Is Allen Stanford An Asset Of The CIA?

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Postby Penguin » Sat Feb 21, 2009 2:48 pm

Wow...From Cryptogon -

Texas Securities Regulators Found Evidence of Potential Money Laundering Involving Stanford Ten Years Ago

February 21st, 2009


The Texas authorities called in the FBI and SEC… which did nothing.

What you have here is a long running U.S. Intelligence operation that became so large and sloppy that it finally blew up.

Oh yeah, I wonder what went on in the Bogota, Colombia office…

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/bus ... 73823.html

The SEC only has the authority to pursue civil actions, leaving the decision to pursue criminal charges to the Justice Department and FBI. An SEC spokesman indicated that the FBI was examining documents and other materials seized in the SEC’s fraud probe.

“We are certainly in contact with the SEC and we are aware of their investigation but we are not going to discuss any ongoing matters,” said FBI Special Agent Shauna Dunlap.

Stanford, a once high-flying businessman whose investment firm’s affiliates stretch from Bogota, Colombia, to Quito, Ecuador, has denied having ties to foreign drug barons and never has been charged with a crime related to his banking. In 1999, Stanford willingly turned over the $3 million from his bank after federal agents found it had come from a drug cartel.

In fact, at the time, Stanford’s cooperation won him praise from authorities who said he had not intentionally accepted drug money.

Around the same time, however, Texas securities regulators found evidence of potential money laundering involving Stanford, an official said Friday in Austin. But, because the activity involved offshore banks, it was referred to the FBI and SEC.

“Why it took 10 years for the feds to move on it, I cannot answer,” Securities Commissioner Denise Voigt Crawford told the Senate Finance Committee in Austin. Later, she added, “We worked with the FBI and the SEC and basically gave them the case. We told them what we’d seen and they were going to run with it.”


http://cryptogon.com/?p=7094
Kucinich on Stanford Group Fraud: SEC Told to “Stand Down” by Unknown Federal Agency in 2006 - VIDEO

Which agency?

Well, last Tuesday (17 February 2009), Allen Stanford was unable to charter a private jet to take him from Houston to Antigua. Then, of all the places he could have gone, where did he turn up two days later?

Virginia. With an unidentified woman. At a private residence. With the FBI waiting for him at that private residence.

Some guesses:

Maybe he had to come in from the cold to get instructions on how this was going to play out. He wants to stay alive. He wants his family to stay alive. Obviously, he’s not going to talk on the phone. So he drives, and drives and winds up in Virginia.

Sure, it could be a Coincidence that Virginia just happens to be the home of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency… But why Virginia, of all places?

To meet the CIA case officer who has been tasking him?

Who was the unidentified woman in the car? Is she his handler? I doubt that his handler would show up for a meeting with the J Edgars, but who knows what arrangements were made?

Where is Allen Stanford right now? “…A day later Stanford was nowhere to be seen in the historic Virginia town.” http://uk.reuters.com/article/topNews/i ... 21?sp=true
Questions, questions.

This has to get rolled up. This has to go away.

UPDATE: The Woman’s Name is Andrea Stoelker, She’s Stanford’s Girlfriend

This is just too much: http://uk.reuters.com/article/topNews/i ... 21?sp=true

Texas billionaire Allen Stanford was nowhere to be seen on Friday in this historic Virginia town, site of a fierce battle in the American Civil War and reputed through local lore to be haunted.



According to a local tour operator, Fredericksburg has a reputation as “one of the most haunted locales in the United States.”

“With a long history dating back to preColonial times, and a legacy of slavery and war, it is no wonder that so many unhappy phantoms wander the streets,” the tour operator says in promotional material.


I guess it’s fair to say that Fredericksburg is a pretty spooky place! *wink*
http://askville.amazon.com/CIA-agents-c ... d=15255240

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... refer=home

Two days after being accused of massive fraud, billionaire R. Allen Stanford surfaced in a Virginia community about 50 miles south of Washington.

Federal Bureau of Investigation agents were waiting yesterday at a residence in the Fredericksburg area when Stanford’s car pulled up, according to a person familiar with what transpired. The FBI then served him court papers. He was described as cooperative and cordial.

Stanford, 58, accused by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission this week of running a “massive, ongoing fraud,” was served with papers related to an SEC civil filing against him and the Stanford Financial Group. Stanford, whose whereabouts were unknown to the SEC earlier in the week, was found with an unidentified woman.


(I guess we can confidently say YES, he is a CIA asset!)
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Postby jingofever » Sat Feb 21, 2009 8:58 pm

US authorities 'had been investigating Allen Stanford for 15 years'

American authorities have been suspicious of Allen Stanford's financial dealings for 15 years but only accelerated their investigation after the Bernard Madoff fraud was exposed, it was claimed today...

