
(note: The writer of this article mysteriously died weeks
after publishing it. He wrote us in support of our
PEACE
AMBASSADORS.)
BIG U.S. BANKS CONFIRMED AS CRIMINAL ENTERPRISES
WACHOVIA WANTED TO SUE US FOR LABELLING IT A CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE
First published on
World Reports Thursday 1 July 2010 00:01
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NEW REPORT STARTS HERE:
Note: Nothing should be construed from the fact that this report is about
the criminal banks engaged in drug-money laundering, and not about the usual
subject. We haven't enough reliable material to elaborate further, yet,
following the end of the abortive G-20 meeting in Toronto.
The following banks and currency exchanges are mentioned in this report:
American Express Bank International
Banco Santander SA
Bank of America
Casa de Cambio Puebla SA
Citigroup, Inc.
HSBC Holdings, London and Mexico
Mexican street currency-exchange firms [3,000]
Standard Chartered PLC, London
Wachovia, including London
Wells Fargo
Western Union
WACHOVIA, WELLS FARGO, BANK OF AMERICA ARE CRIMINAL ENTERPRISES, LIKE WE
SAID
Some time ago, we learned that Wachovia had consulted its lawyers to
establish whether they could sue us for describing the bank, among others,
as a criminal enterprise. Their lawyers are believed to have advised them,
in so many words, that, not least given investigative journalistic freedom
of speech considerations, our observations represented 'fair comment'.
Behind that advice lay the knowledge that since Wachovia was involved in
money laundering drug money, we might well know this and be able to prove
it. So the matter was dropped.
As the entire 'Black' Octopus criminal carousel unravels faster than the
kleptocracy can keep up with events, other sources are now starting to do
our exposure work for us. Late in the day, as usual: but better late than
never. We therefore take the opportunity to post, verbatim, the following
article by Michael Smith for Bloomberg, which of course proves our point.
Wachovia, Wells Fargo and Bank of America, for starters, are egregious
criminal enterprises. Money laundering of drug proceeds is an unspeakable
crime and the most senior officials of these institutions should be arrested
and forced to suffer SEVERE consequences. But that isn't happening.
'MAINSTREAM' MEDIA CONTINUE TO IGNORE THE CENTRAL ISSUE: RAMPANT CRIMINALITY
We are sick and tired of the way the so-called 'mainstream' media are
waffling about every nuance under the sun and OMITTING the central issue:
RAMPANT CRIMINALITY and the banks' open-ended breaches of the law, and their
arrogance based on fears that they might collapse.
Securitisation is ILLEGAL in the United States and in all Common Law
countries, as we have demonstrated and proved with the aid of impeccable
outside academic research. Yet there has been NO RESPONSE TO OUR EXPOSURE OF
THIS FLOUTING OF THE RULE OF LAW, EITHER.
The following Bloomberg report indicates that, at long last, some
'mainstream' reporters have managed to lift themselves off their brains and
to start exposing the truth. Separately, we have been exposing
drug-trafficking operations in our title
The Latin American Times, and continue to do so. You may also be
interested to know that before his 'switch', following the 'bait' during
which he stole the Editor's $35,000 LOAN which should have been repaid at
arms' length plus 7% per annum for two years, on 11th June 2007, Wanta told
the Editor: 'If you expose the drug traffickers, they will kill you'. We
listed that threat among the 37 threats against the Editor so far received.
THE BLOOMBERG REPORT STARTS HERE:
[Note: With interpolations by the Editor].
U.S. BANKS FINANCING MEXICO DRUG GANGS ADMITTED IN WELLS FARGO DEAL
By Michael Smith
June 29 (Bloomberg) -- Just before sunset on April 10, 2006, a DC-9 jet
landed at the international airport in the port city of Ciudad del Carmen,
500 miles east of Mexico City. As soldiers on the ground approached the
plane, the crew tried to shoo them away, saying there was a dangerous oil
leak. So the troops grew suspicious and searched the jet.
