home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1837>
- <title>
- Aug. 19, 1991: The Brave Ones Begin to Sing
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 45
- CORRUPTION
- The Brave Ones Begin to Sing
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As fresh charges are leveled in the B.C.C.I. scandal, an
- ex-official tells of shady practices and death threats
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by S.C. Gwynne/Washington with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> The slender former executive of the Bank of Credit &
- Commerce International clearly feared for his life. Speaking
- before a Senate subcommittee last week, Masihur Rahman told how
- a fellow B.C.C.I. official had threatened to shoot him if he
- exposed the rampant fraud and corruption at the heart of the
- bank. According to Rahman, the colleague warned him, "I've
- personally killed people in my life, and I'd use the same gun
- on you."
- </p>
- <p> Undaunted, Rahman sent his American wife Ellen and their
- two children to the U.S. for safety. "My wife and children were
- suffering greatly. They were being terrorized by this
- situation," he testified. Rahman then fled London just days
- before he testified. As his wife sat behind him, the former
- chief financial officer declared last week that B.C.C.I. had
- been essentially broke since 1985. He went on to accuse the
- accounting firm Price Waterhouse of tolerating phony bookkeeping
- that made the bank look solvent--a charge the auditor denies.
- Among the losses covered up were hundreds of millions of dollars
- in dubious loans in 1985-86 to the Gokal family of Pakistan,
- which owned a shipping company. "It was kept an incredible
- secret; not more than four or five people knew what had
- happened," Rahman said.
- </p>
- <p> Rahman's charges were far from the only ones leveled last
- week against B.C.C.I., which was shut down in July in most of
- the 69 countries where it operated. From Abu Dhabi to Zimbabwe,
- the repercussions of the bank scandal gathered force amid a new
- surge of allegations, investigations and financial distress. The
- depth and breadth of the mess prompted fresh questions about
- what government regulators should have done to prevent B.C.C.I.
- from growing into the largest corporate criminal enterprise in
- history. The major developments:
- </p>
- <p> NUKES FOR PAKISTAN? Even as it served as a cash conduit
- for terrorists, money launderers and gunrunners, B.C.C.I. may
- have financed the illicit development of nuclear weapons
- programs. The U.S. last week pressed efforts to extradite Inam
- ul-Haq, a retired Pakistani brigadier, on charges that he
- masterminded an abortive 1987 plot to smuggle to Pakistan an
- American speciality steel used to enrich weapons-grade uranium.
- B.C.C.I. reportedly provided credit for the deal. But Pakistan,
- home of B.C.C.I. founder Agha Hasan Abedi, denied--as it has
- in the past--that it seeks to develop nuclear arms, and said
- the government had no connection with Inam, who was arrested by
- German authorities in Frankfurt last month on an international
- warrant put out by the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> FINANCIAL FALLOUT. Already burned once by the B.C.C.I.
- shutdown, panicky crowds in Hong Kong rushed to withdraw their
- cash last week from local Citibank branches. The two-day run was
- triggered by unfounded reports that Citibank was insolvent. Last
- month Hong Kong's overdue seizure of the local subsidiary of
- B.C.C.I. froze $1.4 billion in accounts held by 40,000 hapless
- depositors. The colony's residents were still so shaken by the
- shutdown that on Friday they staged a second run, on the
- British-based Standard Chartered Bank after rumors that it had
- lost either its banking license or its stock-exchange listing.
- </p>
- <p> Hong Kong's nervous depositors were hardly alone. The
- shutdown also froze some $400 million of deposits belonging to
- Beijing-controlled companies, giving China a bitter taste of the
- risks of capitalism. In Egypt the government fired the board of
- the country's B.C.C.I. affiliate and sought to recover $400
- million in frozen assets. In Nigeria officials said they would
- provide $16 million to cover now worthless letters of credit
- from B.C.C.I. The shutdown even torpedoed shipping around the
- world. The Wall Street Journal reported that $85 million worth
- of freight sat stranded on some 1,000 ships because the
- purchasers could not use credit that B.C.C.I. had provided.