Or they only accelerated their investigation after somebody on the internet exposed Stanford to the public.
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cross-post: seems relevant

Postby dqueue » Sat Feb 21, 2009 11:22 pm

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Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 21, 2009 11:44 pm

“Why it took 10 years for the feds to move on it, I cannot answer,”


I can.

Really.

.
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Postby Nordic » Sun Feb 22, 2009 2:53 am

Just giving this a bump. This whole thing is like a John LeCarre novel.
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Postby justdrew » Sun Feb 22, 2009 2:58 am

so this only came to light because of a whistle-blower. Who was sponsoring that mole? Perhaps... just perhaps the entire edifice of the financial wing of the right wing secret government apparatus is being dismantled and excoriated. May it be done with ever increasing levels of viscous ruthless bloodymindedness.
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Postby MinM » Sun Feb 22, 2009 2:18 pm

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Postby jingofever » Sun Feb 22, 2009 4:12 pm

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Postby wintler2 » Mon Feb 23, 2009 6:29 am

Of course none of the interesting details noted here make it into coverage by Aus Broadcasting Commisions Radio National, their PM program today said Stanford came in as a new broom, proving that Antigua had cleaned up its banking system! And finished with some supposedly random street voxpops talking about what a wonderful man he was and how much he had done for the country. Its just embarrassing sometimes, living in a colony.

No matter, Allan Stanfords fall has many silver linings:
The probe casts into uncertainty his investments and projects stretching from Texas to Latin America and the Caribbean, including a long-sought bid to turn ecologically sensitive Guiana Island into a playground for the ultra-rich. ..
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/id ... WX20090221
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Postby MinM » Wed Feb 25, 2009 2:42 am

Stanford a cog in the U.S. intelligence dirty money laundering machine
Image
“Sir” Allen Stanford appears to be yet another multi-billion dollar cog in a network of off-shore banks, corporate contrivances, and folding tent operations. Although Stanford is being investigated for a $8 billion fraud scheme, the U.S. Attorney for the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Stanford has “extensive” holdings on the island of St. Croix, told the Associated Press that the Obama Justice Department is “not actively pursuing” Stanford.

The Obama campaign gave $4,600 in donations from Stanford to the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless after the news broke about the investigation against Stanford’s firms.

A host of Democrats and Republicans reaped donations from Stanford, including jailed ex-Representative Bob Ney (R-OH), who was convicted in the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling scandal; former Representative Tom DeLay (R-TX); Representative Charles Rangel (D-NY), and Senators John McCain (R-AZ), John Cornyn (R-TX), Bill Nelson (D-FL), Richard Shelby (R-AL), Charles Schumer (D-NY), and Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX).

In 2006, Stanford obtained a knighthood from the Antiguan government thanks to his close relationship to Antiguan Prime Minister Spencer Baldwin, where Stanford International Bank maintains its headquarters. Stanford maintains dual U.S. and Antiguan citizenship. Stanford was also close to Antigua’s former Prime Minister Lester Bird, who was accused of massive corruption.

Ironically, it was while Baldwin’s United Progressive Party was in opposition in 2003 that he accused two of Bird’s ministers, Tourism Minister Molwyn Joseph and Planning Minister Gaston Browne, of accepting campaign donation bribes from Stanford in exchange for pubic lands in St. John’s, the Antiguan capital. Learning from his experience in donating to both Democrats and Republicans in the United States, Stanford ensures that both major parties in Antigua also received his monetary largess. It should also be noted that Antigua is a primary center for Russian-Israeli Mafia money laundering activities in the Caribbean.

That may come as unwelcome news not only to Stanford but to the CIA that could see its illegal money laundering operations if Stanford is arrested and tried. Of course, that may also be problematic since the Obama Justice Department has decided to maintain a Bush policy of invoking a privilege of state secrets in criminal and civil cases involving national security matters.

Last November 1, the Spanish news agency EFE reported that Hugo Chavez’s military intelligence agents raided Stanford International Bank in Caracas and investigated three Stanford Bank employees at the Venezuela branch who were believed to be U.S. intelligence agents.

Stanford International Bank was reported by EFE to have been founded “during the Great Depression.” The bank is part of the Stanford Financial Group that was reported to have $51 billion in assets. Stanford Capital Management, Stanford Group’s investment branch, managed a fund called Stanford Allocation Strategy. The investment arm is also under investigation.

On March 6, 2007, WMR reported: “WMR’s report about ‘Sir’ R. Allen Stanford and his Stanford Financial Group in Houston buying up land in Antigua and Barbuda and running roughshod over the government of that nation turned up an interesting important footnote to the story. Stanford’s Houston offices are directly across Westheimer Road in the part of the Galleria complex where Carlyle Group offices are located. Coincidence? Not with the Bush criminal cartel.”

