ($1.3 million), purportedly to pay
- the expenses for a PASOK youth festival. Georgios Louvaris
- would drop by. In the following months, says Koskotas,
- Papandreou made two other personal calls for cash, each for 150
- million drachmas ($1 million), for what he described as PASOK
- events. Otherwise the Prime Minister received a weekly delivery
- of around 75 million drachmas.
- </p>
- <p> Soon Koskotas found the requests from Papandreou and
- Koutsogiorgas bolder -- and more personal. Papandreou wanted to
- squelch a critical memoir by his first wife, Christine, a
- psychiatrist. Through foreign book agents, Koskotas paid out
- $90,000 and tied up world rights to the book. Papandreou raised
- another problem. The Prime Minister, then 69, was keeping
- company with Dimitra Liani, a buxom airline hostess half his
- age. The weekly newspaper Evdomi, Papandreou complained, kept
- turning up nude photographs of Dimitra. Within a month Koskotas
- had bought Evdomi, and three months later he shut it down. Then
- there was Margaret, the second wife Papandreou wanted to
- divorce. He said that Margaret, absurdly, wanted a settlement of
- $100 million. Koskotas heard himself say he could over a period
- of time put together $10 million to $20 million as a start.
- </p>
- <p> In August 1988 the Prime Minister suddenly flew to London
- for triple-bypass heart surgery. The day before Papandreou left,
- Koskotas says, Louvaris came to pick up the customary cash, a
- suitcase of 90 million drachmas ($600,000). After the surgery,
- Papandreou for the first time made public what many already
- knew: his relationship with Liani. That further undermined his
- slipping political standing. Rumors of the Koskotas money
- connection were also circulating; now opponents called for a
- reckoning.
- </p>
- <p> The governor of the Bank of Greece started to press for a
- special audit of the Bank of Crete. Koutsogiorgas told Koskotas
- that the investigation could not be stopped. Fearing
- abandonment, Koskotas made a last threat. "If I am destroyed,"
- he says he told Koutsogiorgas, "we'll all be destroyed. You
- know what they will find at the bank."
- </p>
- <p> Soon 40 secret service agents were keeping a discreet
- surveillance over Koskotas. He began to think he might be
- killed. One day a friend in Greek intelligence told him he
- would be arrested by 6:30 that evening; Koskotas fled. He
- slipped out of his printing plant unseen, hidden in the back of
- one of his newspaper delivery trucks, to start a desperate
- journey across three continents. Three weeks later he fetched
- up in the U.S., where he was apprehended.
- </p>
- <p> Locked in the Salem prison and fighting extradition, George
- Koskotas started to get advice to keep quiet from old
- accomplices. One of them, Yannis Mantzouranis, former secretary
- to the Greek Cabinet, sounded especially anxious to learn if
- the prisoner was going to talk. Mantzouranis, Koskotas says,
- was still holding a $2 million payoff to Koutsogiorgas in a
- Swiss bank account. The existence of the account would implicate
- him.
- </p>
- <p> Hoping to entrap Mantzouranis, Koskotas instructed his wife
- to make tape recordings of the phone calls from Athens. The
- objective was to goad the unwitting Cabinet secretary into
- telling more about PASOK corruption. Mantzouranis warns of the
- consequences of saying too much. "I know them better than
- George," he says of his PASOK colleagues. "They wouldn't
- hesitate to do anything."
- </p>
- <p> Mantzouranis relates how his own life has changed
- drastically. "You must understand that I am in danger," he
- says. "I do not circulate at night. I no longer live at my
- house."
- </p>
- <p> In jail, listening to the cassette, Koskotas heard the
- fright in the caller's voice. It was an echo of his own fears.
- Mantzouranis had an important message to pass on: Koutsogiorgas
- wants to be certain the prisoner knows what he is doing. "Menios
- says," the voice from Greece emphasized, "that George should not
- betray the only people who can help him now." Koskotas pondered
- silently and for a second felt a twinge of his old power. Then
- he dismissed the warning. He wanted to talk.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout last week TIME sought comments and answers from
- government officials -- including Prime Minister Papandreou --
- on the accusations in this story. When all refused to be
- interviewed, a list of questions was submitted to them. TIME
- did not disclose that it had interviewed Koskotas, but made
- clear that it was publishing a major story that contained
- serious and damaging allegations. Papandreou did address the
- affair in a Feb. 14 memorandum to investigators. He said he met
- Koskotas only three times, at the banker's initiative, between
- March 4, 1987, and June 30, 1988, during which the two discussed
- only Koskotas' business and, later, the accusations against him.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-