They found 128 black suitcases, packed with 5.7 tons of cocaine, valued at
$100 million. The stash was supposed to have been delivered from Caracas to
drug traffickers in Toluca, near Mexico City, Mexican prosecutors later
found. Law enforcement officials also discovered something else.
The smugglers had bought the DC-9 with laundered funds they transferred
through two of the biggest banks in the U.S.: Wachovia Corp. and Bank of
America Corp., Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its August 2010 issue.
This was no isolated incident. Wachovia, it turns out, had made a habit of
helping move money for Mexican drug smugglers. Wells Fargo & Co., which
bought Wachovia in 2008, has admitted in court that its unit failed to
monitor and report suspected money laundering by narcotics traffickers --
including the cash used to buy four planes that shipped a total of 22 tons
of cocaine.
The admission came in an agreement that Charlotte, North Carolina-based
Wachovia struck with federal prosecutors in March, and it sheds light on the
largely undocumented role of U.S. banks in contributing to the violent drug
trade that has convulsed Mexico for the past four years.
BLATANT DISREGARD FOR THE RULE OF LAW AND BASIC MORALITY
Wachovia admitted it didn't do enough to spot illicit funds in handling
$378.4 billion for Mexican-currency-exchange houses from 2004 to 2007.
That's the largest violation of the Bank Secrecy Act, an
anti-money-laundering law, in U.S. history -- a sum equal to one-third of
Mexico's current gross domestic product.
"Wachovia's blatant disregard for our banking laws gave international
cocaine cartels a virtual carte blanche to finance their operations", says
Jeffrey Sloman, the Federal Prosecutor who handled the case.
Since 2006, more than 22,000 people have been killed in drug-related battles
that have raged mostly along the 2,000-mile (3,200-kilometer) border that
Mexico shares with the U.S. In the Mexican city of Ciudad Juarez, just
across the border from El Paso, Texas, 700 people had been murdered this
year as of mid- June. Six Juarez police officers were slaughtered by
automatic weapons fire in a midday ambush in April.
Rondolfo Torre, the leading candidate for governor in the Mexican border
state of Tamaulipas, was gunned down yesterday, less than a week before
elections in which violence related to drug trafficking was a central issue.
45000 MEXICAN TROOPS DEPLOYED AGAINST THE CARTELS
Mexican President Felipe Calderon vowed to crush the drug cartels when he
took office in December 2006, and he's since deployed 45,000 troops to fight
the cartels.
They've had little success.
Among the dead are police, soldiers, journalists and ordinary citizens. The
United States has 'pledged' Mexico $1.1 billion in the past two years to aid
in the fight against narcotics cartels.
[EDITOR'S INSERT: This is absurd. Under the standard double-mindedness,
dialectical non-ethic that characterises the criminalist behaviour of
elements of the US Government, law enforcement and the Drug Enforcement
Administration battle valiantly against the proliferation of Mexican drug
gangs, which now operate in every corner of the United States. Meanwhile,
the drug offensive was organised and orchestrated by CIA operatives in Latin
America in the 1970s and 1980s, aided by Israeli 'Black' intelligence headed
by David Kimche (who died of brain cancer on 8th March 2010) and Michael
Harari. Their involvement is proven by the Cutolo Affidavit dated 11th March
1980.
The military officer (Cutolo) was subsequently murdered, along with 'Bo'
Baker and others because of their knowledge inter alia of this criminal
activity. The barrels of precursor chemicals found in the forests fo
Colombia and elsewhere did not materialse from nowhere. The 'Anglo-Saxons'
and their nefarious Israeli cutouts took over and organised the disparate
competing Latin American gangs, establishing a self-perpetuating scoourge
run by peasant criminals: a perfect cut-out.