The FBI is reportedly now investigating Stanford’s firms for laundering money for Mexico’s Gulf drug cartel. Stanford, Houston, off-shore banks, and drugs equal the perfect brew for another Bush family criminal cartel operation tied to the CIA.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish ... 4402.shtml
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http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2009/02/ ... s-and.html
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Postby JackRiddler » Sat Feb 28, 2009 3:18 pm

.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKN2736 ... 28?sp=true

WRAPUP 2-
US charges Stanford with massive Ponzi scheme
Sat Feb 28, 2009 1:37am GMT

* U.S. charges Stanford with Ponzi scheme

* Fellow Stanford exec released on $300,000 bail

* Antigua lawmakers move to seize Stanford land assets (Recasts with amended SEC complaint alleging Ponzi scheme)

By Anna Driver

HOUSTON, Feb 27 (Reuters) - U.S. securities regulators on Friday accused Texas billionaire Allen Stanford, his college roommate and three of their companies of carrying out a "massive Ponzi scheme" over at least a decade and misappropriating at least $1.6 billion of investors' money.

Meanwhile, a Houston judge ruled on Friday that Laura Pendergest-Holt, the only person arrested in the $8 billion Allen Stanford fraud investigation, could walk free after she posted a $300,000 bond.

In an amended complaint filed in a federal court in Dallas, the Securities and Exchange Commission increased its civil charges against Stanford to include a Ponzi scheme where early investors are paid with the money of new clients.

Along with his former Baylor University roommate James Davis, the 58-year-old golf, cricket and polo promoter "misappropriated billions of dollars of investor funds and falsified" financial statements issued by Antigua-based Stanford International Bank, the SEC charged.

Stanford and Davis could not be reached immediately for comment and have yet to name their legal representatives in the case. The company is directing all inquiries to the SEC.

It was the second high-profile alleged Ponzi scheme revealed by U.S. regulators, after charges that Wall Street veteran Bernard Madoff carried out a $50 billion fraud that allegedly involved a giant Ponzi scheme.

In the amended complaint, the SEC alleged that by February, Stanford and Davis - who have not been charged with criminal wrongdoing - had misappropriated at least $1.6 billion in investor money through "bogus personal loans" to Stanford. The funds were invested in "speculative, unprofitable private businesses controlled by Stanford," it said.

Every month, Stanford and Davis set a predetermined rate of return for certificates of deposit issued by their Antigua bank, then bank accountants reverse-engineered financial statements to "report investment income that the bank did not actually earn," the SEC charged.

The $1.6 billion in loans first came to light in a criminal complaint filed by the Justice Department against Pendergest-Holt, the 35-year-old chief investment officer for the Stanford Financial Group who was arrested by the FBI on Thursday.

The criminal complaint referenced a $1.6 billion loan from a Stanford account labeled "Loan to Shareholder," which was the focus of the SEC's questions to Pendergest-Holt.

After spending a night in a Houston detention center Pendergest-Holt faced U.S. Magistrate Judge Mary Milloy in court on Friday.

U.S. prosecutors had asked the judge to set bond at $1 million, an amount that Pendergest-Holt's attorney, Dan Cogdell, called "outrageous."

While agreeing it was a serious case, Milloy lowered the amount to $300,000 and ordered Pendergest-Holt, who appeared in court dressed in a dark pants suit and heels, to wear an electronic tracking device after her release.

The tall, slender brunette appeared grim for most of the hearing but occasionally turned in her chair to smile at her husband, equity fund manager Jim Holt.

FBI agents had arrested her at Stanford's Houston-based headquarters and accused her of obstructing a probe into what the SEC called "massive ongoing fraud" by Stanford and his companies.

Under questioning from Pendergest-Holt's lawyer, FBI agent Vanessa Walther said there is no arrest warrant for Stanford, who was served with the SEC's earlier civil complaint last week.

Meanwhile, Stanford's assets are under the control of a court-appointed receiver -- Dallas attorney Ralph Janvey -- who must sort out dozens of claims by Stanford account holders who have seen their funds frozen indefinitely.

A Dallas judge is expected to rule on Monday on whether to extend a temporary restraining order that gives Janvey control of Stanford's assets -- pegged by the company at $50 billion.

Pendergest-Holt's criminal case also moves to U.S. District Court in Dallas, where the charges were filed, lawyers said.

The receiver thus far has identified only about $90 million in actual assets, the FBI's Walther told the judge on Friday. That does not include a Credit Suisse account containing about $160 million that Pendergest-Holt had access to and signed over to the receiver shortly before her arrest.

"There are billions missing in this case," Justice Department attorney Paul Pelletier told Judge Milloy on Friday.

Meanwhile the Antigua and Barbuda's Senate on Friday approved a government takeover of more than 250 acres of Stanford-owned land before Janvey moves to seize it. [ID:nN27350692]

Pendergest-Holt's lawyer Cogdell said his client was innocent of the charges, and will "fight these accusations with every ounce of energy she has."

"They set her up like a bowling pin," Cogdell told reporters after the court hearing, "My suspicion is by Mr. Stanford and Davis." He was referring to James Davis, Stanford's one-time roommate at Baylor University who serves as the company's chief financial officer.

