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- <text id=91TT2903>
- <title>
- Dec. 30, 1991: Scandals:Is That All There Is?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 59
- SCANDALS
- Is That All There Is?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>B.C.C.I. pleads guilty to criminal charges and forfeits $550
- million, but individual culprits are still on the loose
- </p>
- <p>By Jonathan Beaty and S.C. Gwynne
- </p>
- <p> It was the ultimate package deal, a grand compromise
- designed to clean up one of the world's messiest piles of
- financial wreckage. Bank liquidators, acting on behalf of the
- moribund Bank of Credit & Commerce International, marched into
- a crowded Manhattan courtroom last Friday and settled, in one
- unexpected swoop, all U.S. criminal charges outstanding against
- B.C.C.I. as a corporation. The bank, which in the U.S. is now
- essentially just a hollow shell, pleaded guilty to federal and
- state charges of racketeering, fraud and money laundering. The
- liquidators agreed to surrender virtually every penny of
- B.C.C.I.'s assets in the U.S., a total of $550 million, which
- represents the largest criminal forfeiture in history.
- </p>
- <p> The guilty plea, hammered out during four months of
- intense negotiations among banking authorities and prosecutors
- in Washington, London and Luxembourg, was designed in part to
- impose some order on the worldwide scramble to lay claims to
- B.C.C.I.'s remaining assets. So far, auditors have found only
- $1.5 billion in the coffers of a bank that once held $22 billion
- in deposits. "We felt we could duke it out for years, or we
- could accommodate each other. I think we found a fair
- arrangement," says George Terwilliger, the acting Deputy U.S.
- Attorney General.
- </p>
- <p> Half of B.C.C.I.'s forfeiture has been allocated to a
- worldwide fund to compensate innocent depositors who lost their
- money when the bank collapsed. The remaining half has been
- reserved for a U.S. contingency fund to shore up financial
- institutions that B.C.C.I. secretly controlled. Washington
- regulators fear that the already depleted guarantee fund at the
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation could be endangered by
- banking problems at the Independence Bank in Encino, Calif., and
- at Washington's First American. Their concern was so acute that
- authorities immediately transferred $5 million of the forfeited
- money to the Encino bank to prevent its collapse.
- </p>
- <p> But far more money is needed to compensate victims
- worldwide, so authorities are seeking a much bigger bailout.
- Their intended source: the ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheik Zayed bin
- Sultan al-Nahayan, who is now the major shareholder in B.C.C.I.
- For months banking authorities and liquidators have tried to
- talk Zayed into donating billions of dollars to cushion the
- losses of depositors around the world so they might recoup 30%
- to 40% instead of the 10% now expected. B.C.C.I.'s agreement
- with the U.S. may pave the way for that bailout.
- </p>
- <p> Zayed, who has already poured billions into the bank,
- shows signs of wanting to make the best of a bad situation by
- reviving portions of B.C.C.I. as a bank based in the Middle
- East. "What B.C.C.I. was all about is the infusion of Arab
- dollars into the U.S. and the political influence that goes with
- it," says a B.C.C.I. investigator. Just what Zayed might demand
- for pouring more billions into what's left of B.C.C.I. remains
- unspoken, but Abu Dhabi has made it clear in the past that it
- would prefer some sort of restructuring to outright liquidation.
- </p>
- <p> While the bank is shut down in most countries, B.C.C.I. is
- still operating in Pakistan and Switzerland, as well as in
- Zambia and Zimbabwe. In other countries, individuals or entities
- with close ties to the old B.C.C.I. seem to be buying up the
- bank's branches. At the same time, several Middle Eastern banks
- are taking over the bank's role as a promoter of weapons deals,
- sources have told TIME.
- </p>
- <p> B.C.C.I.'s corporate guilty plea will not slow down the
- pending indictments of individuals connected to the bank. The
- investigation has speeded up now that cooperation has improved
- between federal officials, led by U.S. Attorney General William
- Barr, and state prosecutors in New York, led by Manhattan
- district attorney Robert Morgenthau. For months Morgenthau's
- unprecedented worldwide probe had been running rings around the
- foot-dragging Justice investigation. Plenty remains to be
- uncovered. A grand jury in Manhattan is looking into the roles
- played in B.C.C.I.'s schemes by First American's ex-chairman,
- former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, and his law partner,
- Robert Altman.
- </p>
- <p> Political bribery is another ripe area of investigation.
- In Georgia last week Governor Zell Miller and house speaker Tom
- Murphy testified before a federal grand jury probing reports of
- payoffs to legislators for passing a law enabling First
- American to buy the National Bank of Georgia when both banks
- were controlled by B.C.C.I. A report of those alleged bribes
- originally came into the hands of the CIA in 1986, according to
- TIME sources.
- </p>
- <p> Connections to B.C.C.I. are proving to be politically
- sticky. Last week the Bush Administration denied any knowledge
- of a business relationship between Charles Hostler, the U.S.
- envoy to Bahrain, and B.C.C.I. An NBC News report had linked
- Hostler, a major G.O.P contributor, to a Connecticut real estate
- development controlled by reputed B.C.C.I. front man Mohammed
- Hammoud. Hostler says he became involved in the Connecticut
- project because of friendship with Hammoud and did not profit
- from it, and denies ties to B.C.C.I. Hammoud's connections,
- however, seem clear. Internal B.C.C.I. documents examined by
- TIME show that the bank planned to move $5 million of Hammoud's
- loans--including those related to the Connecticut project--to "offshore" branches to avoid examination by regulators.
- Hammoud will not be able to clear matters up: the London-based
- businessman reportedly died in May 1990 under mysterious
- circumstances.
- </p>
- <p> While the surprising guilty plea last week settled many
- issues, it may have been only a curtain raiser for new
- disclosures on how the corrupt bank really operated.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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