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- <text id=91TT1563>
- <title>
- July 15, 1991: Scandal:Tying an Octopus in Knots
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 15, 1991 Misleading Labels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 50
- SCANDAL
- Tying an Octopus in Knots
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A tenacious, corrupt empire meets its match when a global phalanx
- of regulators seizes the offices of B.C.C.I.
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Jonathan Beaty/Abu Dhabi and S.C.
- Gwynne/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The crackdown was as swift and implacable as a military
- operation. Shortly after noon last Friday, British authorities
- strode into the steel-and-glass London headquarters of the Bank
- of Credit & Commerce International, a notorious cash conduit for
- drug smugglers, arms dealers and rapacious tyrants. Seizing
- control of the office, the regulators told bank employees to
- stop working and go home. The move coincided with similar sweeps
- of B.C.C.I. operations in Luxembourg, the Cayman Islands,
- France, Spain, Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands and the
- U.S., where regulators shut the bank's loan offices in New York
- City and Los Angeles. The combined actions placed more than 75%
- of B.C.C.I.'s $20 billion of assets in 69 countries in
- government hands and wrested control of the empire from the
- bank's Middle Eastern ownership.
- </p>
- <p> The wave of shutdowns marked the most drastic attack yet
- on a shadowy institution that investigators have called the
- most corrupt corporate enterprise in modern history. Those
- ensnared in its toils include former Defense Secretary Clark
- Clifford, the chairman of Washington's First American
- Bankshares, which B.C.C.I. secretly gained control of during the
- 1980s. Bank regulators have been probing B.C.C.I. with
- increasing intensity since last year, when an audit found that
- more than $1 billion had vanished from its vaults and the bank
- pleaded guilty to laundering drug money in a case linked to
- former Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega. Astonished
- investigators have since put the amount of missing funds at $10
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> Authorities in the U.S. and Europe launched their blitz
- last week, after a Bank of England report uncovered "widespread
- fraud at the B.C.C.I. Group in a number of jurisdictions and
- stretching back over a period of years." That clearly confirmed
- what the governments had long suspected. "It's so bad the
- auditors couldn't even put together a balance sheet," said
- William Taylor, staff director of the U.S. Federal Reserve
- Board's banking supervision and regulation division. Taylor said
- the Bank of England had been seeking for months to restructure
- B.C.C.I. "All of a sudden they realized this isn't problem
- lending," he explained. "This is criminal fraud."
- </p>
- <p> The worldwide closures were a resounding vote of no
- confidence in B.C.C.I.'s owner, Sheik Zayed bin Sultan
- al-Nahayan, ruler of the United Arab Emirates. Zayed bailed out
- the bank last year by acquiring control for $1 billion from Arab
- partners of Agha Hasan Abedi, a visionary Pakistani financier
- who founded B.C.C.I. in 1972 and built it into a secretive
- global giant. But while Zayed put up some $200 million in recent
- months to help First American cope with real estate loan
- problems in Washington, regulators have grown increasingly
- dismayed by the sheik's inability to place B.C.C.I. on a sound
- footing. Says a European banking expert: "Perhaps now we will
- see months of intolerable dithering come to an end as the Abu
- Dhabi government at last puts B.C.C.I.'s house in order."
- </p>
- <p> That has been impossible so far, because Abu Dhabi
- factions close to B.C.C.I. have kept Zayed from learning the
- full extent of the bank's problems, insiders say. Some of the
- sheikdom's most knowledgeable bankers fear reprisals from what
- they believe to be a clandestine group based in Karachi that
- specializes in "black operations," among them kidnapping,
- extortion and blackmail. "Anybody who tries to tell His Highness
- what has really gone on with the bank will be killed," an
- apprehensive Abu Dhabi official told TIME.
- </p>
- <p> One of B.C.C.I.'s nefarious dealings was a deep
- involvement in clandestine arms sales, including transactions
- among enemies that wanted to keep their dealings secret. "If
- Israel wanted to funnel arms to Middle Eastern states, such as
- Iran or Iraq, B.C.C.I. was there to handle it," says a former
- State Department official.
- </p>
- <p> Zayed may have to work fast to salvage any portion of
- B.C.C.I. before the world's courts dispose of its assets. "The
- bank will be wound up under the laws of each country," said a
- Bank of England spokesman. "Depositors and shareholders will be
- treated according to the law."
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Reserve rushed to assure customers of U.S.
- banks linked to B.C.C.I. that their funds remained safe. The Fed
- said the closings would have no effect on units of First
- American Bankshares or on Independence Bank of Encino, Calif.,
- which B.C.C.I. also secretly owned. "These banks are separately
- capitalized, U.S. chartered and federally insured institutions,"
- the Fed said. B.C.C.I. is already under orders to divest itself
- of both institutions by the end of the year.
- </p>
- <p> Prosecutors will keep their sights trained on the bank
- long after that. Grand juries in Miami, Washington and New York
- City are probing B.C.C.I.'s U.S. activities. A second Miami
- grand jury is looking into the bank's ties to Florida's
- CenTrust Savings and Loan, which collapsed last year. Subjects
- of the New York investigation include Clifford, who has said he
- was unaware that B.C.C.I. owned First American.
- </p>
- <p> While B.C.C.I.'s U.S. and European holdings are now in
- government hands, ending the bank's influence in the Third World
- could prove to be more difficult. In such places as Jamaica and
- Nigeria, B.C.C.I. has woven itself firmly into the fabric of the
- country by holding substantial government deposits. Sheik Zayed
- may have to restructure the remains of those branches himself
- if the host countries don't have the gumption to do so. But
- regulators have at last corralled a runaway global maverick that
- was left unbridled far too long.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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