"I see a billionaire who has not been charged," said Cogdell. "I see a semi-millionaire who has not been charged. I see a multi-thousandaire who is being charged. That's just wrong."

The FBI's Walther said Pendergest-Holt's salary in 2007 and 2008 was near $1 million, including bonuses.

(For other stories on the Stanford case, please double-click [ID:nN1356805]) (Additional reporting by Eileen O'Grady, writing by Chris Baltimore; Editing by Gary Hill and Carol Bishopric)


© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved.
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Postby jingofever » Sun Sep 13, 2009 1:34 am

Former DEA chief posts bond in Stanford scandal:

The day after his indictment in the Stanford financial scandal, Tom Raffanello surrendered to federal agents and found himself in court -- bound in handcuffs -- next to defendants charged with crimes he spent a lifetime fighting.

The appearance of the former chief of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Miami office on Friday represented a new development in a case that has so far centered largely on offshore banks and scammed investors.

After months of probing billionaire Allen Stanford and his top lieutenants, prosecutors say they now want to find out why thousands of records were shredded during a crucial period in the government's investigation.

Raffanello -- who joined Stanford's security force after retiring in 2004 -- is accused of ordering the records destroyed six days after federal agents shut down Stanford's worldwide operations in February.

Appearing in federal court in Fort Lauderdale with defendants from other cases -- including seven suspected drug traffickers -- the former DEA chief posted a $100,000 bond and agreed to turn over his passport.

Along with former co-worker Bruce Perraud, Raffanello will be arraigned Sept. 18 before Magistrate Judge Robin Rosenbaum.

PREPARED TO FIGHT

The muscular 61-year-old New York native said he is prepared to fight the government's charges that he permanently destroyed records created during the years he worked for one of the world's wealthiest bankers.

The paperwork -- stored in the company's security office on the fringes of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport -- were copies of electronic records readily available to prosecutors, said Raffanello, who traveled the hemisphere responding to company crises.

``We kept everything on electronic files,'' he said. ``I told them that I ordered [Bruce Perraud] to destroy the paper records because we had duplicates.''

The case is expected to center around whether Raffanello and his employee hampered the government's probe of Stanford and his top officers, who are charged in what prosecutors are calling a $7 billion Ponzi scheme.

Shortly after federal agents announced the case against Stanford, Raffanello and Perraud exchanged e-mails acknowledging a judge's order to keep all company records intact, court records state.

But less than a week later, Raffanello called an employee and ordered the destruction of thousands of paper records, the indictment states.

On Feb. 25, with Perraud supervising the effort, a shredding truck arrived and hauled away all the office's paperwork -- including files brought from several employees' cars, the indictment says.

`TAKING OUT THE TRASH'

Miami lawyer Kendall Coffey, who represents Raffanello, called the government's claims a ``huge mistake,'' and said the employees were ``taking out the trash'' as part of routine housekeeping.

Perraud's lawyer Ed Shohat said in addition to being duplicates, the paperwork at the office was not related to Stanford's financial operation.

``It was a security office that had absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the issues the SEC was investigating,'' Shohat said. ``This office maintained none of those records.''

During the bond hearing Friday, prosecutor Jack Patrick said investigators were prepared to turn over 5,000 documents supporting the charges. He said the records could be ready as early as Monday.

For most of the hearing, Raffanello sat in the jury box with seven other defendants accused of taking part in a cocaine trafficking and robbery ring.
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Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 08, 2009 6:35 pm

Indicted Miami Ex-DEA Boss Turns Himself In
Bound in handcuffs, former DEA chief Tom Raffanello appeared in federal court on charges of obstruction, conspiracy and destruction of records relating to the Allen Stanford fraud investigation.

BY ROB BARRY AND MICHAEL SALLAH



The day after his indictment in the Stanford financial scandal, Tom Raffanello surrendered to federal agents and found himself in court -- bound in handcuffs -- next to defendants charged with crimes he spent a lifetime fighting.

The appearance of the former chief of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's Miami office on Friday represented a new development in a case that has so far centered largely on offshore banks and scammed investors.

After months of probing billionaire Allen Stanford and his top lieutenants, prosecutors say they now want to find out why thousands of records were shredded during a crucial period in the government's investigation.

Raffanello -- who joined Stanford's security force after retiring in 2004 -- is accused of ordering the records destroyed six days after federal agents shut down Stanford's worldwide operations in February.

Appearing in federal court in Fort Lauderdale with defendants from other cases -- including seven suspected drug traffickers -- the former DEA chief posted a $100,000 bond and agreed to turn over his passport. ...

CONTINUED: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/southfl ... 29664.html
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Re: Is Allen Stanford An Asset Of The CIA?