Incidentally, after David Kimche died, The Daily Telegraph boobed by
publishing a photograph in which he was shown (engaged in negotiations with
the Lebanese in 1972) but wrongly attributed. We have published a recent
issue of
Arab-Asian Affairs (which title we bought unknowingly from Kimche's
brother, Jon Kimche, in 1975). Jon Kimche used to come to our office, as he
continued for a time as Editor (until he doubled his price, whereupon we
fired him). We are therefore familiar with the facial characteristics of the
Kimche brothers. Investigations by this service revealed that ALL picture
representations of David Kimche published in The Jerusalem Post, Haaretz,
The Daily Telegraph, The Times and US newspapers have been FRAUDULENT all
along.
They have all identified several individuals wrongly as David Kimche and
continue to do so after his death. Why? To protect ongoing and past, highly
incriminating and sensitive drug operations].
In May, President Barack Obama said he'd send 1,200 National Guard troops,
adding to the 17,400 agents on the U.S. side of the border to help stem drug
traffic and illegal immigration.
Behind the carnage in Mexico is an industry that supplies hundreds of tons
of cocaine, heroin, marijuana and methamphetamines to Americans. The cartels
have built a network of dealers in 231 U.S. cities, taking in about $39
billion in sales annually, according to the Justice Department.
ITS THE CRIMINAL BANKS THAT SHOULD BE PROSECUTED AND MADE TO SUFFER
Twenty million people in the U.S. regularly use illegal drugs, spurring
street crime and wrecking families. Narcotics cost the U.S. economy $215
billion a year -- enough to cover health care for 30.9 million Americans --
in overburdened courts, prisons and hospitals and lost productivity.
"It's the banks laundering money for the cartels that finances the tragedy",
says Martin Woods, Director of Wachovia's anti-money-laundering unit in
London from 2006 to 2009.
• Woods says he quit the bank in disgust after
executives ignored his documentation that drug dealers were funneling money
through Wachovia's branch network.
"If you don't see the correlation between the money laundering by banks and
the 22,000 people killed in Mexico, you're missing the point", Woods says.
WACHOVIA ONE OF MANY U.S. AND EUROPEAN BANKS HANDLING DRUG MONEY
Wachovia is just one of the U.S. and European banks that have been used for
drug money laundering. For the past two decades, Latin American drug
traffickers have gone to U.S. banks to cleanse their dirty cash, says Paul
Campo, head of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's financial crimes
unit.
Miami-based American Express Bank International paid fines in both 1994 and
2007 after admitting that it had failed to spot and report drug dealers
laundering money through its accounts. Drug traffickers used accounts at
Bank of America in Oklahoma City to buy three planes that carried 10 tons of
cocaine, according to Mexican court filings.
Federal agents caught people who work for Mexican cartels depositing illicit
funds in Bank of America accounts in Atlanta, Chicago and Brownsville,
Texas, from 2002 to 2009. Mexican drug dealers used shell companies to open
accounts at London-based HSBC Holdings Plc, Europe's biggest bank by assets,
an investigation by the Mexican Finance Ministry found.
CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE BANKS HIDE BEHIND RHETORIC AND CLIENT CONFIDENTIALITY
Those two banks weren't accused of wrongdoing. Bank of America spokeswoman
Shirley Norton and HSBC spokesman Roy Caple say laws bar them from
discussing specific clients. They say their banks strictly follow the
government rules.
"Bank of America takes its anti-money-laundering responsibilities very
seriously". Norton says. [EDITOR: Translation: This is a deliberately
vacuous, meaningless and empty statement].
A Mexican judge on January 22 accused the owners of six centros cambiarios,
or money changers, in Culiacan and Tijuana of laundering drug funds through
their accounts at the Mexican units of Banco Santander SA, Citigroup Inc.
and HSBC, according to court documents filed in the case.
The money changers are in jail while being tried. Citigroup, HSBC and
Santander, which is the largest Spanish bank by assets, weren't accused of
any wrongdoing.
The three banks say Mexican law bars them from commenting on the case,
adding that they each carefully enforce anti-money-laundering programs.