- </p>
- <p> PROBES APLENTY. Just five days before he formally
- announced his resignation in order to run for the Senate,
- Attorney General Dick Thornburgh declared that the Justice
- Department will issue "far-reaching indictments" within "the
- next month or six weeks." Stung by charges that Justice was
- moving too slowly against B.C.C.I., the department seems to be
- trying to catch up to the fraud, bribery and grand-larceny
- allegations brought by a New York State grand jury in late July.
- But some disgruntled law-enforcement sources told TIME that
- major federal indictments were unlikely anytime soon because
- Justice probes in Washington and other cities were still months--if not years--from completion.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the department clearly felt pressured to
- prove it has not been napping. Justice took a step in that
- direction last week when a federal grand jury in Miami indicted
- Munther Bilbeisi, a Jordanian coffee dealer who banked at
- B.C.C.I., on charges that he smuggled Guatemalan coffee into the
- U.S. to avoid income taxes on profits from the sale of the
- beans.
- </p>
- <p> In Peru the Senate began looking into charges that former
- President Alan Garcia Perez looted government funds by siphoning
- them through B.C.C.I. accounts in Panama. Returning from a
- month-long vacation in Europe, Garcia hotly denied the
- accusations. At the same time, officials in Chile and Argentina
- scrutinized the financial affairs of Ghaith Pharaon, a Saudi
- tycoon and B.C.C.I. front man who is building Hyatt hotels in
- both countries.
- </p>
- <p> Even as those probes got under way, investigators in
- Colombia and Luxembourg examined dealings between Jose Gonzalo
- Rodriguez Gacha, a leader of the Medellin cocaine cartel who
- died in a 1989 shootout with police, and a Colombian shadow bank
- that B.C.C.I. used to launder drug money. Among other things,
- the probers want to know why Colombian prosecutors slapped
- B.C.C.I. with a token $10,000 fine after discovering that the
- shadow bank took in a whopping $45 million in foreign currency
- in just six months in 1986--six times the amount B.C.C.I.'s
- Colombia branch reported for the entire year. The branch split
- apart from B.C.C.I. last week when it was acquired by Isaac
- Gilinsky, a Colombian food and textile magnate who said he would
- reorganize the branch and reopen it under the name Banco Andino.
- </p>
- <p> POLITICAL SHAME AND BLAME. With so many accusations being
- tossed around, politicians sought to distance themselves from
- the scandal and hold rival parties to account. Senator Orrin
- Hatch, a Utah Republican, issued an obviously partisan report
- that tried to deflect blame for the B.C.C.I. mess from the Bush
- and Reagan Administrations. Hatch said financier David Paul and
- the ubiquitous Pharaon had assiduously cultivated major figures
- in the Democratic Party. Paul, a big political contributor, ran
- CenTrust Savings, which collapsed in Miami last year at a cost
- to taxpayers of as much as $2 billion. Among the Democrats he
- courted: Joseph Biden of Delaware and John Kerry of
- Massachusetts, the chairman of the B.C.C.I. hearing last week.
- Both met with Paul in 1989 at a time when he was negotiating
- with federal regulators over terms of an agreement to
- recapitalize the foundering S&L.
- </p>
- <p> Paul succeeded in keeping CenTrust afloat, thanks partly
- to funds from Pharaon, who allegedly acted on behalf of
- B.C.C.I. While Hatch stopped short of charging the Democrats
- with wrongdoing, the report hinted that Paul may have used his
- Democratic connections to help keep CenTrust in business.
- Ironically, Hatch had strongly endorsed a 1990 plea bargain in
- Tampa that allowed B.C.C.I. to forfeit $15 million in profits
- to settle money-laundering charges. Hatch went so far as to
- praise B.C.C.I. for its cooperation.
- </p>
- <p> In another maneuver, Democratic Representative Edward
- Markey of Massachusetts said he would return a $1,000 campaign
- contribution from Robert Altman, president of Washington's First
- American Bankshares, which B.C.C.I. secretly acquired in the
- early 1980s. Altman and former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford,
- chairman of First American, have denied knowing B.C.C.I. had
- taken control of their bank. Clifford and Altman gave donations
- last year to several other legislators, usually in $1,000
- amounts, but so far they have seen fit to keep the money. As the
- scandal deepens, however, any connection with B.C.C.I. money
- could become hazardous to one's political health.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-