Postby American Dream » Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:52 am

http://antifascist-calling.blogspot.com ... d-and.html

A Full-Service Bank: R. Allen Stanford and the CIA


In a scandal-plagued era such as ours, scarred by murderous wars, occupations and corruption that would make a Roman emperor blush, accused crooks have names; even juiced ones like R. Allen Stanford.

Last year, when a federal court in Texas handed downindictments charging Stanford International Bank (SIB) and its officers with "orchestrating a fraudulent, multibillion dollar investment scheme," I wondered: was there more to the story?

Indeed there was.

Once described by fawning media as a "flamboyant Texan" and "philanthropist," Stanford was founder and sole shareholder of a global banking empire once conservatively valued at $50 billion.

According to the federal indictment, "Sir Allen," as he was dubbed by a corrupt former minister of Antigua, ran a massive Ponzi scheme camouflaged as a bank that sold some $7 billion in self-styled "certificates of deposit" and $1.2 billion in mutual funds.

Operated from behind a façade of well-appointed offices and with a jet-set lifestyle to match, the Stanford grift may have been impressive but it was a scam from the get-go. Lured by "high rates that exceed those available through true certificates of deposits offered by traditional banks," thousands lost their shirts.

Those high rates were a lie and the bank's "unique investment strategy" about as legitimate as a penny-stock fraud or advance fee scam on the internet. Of the $8 billion hoovered up by the banker and his cronies, only about $500 million have been recovered.

Facing the prospect of years in prison, The Miami Heraldreported that SIB's chief financial officer James Davis, once Stanford's college roommate and originally charged in the indictment, copped a plea to save his own neck.

Davis told the Justice Department that "his boss had been stealing from investors for decades while paying bribes to regulators and even performing blood oaths never to reveal his secrets."

Talk about a wise guy!

And with connections and generous pay-outs to U.S. politicians going back more than a decade, 65% of which went to Democrats including our "change" president, Allen Stanford was plugged-in.

Evidence also suggests he may have gotten an assist covering his tracks from regulators and U.S. secret state agencies, including the CIA.

SEC Stand Down

Allen Stanford did business the American way; he swindled depositors and then siphoned-off the proceeds into a spider's web of offshore accounts.

The indictment charges "it was part of the conspiracy that Stanford ... and others would cause the movement of millions of dollars of fraudulently obtained investors' funds from and among bank accounts located in the Southern District of Texas and elsewhere in the United States to various bank accounts located outside of the United States ... in order to exercise exclusive control over the investors' funds."

Auditors learned that funds were moved through Stanford-controlled accounts to offshore banks, including HSBC in London, Bank Julius Baer in Zurich and eight others; banks which have figured in past money laundering or tax-avoidance scandals. None have been charged with an offense in connection with the affair.

In all, 28 numbered accounts were listed by prosecutors, veritable black holes that escaped scrutiny; that is if regulators in Washington were minding the store, which they weren't.

Years earlier, SEC investigators at the commission's Ft. Worth office uncovered evidence of wrongdoing. According to an explosive report by the SEC's Office of the Inspector General, Ft. Worth examiners launched a series of probes in 1997, 1998, 2002 and 2004 exploring SIB practices but their diligence was sabotaged by high-level officials.

That report, Investigation of the SEC's Response to Concerns Regarding Robert Allen Stanford's Alleged Ponzi Scheme, Case No. OIG-526, March 31, 2010, paints a damning picture of the regulatory process.

The inspector general states: "While the Fort Worth Examination group made multiple efforts after each examination to convince the Fort Worth Enforcement program ('Enforcement') to open and conduct an investigation of Stanford, no meaningful effort was made by Enforcement to investigate the potential fraud or to bring an action to attempt to stop it until late 2005."

Last month, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that staff members, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared management retaliation, told the newspaper that higher-ups wanted "tools to do away with people who have a dissenting opinion."

Senior managers called the probes a "goat screw" and ordered them killed.

The OIG investigation "found that the former head of Enforcement in Fort Worth, who played a significant role in multiple decisions over the years to quash investigations of Stanford, sought to represent Stanford on three separate occasions after he left the Commission, and in fact represented Stanford briefly in 2006 before he was informed by the SEC Ethics Office that it was improper to do so." (emphasis added)

In Florida, The Miami Herald revealed that state regulators did the SEC one better and gave the bank carte blanche to operate secretly, moving "vast amounts of money offshore--without reporting a penny to regulators."

The arrangement between the bank and the Florida Office of Financial Regulation was so brazen, that Stanford's company "was allowed to sell hundreds of millions in bank notes without allowing regulators to check for fraud."

And once those suspect instruments were sold, the Heraldreported that "employees shredded records of the trust agreements and CD purchases once the original documents were sent to Antigua, state records show."

A sweet deal if you can get it, or have powerful friends who might wish to avoid messy inquiries touching upon sensitive matters.

The New York Times reported last year that current charges "stem from an inquiry opened in October 2006," that is, nearly a decade "after a routine exam of Stanford Group, according to Stephen J. Korotash, an associate regional director of enforcement with the agency's Fort Worth office."