HSBC has stopped accepting dollar deposits in Mexico, and Citigroup no
longer allows noncustomers to change dollars there. Citigroup detected
suspicious activity in the Tijuana accounts, reported it to regulators and
closed the accounts, spokesman Paulo Carreno says. [EDITOR: Yeah, after the
event and after the temperature got too hot].
FOCUS IS ON THE CARTELS: BUT THEY CAN'T OPERATE WITHOUT CRIMINAL BANKS
On June 15, the Mexican Finance Ministry announced it would set limits for
banks on cash deposits in dollars. Mexico's drug cartels have become
multinational criminal enterprises.
Some of the gangs have delved into other illegal activities such as
gunrunning, kidnapping and smuggling people across the border, as well as
into seemingly legitimate areas such as trucking, travel services and air
cargo transport, according to the us Justice Department's National Drug
Intelligence Center.
These criminal empires have no choice but to use the global banking system
to finance their businesses, Mexican Senator Felipe Gonzalez says.
"With so much cash, the only way to move this money is through the banks",
says Gonzalez, who represents a central Mexican state and chairs the senate
public safety committee.
[EDITOR: In January 2009, Sr. Maria Antonio Costa, head of the Vienna-based
UNDOC, told the Austrian journal Profil in an interview that the only
liquidity in the interbank sector during the second half of 2008 was drug
money. Actually, he meant from the discontinuity that took place on 10-12
September, after which the Editor received three gunshots on our voicemail:
see passim].
Gonzalez, a member of Calderon's National Action Party, carries a .38
revolver for protection.
"I know this won't stop the narcos when they come through that door with
machine guns". he says, pointing to the entrance to his office. "But at
least I'll take one with me".
NO BANK MORE CLOSELY LINKED TO MEXICAN DRUG LAUNDERING THAN WACHOVIA
No bank has been more closely connected with Mexican money laundering than
Wachovia. Founded in 1879, Wachovia became the largest bank by assets in the
southeastern U.S. by 1900. After the Great Depression, some savvy people in
North Carolina called the bank "Walk-Over-Ya" because it had foreclosed on
farms in the region.
By 2008, Wachovia was the sixth-largest American lender, and it faced $26
billion in losses from subprime mortgage loans. That cost Wachovia Chief
Executive Officer Kennedy Thompson his job in June 2008.
Six months later, San Francisco-based Wells Fargo, which dates from 1852,
bought Wachovia for $12.7 billion, creating the largest network of bank
branches in the U.S. Thompson, who now works for private-equity firm
Aquiline Capital Partners LLC in New York, declined to comment.
As Wachovia's balance sheet was bleeding, its legal woes were mounting. In
the three years leading up to Wachovia's agreement with the Justice
Department, grand juries served the bank with 6,700 subpoenas requesting
information.
WACHOVIA REACTED LETHARGICALLY TO THIS GRAND JURY ONSLAUGHT
The bank didn't react quickly enough to the prosecutors' requests and failed
to hire enough investigators, the U.S. Treasury Department said in March.
After a 22-month investigation, the Justice Department on March 12 charged
Wachovia with violating the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to run an effective
anti-money-laundering program.
Five days later, Wells Fargo promised in a Miami federal courtroom to revamp
its detection systems. Wachovia's new owner paid $160 million in fines and
penalties, less than 2 percent of its $12.3 billion profit in 2009.
If Wells Fargo keeps its pledge, the U.S. government will, according to the
agreement, drop all charges against the bank in March 2011. [EDITOR: WHAT A
SCANDAL].
Wells Fargo regrets that some of Wachovia's former anti-money-laundering
efforts fell short, spokeswoman Mary Eshet says. Wells Fargo has invested
$42 million in the past three years to improve its anti-money-laundering
program and has been working with regulators, she says.
'AFTER THE HORSES HAVE BOLTED' WHINING
"We have substantially increased the caliber and number of staff in our
international investigations group, and we also significantly upgraded the
monitoring software", Eshet says. The agreement bars the bank from
contesting or contradicting the facts in its admission.
