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- <text id=91TT1786>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: Scandals:Cashing In on Blue Chips
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 47
- SCANDALS
- Cashing In on Blue Chips
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Mounting evidence discloses the stunning extent to which B.C.C.I.
- bought its way into the inner circles of power
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Jonathan Beaty/Los Angeles, Helen
- Gibson/London and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> In a drab Senate hearing room fittingly dominated by a
- vast map of the world, witnesses gave the first public
- testimony last week in the biggest and most brazen financial
- scandal of all time. Speaking in blunt terms that brought gasps
- from the packed chamber, they charged what TIME and other media
- reported in July: the criminal enterprise known as the Bank of
- Credit & Commerce International thrived as a $20 billion
- worldwide cash conduit for thugs ranging from terrorists to
- narcotraficantes, while Washington and other capitals turned a
- blind eye. "This is a story of big-time, big-money con artists,"
- said Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry, chairman of the Senate
- Foreign Relations subcommittee that held the two-day hearings.
- "It's a story of international lawlessness and extraordinary
- greed, which is becoming the centerpiece of recent history."
- </p>
- <p> The sessions were part of a global offensive of probes and
- law-enforcement actions against the rogue bank, which regulators
- seized last month in most of the 69 countries where it operated.
- The latest moves shed harsh new light on the shadowy institution
- and brought it fully and irrevocably into the public arena,
- where it promises to become a hot political issue in the U.S.
- and elsewhere for months to come. Among last week's
- developments:
- </p>
- <p>-- A New York State grand jury indicted B.C.C.I. and its
- two principal officers for fraud, bribery, grand larceny and
- money laundering after a two-year investigation led by Manhattan
- District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. B.C.C.I., said Morgenthau,
- had looted depositors of more than $5 billion in "the largest
- bank fraud in world history." Named as defendants were Agha
- Hasan Abedi, the Pakistani founder of B.C.C.I., and countryman
- Swaleh Naqvi, who had been the bank's chief operating officer.
- But bringing the pair to trial could prove impossible. Pakistan
- said last week it will refuse to extradite the ailing Abedi, 68,
- who is a hero in his homeland for organizing the Third World's
- largest bank.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Federal Reserve Board fined B.C.C.I. $200 million
- for illegally acquiring control of three prominent U.S. banking
- institutions. Chief among them was First American Bankshares,
- Washington's largest bank holding company, which is headed by
- former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford and his law partner
- Robert Altman. Clifford and Altman, who served as attorneys for
- B.C.C.I. throughout the 1980s, have denied knowing it owned
- First American. The other two secretly owned banks were the
- National Bank of Georgia, which Ghaith Pharaon, a Saudi tycoon
- and B.C.C.I. front man, acquired from Carter Administration
- official Bert Lance, and Miami's CenTrust Savings. Pharaon used
- B.C.C.I. funds to become a partner of financier David Paul, who
- built CenTrust into a giant house of cards before it collapsed
- last year at a cost to taxpayers of more than $1.7 billion.
- </p>
- <p>-- Kerry released part of a 1986 CIA memo warning the
- Treasury and State departments that B.C.C.I. had secretly owned
- First American since 1982. Yet the Reagan Administration
- apparently did nothing in response to the document. On Friday,
- CIA Deputy Director Richard J. Kerr confirmed that the agency
- had used B.C.C.I. to move money around the world; other sources
- confirmed that the Defense Intelligence Agency, which monitors
- other nations' armed forces, had transferred funds through the
- bank. But the CIA's Kerr said his agency had "aggressively"
- targeted the bank for intelligence gathering because, "from the
- early 1980s, it was obvious it was involved in illegal
- activities such as money laundering, narcotics and terrorism."
- According to the Washington Post, sources said that the CIA
- began closing its accounts when it realized the bank was "dirty"
- and that all agency accounts were closed by 1989.
- </p>
- <p>-- Peru launched a government-wide probe of charges that
- B.C.C.I. gave two central-bank officers $3 million in bribes in
- return for their depositing $200 million of Peruvian funds in
- secret B.C.C.I. accounts in Panama. Officials denied the
- allegations, which were part of the Manhattan indictment against
- B.C.C.I. But they said they had deposited money with B.C.C.I.
- because threats by former President Alan Garcia Perez to reduce
- Peru's foreign-debt payments had scared off other banks. At the
- same time, a Peruvian representative to the World Bank who once
- worked for B.C.C.I. quit his post.
- </p>
- <p>-- A London court halted the liquidation of B.C.C.I.'s
- British branches until December to give Sheik Zayed bin Sultan
- al-Nahayan, the ruler of Abu Dhabi who acquired control of
- B.C.C.I. last year, a chance to rescue depositors and develop
- a plan to reopen a cleansed and scaled-down version of the
- global bank. Zayed immediately put up $84 million to help rescue
- the 120,000 British customers who had entrusted $400 million to
- B.C.C.I.