Korotash told the Times that the SEC "stood down" its investigation "at the request of another federal agency, which he declined to name."

According to BusinessWeek, in 2006 the Bush administration "bestowed on his intelligence czar ... broad authority, in the name of national security" to excuse companies from "their normal accounting and securities-disclosure obligations" if such disclosures revealed "certain top-secret defense projects."

At the time, William McLucas, the Securities and Exchange Commission's former enforcement chief told the publication that the ability to conceal financial information from regulators under the rubric of "national security" could lead some companies "to play fast and loose with their numbers."

The former official said, "it could be that you have a bunch of books and records out there that no one knows about."

In response to media reports, congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), wrote a letter to SEC Chair Mary Schapiro last year, demanding documents, and answers, why the SEC suspended investigations of the "Stanford Group under pressure from another unidentified federal agency."

The Ohio congressman said, "if this is true ... our subcommittee will demand that the SEC reveal the name of that agency which told it not to enforce federal laws which protect investors."

Neither documents nor answers were forthcoming.

Cynics might see something untoward here, but I think it's all just a coincidence, like drug planes bought with bundles of cashlaundered through American banks.

Drug Probes Killed

In 1986 during the Iran-Contra period, Allen Stanford's Guardian International Bank set up shop on the sleepy Caribbean isle of Montserrat (pop. 5,870).

It didn't take long before the bank came under scrutiny. Guardian was the subject of a joint Scotland Yard-FBI investigation "into so-called 'brass-plate' banks," The Independent disclosed.

According to reporters David Connett and Stephen Foley, the bank "was suspected of laundering drug money from the notorious Medellin and Cali drug cartels run by Pablo Escobar and the Orejuela brothers."

During the Iran-Contra scandal, congressional investigators and journalists scrutinized links between Colombian drug traffickers and the CIA's Nicaraguan Contra army.

By 1986, evidence began to emerge that top Contra officials and the Agency enjoyed cosy ties with both Escobar and the Orejuela brothers. Under pressure from the Reagan administration however, both Congress and corporate media deep-sixed the story as the affair was covered-up.

A decade later, largely as a result of outrage generated by the late Gary Webb's Dark Alliance series, a memorandum of understanding between Reagan's Justice Department and the Agency entered the public record. That 1982 memo legally freed the CIA from reporting drug smuggling by their assets.

Former FBI agent Ross Gaffney who led the Guardian probe, told Connett and Foley that "we suspected that Stanford's bank was involved in money laundering." But before that investigation could be developed, Stanford suddenly pulled up stakes and "voluntarily surrendered his Montserrat banking licence and left the island."

Gaffney said that even after Guardian closed, the FBI "continued to take an interest in Stanford and set up a second inquiry into that bank after receiving intelligence that it continued to launder money for the Medellin and Cali cartels."

The former federal agent told The Independent, "We had hard intelligence about what he was doing and we began to develop it" but the investigation died or more likely, killed, by officials higher-up the food chain.

After leaving Montserrat, Stanford trained his sights on Antigua and Barbuda and developed a close relationship with former prime minister Lester Bird.

"Under the Bird family leadership" Connett and Foley reported, "the island was widely regarded as one of the most corrupt in the Caribbean, with well-documented links to arms and drug smuggling and money laundering."

According to The Independent, "in 1990, Israeli automatic weapons ordered by Mr Bird's brother Vere turned up in the hands of a notorious Colombian drug trafficker."

Despite suspicions, it appears that Stanford was golden as far as the feds were concerned; just another guy with an endless supply of "get-out-of-jail-free" cards.

One reason Stanford operated with impunity, the BBC informs us, is that he "may have been a US government informer."

DEA documents seen by BBC's investigative unit Panorama, suggest that "drug money [was] originally paid in to Stanford International Bank by agents acting for a feared Mexican drug lord known as the 'Lord of the Heavens'."

Confidential DEA sources believe that Stanford turned over "details of money-laundering from Latin American clients from Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela and Ecuador," thus "effectively guaranteeing himself a decade's worth of 'protection' from the authorities, especially the SEC."

"We were convinced that Stanford's bank attracted millions of narco-dollars," sources told Panorama, "but it was very difficult to get the evidence to nail him."

"The word is" BBC reported, "that Stanford has been a confidential informer for the DEA since '99."

Snitch or not, this raises intriguing questions.

Was Stanford's bank a black hole which U.S. intelligence agencies could exploit, in the interest of "national security" mind you, and therefore exempt from "normal disclosure obligations" as BusinessWeek averred?

If this were so, then even if Stanford were an informant he could have continued to launder drug money and profit nicely; such gentleman's agreements are not without precedent.

One need only glance at internal U.S. government documentsreleased by the National Security Archive, documents which revealed the Cali cartel's close collaboration with corrupt Colombian police, neofascist paramilitaries and the CIA when Medellín drug lord Pablo Escobar was run to ground.