The bank declined to answer specific questions, including how much it made
by handling $378.4 billion -- including $4 billion of cash-from Mexican
exchange companies. [EDITOR: PROTECTED].
The 1970 Bank Secrecy Act requires banks to report all cash transactions
above $10,000 to regulators and to tell the Government about other suspected
money-laundering activity.
Big banks employ hundreds of investigators and spend millions of dollars on
software programs to scour accounts. [EDITOR: GREAT. BUT HASN'T ADDRESSED
THE BANKS' CRIMINALITY].
No big U.S. bank -- Wells Fargo included -- has ever been indicted for
violating the Bank Secrecy Act or any other Federal law. Instead, the
Justice Department settles criminal charges by using deferred-prosecution
agreements, in which a bank pays a fine and promises do it again.
BANKS PROTECTED BY FEARS THAT A BANK COLLAPSE WOULD IMPLODE THE SYSTEM
Large banks are protected from indictments by a variant of the
too-big-to-fail theory.
Indicting a big bank could trigger a mad dash by investors to dump shares
and cause panic in financial markets, says Jack Blum, a U.S. Senate
investigator for 14 years and a consultant to international banks and
brokerage firms on money laundering.
The theory is like a get-out-of-jail-free card for big banks, Blum says.
[EDITOR: Jack Blum is a highly respected investigator, a man of the highest
integrity and calibre].
"There's no capacity to regulate or punish them because they're too big to
be threatened with failure", Blum says. "They seem to be willing to do
anything that improves their bottom line, until they're caught". [EDITOR:
ACCURATE, ACCURATE, ACCURATE, ACCURATE].
Wachovia's run-in with Federal prosecutors hasn't troubled investors. Wells
Fargo's stock traded at $30.86 on March 24, up 1 percent in the week after
the March 17 agreement was announced.
Moving money is central to the drug trade -- from the cash that people tape
to their bodies as they cross the U.S.-Mexican border, to the $100,000 wire
transfers they send from Mexican exchange houses to big U.S. banks.
BORDER FENCE DOESN'T STOP ANYONE. A HUGE WALL IS NECESSARY
In Tijuana, 15 miles south of San Diego, Gustavo Rojas has lived for a
quarter of a century in a shack in the shadow of the 10-foot-high
(3-meter-high) steel border fence that separates the U.S. and Mexico there.
He points to holes burrowed under the barrier.
"They go across with drugs and come back with cash," Rojas, 75, says.
"This fence doesn't stop anyone".
Drug money moves back and forth across the border in an endless cycle. In
the U.S., couriers take the cash from drug sales to Mexico -- as much as $29
billion a year, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. That
would be about 319 tons of $100 bills. [EDITOR: NO. $45 BILLION].
They hide it in cars and trucks to smuggle into Mexico. There, cartels pay
people to deposit some of the cash into Mexican banks and branches of
international banks. The narcos launder much of what's left through money
changers.
DRUG MONEY LAUNDERED THROUGH STREET MONEY TRADERS
Anyone who has been to Mexico is familiar with these street-corner money
changers; Mexican regulators say there are at least 3,000 of them from
Tijuana to Cancun, usually displaying large signs advertising the day's
dollar-peso exchange rate.
Mexican banks are regulated by the National Banking and Securities
Commission, which has an anti-money-laundering unit; the money changers are
supposedly policed by Mexico's Tax Service Administration, which has no such
unit.
By law, the money changers have to demand identification from anyone
exchanging more than $500. They also have to report transactions higher than
$5,000 to regulators.
The cartels get around these requirements by employing legions of
individuals -- including relatives, maids and gardeners -- to convert small
amounts of dollars into pesos or to make deposits in local banks. After
that, cartels wire the money to a multinational bank.
SMALL MONEY EXCHANGES ARE CALLED SMURFS
The people making the small money exchanges are known as Smurfs, after the
cartoon characters.