- </p>
- <p> Even as countries strove to pierce the veil of deceit and
- corruption that shrouds B.C.C.I., fresh disclosures of the
- bank's influence peddling came to light. TIME has learned that
- Pharaon helped keep CenTrust open for a year longer than its
- bankrupt condition warranted after acquiring a total of 1.5
- million CenTrust shares, or more than 5% of the S&L's stock, in
- 1988 and 1989. CenTrust was so shaky by late 1988 that
- regulators for the Federal Home Loan Bank Board in Atlanta had
- decided to shut it down.
- </p>
- <p> Pharaon and Paul, who is a target of a Miami grand jury
- investigation of CenTrust, struggled to keep the institution's
- doors--and coffers--open. Pharaon assured regulators that
- he was backed by oil-rich Arabs who would keep CenTrust solvent.
- When that tack failed to deter officials, Pharaon and Paul flew
- CenTrust's corporate jet to Washington to give similar promises
- to M. Danny Wall, who chaired the Home Loan Bank Board at the
- time. (Wall recalled the meeting in an interview but said he
- could not remember the outcome.) After the session, regulators
- said CenTrust could remain open by selling bonds to shore up its
- capital. But when few investors bought the offering, Pharaon
- ponied up $30 million to keep CenTrust afloat.
- </p>
- <p> But once regulators let CenTrust stay in business,
- B.C.C.I. whisked the $30 million back into its own accounts. By
- the time CenTrust formally went bust in 1990, the yearlong delay
- in closing the thrift may have cost American taxpayers as much
- as $1 billion in extra bailout expenses.
- </p>
- <p> Just as Pharaon came to CenTrust's aid, so members of
- Washington's power elite have frequently gone to bat for
- B.C.C.I. Jack Blum, the former chief investigator for Kerry's
- subcommittee, stunned the hearing last week by declaring that
- Altman and Clifford advised Amjad Awan, a B.C.C.I. official who
- had run the bank's Panama office, to flee the U.S. for Paris in
- 1988 to avoid a congressional subpoena. Altman, a fast-rising
- star in Washington legal and social circles, then reportedly
- arranged for B.C.C.I. to transfer Awan to Paris. But Carl Rauh,
- an attorney for Clifford and Altman, denied the account as
- "completely false." Pronounced Rauh: "It never happened."
- </p>
- <p> In any case, Awan stayed put in 1988 and was arrested by
- law-enforcement officers investigating the bank's U.S.
- money-laundering operations. The hapless Awan, who had been
- personal banker to Noriega and others, was convicted of
- money-laundering charges with four other B.C.C.I. officers in
- Tampa last year and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the Tampa convictions, which required B.C.C.I. to
- forfeit $15 million of its money-laundering profits, Blum and
- former customs commissioner William von Raab elaborated on their
- earlier descriptions of the Justice Department's Florida case
- as a law-enforcement debacle. "I was personally infuriated,"
- Blum said. He argued that the plea bargain gave B.C.C.I.
- immunity from future prosecutions based on evidence in the case--a charge that Justice disputes. Von Raab, sporting a yellow
- handkerchief that drooped flower-like from his breast pocket,
- called the settlement "a shameless agreement" and "a disaster
- in terms of the punishment that should have been meted out." He
- said B.C.C.I. had raked in some $200 million from the
- money-laundering scheme, which undercover customs agents exposed
- in a sting operation.
- </p>
- <p> Von Raab charged that the Bush Administration had taken a
- "lackadaisical" approach to prosecuting B.C.C.I. in part because
- the bank used Beltway insiders such as Clifford and Altman to
- lobby federal regulators. "If you were to look at the Rolodexes
- at B.C.C.I.," he said, they would show "the blue chips of
- Washington influence peddlers." As a result, he said, "senior
- U.S. policy-level officials were constantly under the impression
- that B.C.C.I. was probably not that bad because these good guys
- who they play golf with all the time were representing them."
- </p>
- <p> Law-enforcement officials bristle at charges that their
- work has been impeded by anyone in or out of government. Says
- Robert Mueller, who heads the Justice Department's criminal
- division: "At no time have we been approached by any
- intelligence agency or the White House and told to shut down or
- slow down an investigation we're doing related to B.C.C.I. At
- no time have they suggested we shift the course of our
- investigation."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the reason, regulators around the world certainly
- allowed B.C.C.I. to flourish far too long. The alliance with
- Altman and Clifford's First American Bankshares was clearly--and apparently successfully--designed to win respectability
- in the American power establishment. The link with Paul's
- CenTrust S&L was a pipeline to the fast-buck financial
- arrivistes of the '80s--a joining of hands by what history may
- well describe as the two great scandals of the century.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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