Pointedly, was Stanford's banking empire another in a long line of institutional channels that drug cartels and the CIA could both profit from?

Banks, Drugs and Covert Operations

Across the decades, historians, investigative journalists and researchers have uncovered strong evidence that various banks have served as virtual cut-outs for CIA covert operations.

Readers need only recall illegal activities by institutions as diverse as Paul Helliwell's Castle Bank and Trust in the Bahamas, Frank Nugan and Michael Hand's Nugan Hand Bank in Sydney and the Cayman Islands, or the far-flung empire of Agha Hasan Abedi's Bank and Credit and Commerce International.

Separated in time and geography, what all three banks had in common was their close proximity to international drug trafficking networks and the CIA, particularly in areas of acute interest to U.S. policy planners. Did Stanford International Bank have a similar arrangement with the Agency?

When the scandal finally broke, the Houston Chronicle reported that authorities had been "looking for ties to organized drug cartels and money laundering, going back at least a decade."

In the late 1990s, court documents revealed that "operatives of the Juarez cartel began opening accounts at Stanford's Antigua-based bank," laundering profits amassed by the Amado Carrillo Fuentes organization, the late "Lord of the Heavens" referred to in the BBC report.

The Chronicle notes that Fuentes' representatives "used Stanford International Bank to open 10 accounts and deposit $3 million." We should bear in mind however, these represent onlyknown accounts. Were there others? Federal and state investigators have said that there were.

After authorities determined the accounts were held by a notorious drug cartel, Stanford turned over the $3 million. Yet despite hard evidence of criminal wrongdoing, federal officials told the Chronicle that "any alleged Stanford connection to drug cartels and their money could lie buried in the paperwork gathered for the Security and Exchange Commission's civil inquiry."

One might even say rather conveniently.

During the same period, Texas state securities regulators uncovered more evidence of money laundering by Stanford entities. But because it involved offshore banks, they "referred it" to the FBI and SEC.

Texas Securities Commissioner Denise Voigt Crawford told a Senate Finance Committee last year, "Why it took 10 years for the feds to move on it, I cannot answer."

Miffed by government foot-dragging, Crawford added, "We worked with the FBI and the SEC and basically gave them the case. We told them what we'd seen and they were going to run with it."

But that investigation died on the vine.

Echoing similar themes, The Observer disclosed an FBI source close to the investigation confirmed that the Bureau "was looking at links to international drug gangs as part of the huge investigation into Stanford's banking activities."

The Observer reported that Mexican authorities seized one of Stanford's private jets in connection with alleged links to the Gulf cartel and said that "cheques found inside the plane were linked to the cartel, which is one of the most violent criminal organisations in the world."

DEA sources told the London newspaper "there may well have been a trail connecting his Mexican affairs to narco-trafficking interests." However, a second DEA official told The Observer, "I think we'll find that any possible drug-related trail and SEC priorities are not all in the same frame."

A curious statement considering the billions of dollars in fraudulent activities alleged against the bank, some of which may have been derived from laundering drug money.

One would assume that evidence of serious wrongdoing would be motive enough to take a hard look at the allegations and not concoct a fairy tale that these charges lie "buried in the paperwork"!

A U.S. drug enforcement official told The Observer, "Any major US interest seeking to avoid fully disclosed investments would have to go to pretty careful lengths to avoid encountering cartel interests."

"Anyone seeking to conceal or launder money would find it in safe and lucrative hands were they to forge alliances with, rather than skirt, the cartels," The Observer noted, and would "find them accommodating in terms of remuneration." The official hastened to add, it's "nothing anyone will confirm for Stanford right now."

The question is: why?

A Full-Service Bank

One possible answer may revolve around charges that SIB's Venezuela branch was a conduit for laundered CIA funds.

If true, then the Agency would be dead set against trial disclosures that revealed the bank had been involved in laundering drug money, particularly if narcotics syndicates are playing a role in U.S. destabilization efforts there.

Months before Stanford's empire collapsed, Venezuela's socialist government launched a raid on SIB offices in Caracas.

The Daily Telegraph reported that "Sir Allen Stanford, the Texan billionaire ... is now at the centre of an international spying row."

The conservative British newspaper disclosed that "officials from Venezuelan military intelligence raided a branch of his offshore bank over claims that its employees were paid by the CIA to spy on the south American country."

Although corporate media in the U.S. dismissed Venezuelan allegations as propaganda, questions persist.

While on a charm offensive before his arrest last year, Stanford gave an interview to CNBC's Scott Cohn. When asked about claims that his bank may have been a cut-out for the Agency, this curious exchange took place:

Cohn: "You just by nature of your position and where you were got to know a lot of people in Latin America, in Africa, in Europe, around the world, and it strikes me that somebody in your position would be useful to the authorities in the US trying to find out what was going on there, what was going on in places like Venezuela. Can you tell me about any sort of role you played that way, were you helpful to the authorities in the US?"