"They can use an army of people like Smurfs and go through $1 million before
lunchtime", says Jerry Robinette, who oversees U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement operations along the border in east Texas.
The U.S. Treasury has been warning banks about big Mexican-
currency-exchange firms laundering drug money since 1996. By 2004, many U.S.
banks had closed their accounts with these companies, which are known as
casas de cambio.
Wachovia ignored warnings by regulators and police, per the
deferred-prosecution agreement.
"As early as 2004, Wachovia understood the risk", the bank admitted in
court. "Despite these warnings, Wachovia remained in the business".
One customer that Wachovia took on in 2004 was Casa de Cambio Puebla SA, a
Puebla, Mexico-based currency-exchange company. Pedro Alatorre, who ran a
Puebla branch in Mexico City, had created front companies for cartels,
according to a pending Mexican criminal case against him.
FEDERAL INDICTMENT IN MIAMI
A Federal Grand Jury in Miami indicted Puebla, Alatorre and three other
executives in February 2008 for drug trafficking and money laundering. In
May 2008, the Justice Department sought extradition of the suspects, saying
they used shell firms to launder $720 million through U.S. banks.
Alatorre has been in a Mexican jail for 2 1/2 years. He denies any
wrongdoing, his lawyer Mauricio Moreno says. Alatorre has made no
court-filed responses in the U.S.
During the period in which Wachovia admitted to moving money out of Mexico
for Puebla, couriers carrying clear plastic bags stuffed with cash went to
the branch Alatorre operated at the Mexico City airport, according to
surveillance reports by Mexican police.
Alatorre opened accounts at HSBC on behalf of front companies, Mexican
investigators found.
Puebla executives used the stolen identities of 74 people to launder money
through Wachovia accounts, Mexican prosecutors say in court-filed reports.
WACHOVIA NEVER REPORTED ANY TRANSACTIONS AS SUSPICIOUS
"Wachovia handled all the transfers, and they never reported any as
suspicious", says Jose Luis Marmolejo, former head of the Mexican Attorney
General's financial crimes, now in private practice.
In November 2005 and January 2006, Wachovia transferred a total of $300,000
from Puebla to a Bank of America account in Oklahoma City, according to
information in the Alatorre cases in the United States and Mexico.
Drug smugglers used the funds to buy the DC-9 through Oklahoma City aircraft
broker U.S. Aircraft Titles Inc., according to financial records cited in
the Mexican criminal case. U.S. Aircraft Titles President Sue White declined
to comment.
On April 5, 2006, a pilot flew the plane from St. Petersburg, Florida, to
Caracas to pick up the cocaine, according to the DEA. Five days later,
troops seized the plane in Ciudad del Carmen and burned the drugs at a
nearby army base.
WACHOVIA KNEW PERFECTLY WELL WHAT WAS GOING ON
"I am sure Wachovia knew what was going on", says jJose Marmolejo, who
oversaw the criminal investigation into Wachovia's customers.
"It went on too long and they made too much money not to have known".
At Wachovia's anti-money-laundering unit in London, Woods and his colleague
Jim DeFazio, in Charlotte, say they suspected that drug dealers were using
the bank to move funds.
Woods, a former Scotland Yard investigator, spotted illegible signatures and
other suspicious markings on traveler's checks from Mexican exchange
companies, he said in a September 2008 letter to the U.K. Financial Services
Authority. He sent copies of the letter to the DEA and Treasury Department
in the United States.
Woods, 45, says his bosses instructed him to keep quiet and tried to have
him fired, according to his letter to the FSA. In one meeting, a bank
official insisted Woods shouldn't have filed suspicious activity reports to
the Government, as both US and UK laws require.
LONDON WACHOVIA BOSSES TRIES TO SILENCE WHISTLEBLOWER WHO THEN LEFT BANK
"I was shocked by the content and outcome of the meeting, genuinely
traumatized", Woods wrote.
