Posted: 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
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
(I guess we can confidently say YES, he is a CIA asset!)
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!)