Stanford: "Are you talking about the CIA?"

Cohn: "Well, you tell me."

Stanford: "I'm not going to talk about that."

Cohn: "Why not?"

Stanford: "I'm just not going to talk about that."

Cohn: "Well, I mean, am I--is my premise correct that someone in your position would be helpful to those who wanted to know what was going on?"

Stanford: "I really don't have anything to add to that that would be of any value."


Stanford's reticence is certainly understandable, considering Frank Hand's fate 30 years ago.

During a similar scandal when the CIA-linked Nugan Hand bank collapsed amid charges of fraud and drug money laundering, the chief executive turned up dead in his Mercedes with a shot to the head.

Despite evidence uncovered by investigations going back to the 1980s, drug money laundering charges or any reference to Agency activities will not figure in the Justice Department's case when Stanford goes on trial in January.

As ABC News delicately put it, SEC action against Stanford "may have complicated the federal drug case."

Underscoring the federal government's reluctance to explore this dark corner of Allen Stanford's career, it might do well to keep in mind what one airline executive told investigative journalist Daniel Hopsicker during his probe into the 9/11 attacks.

"Sometimes when things don't make business sense, its because they do make sense...just in some other way.
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Re: Is Allen Stanford An Asset Of The CIA?

Postby Nordic » Fri Jan 28, 2011 4:09 am

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/01/sir- ... ial-judge/

Billionaire ruled unfit to stand trial due to drug addiction

Financier and cricket mogul Sir Allen Stanford was unfit to stand trial on charges of running a $7-billion fraud and needs treatment for a drug addiction, a US judge ruled.

Stanford's trial had been due to begin this week but was postponed indefinitely until he could be considered fit to prepare his defense.

The financier has pleaded not guilty to 21 counts of fraud, money laundering and obstruction. He faces up to 375 years in jail if convicted.

"The court finds Stanford is incompetent to stand trial at this time based on his apparent impaired ability to rationally assist his attorneys in preparing his defense," US District Judge David Hittner wrote in his ruling in Houston, Texas.

"The court's finding that Stanford is incompetent, however, does not alter the court's finding that Stanford is a flight risk."



Psychiatrists for the government and Stanford's team testified on Stanford's condition at a hearing earlier this month. They said he was suffering from bouts of delirium linked to his dependency on a strong anti-anxiety medication.

They found the 60-year-old was also depressed and incompetent to stand trial due to a brain injury he sustained during a 2009 jailhouse brawl, and recommended he be weaned off the drug.

Hittner denied a request by Stanford's lawyers to release him on bond and place him in a private treatment facility for his addiction.

Instead, he ordered the inmate to be committed to the custody of the attorney general to "undergo medical treatment for his current impaired mental capacity" and get a psychiatric evaluation.

The judge also recommended that the flamboyant Texan be sent to a medical facility within the US Bureau of Prisons, namely citing the Federal Medical Center in Butner, North Carolina, where Wall Street swindler Bernard Madoff is currently serving a 150-year term for defrauding investors of $20 billion.

The psychiatrists who examined Stanford found he was currently taking at least three medications to treat his depression and anxiety -- clonazepam (Klonopin), mirtazapine (Remeron) and sertraline (Zoloft) -- and that he was taking particularly high doses of clonazepam.

Clonazepam can be addictive when the body develops tolerance to the drug.

Lawyers for Stanford did not immediately return requests for comment.

Stanford allegedly ran the most high-profile fraud since Wall Street financier Bernard Madoff was charged in a $50-billion Ponzi scheme in December. But while that scandal has damaged -- or ruined -- the portfolios of foundations and celebrities around the world, the effect of Stanford's alleged scheme has thus far centered more on Washington.

The Center for Responsive Politics reported that the Sanford Financial Group (SFG) gave $2.4 million to political parties, committees and more than 100 political candidates -- past and present -- since 2000, including $31,750 to President Barack Obama when he was a senator.

Obama's White House rival, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), received $28,150 from SFG, the center said.

As early as 2006, US officials were so worried about rumors of "bribery, money-laundering and political manipulation," that they avoided contacting or being photographed with Stanford, according to a US State Department cable, revealed late last year by WikiLeaks.

"Allen Stanford is a controversial Texan billionaire who has made significant investments in offshore finance, aviation, and property development in Antigua and throughout the region," the cable noted. "His companies are rumoured to engage in bribery, money-laundering and political manipulation."

"Embassy officers do not reach out to Stanford because of the allegations of bribery and money-laundering. The ambassador managed to stay out of any one-on-one photos with Stanford during the breakfast," it added.

A self-described "maverick," Stanford hit international sports headlines by creating the eponymous Stanford Super Series Twenty20 cricket competition.

-- With earlier reporting by Jeremy Gantz and AFP


Gee, what a conveeenient drug addiction. :roll:
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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