In the U.S., DeFazio, a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent for 21 years,
says he told bank executives in 2005 that the DEA was probing the transfers
through Wachovia to buy the planes.
Bank executives spurned recommendations to close suspicious accounts,
DeFazio, 63, says.
"I think they looked at the money and said, 'The hell with it. We're going
to bring it in, and look at all the money we'll make'", DeFazio says.
"I didn't want anything from them", he says. "I just wanted to get out".
Woods, who resigned from Wachovia in May 2009, now advises banks on how to
combat money laundering. He declined to discuss details of Wachovia's
actions.
U.S. Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan told Woods in a March 19 2010
letter that his efforts had helped the United States build its case against
Wachovia. He wrote:
"You demonstrated great courage and integrity by speaking up when you saw
problems".
It was the Puebla investigation that led U.S. authorities to the broader
probe of Wachovia. On May 16, 2007, DEA agents conducted a raid of
Wachovia's international banking offices in Miami. They had a court order to
seize Puebla's accounts.
U.S. prosecutors and investigators then scrutinized the bank's dealings with
Mexican-currency-exchange firms. That led to the March deferred-prosecution
agreement.
With Puebla's Wachovia accounts seized, Alatorre and his partners shifted
their laundering scheme to HSBC, according to financial documents cited in
the Mexican criminal case against Alatorre.
In the three weeks after the DEA raided Wachovia, two of Alatorre's front
companies, Grupo ETPB SA and Grupo Rahero SC, made 12 cash deposits totaling
$1 million at an HSBC Mexican branch, Mexican investigators found.
DRUG MONEY NOW LAUNDERED THROUGH HSBC TO BUY ANOTHER PLANE
The funds financed a Beechcraft King Air 200 plane that police seized on
December 29, 2007, in Cuernavaca, 50 miles south of Mexico City, according
to information in the case against Alatorre.
For years, Federal authorities watched as the wife and daughter of Oscar
Oropeza, a drug smuggler working for the Matamoros-based Gulf Cartel,
deposited stacks of cash at a Bank of America branch on Boca Chica Boulevard
in Brownsville, Texas, less than 3 miles from the border.
Investigator Robinette sits in his pickup truck across the street from that
branch. It's a one-story, tan stucco building next to a Kentucky Fried
Chicken outlet. Robinette discusses the Oropeza case with Tom Salazar, an
agent who investigated the family.
"Everybody in there knew who they were -- the tellers, everyone", Salazar
says.
"The bank never came to us, though". [EDITOR: COURSE NOT. IT'S A C.I.A.
CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE]
MICRO-MONEY LAUNDERING TECHNIQUE
The Oropeza case gives a new, literal meaning to the term money laundering.
Oropeza's wife, Tina Marie, and daughter Paulina Marie, deposited stashes of
$20 bills several times a day into Bank of America accounts, Salazar says.
Bank employees knew the Oropezas by smelling their money.
"I asked the tellers what they were talking about, and they said the money
had this sweet smell like Bounce, those sheets you throw into the dryer",
Salazar says. "They told me that when they opened the vault, the smell of
Bounce just poured out".
Oropeza, 48, was arrested 820 miles from Brownsville, Texas.. On May 31,
2007, police in Saraland, Alabama, stopped him on a traffic violation.
Checking his record, they learned of the investigation in Texas. They
searched the van and discovered 84 kilograms (185 pounds) of cocaine hidden
under a false floor. That allowed Federal agents to freeze Oropeza's bank
accounts and search his marble-floored home in Brownsville, Robinette says.
Inside, investigators found a supply of Bounce alongside the clothes dryer.
All three Oropezas pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Brownsville, TX,
to drug and money-laundering charges in March and April 2008. Oscar Oropeza
was sentenced to 15 years in prison; his wife was ordered to serve 10 months
and his daughter got 6 months.
Bank of America's Norton says: "We not only fulfilled our regulatory
obligation, but we proactively worked with law enforcement on these
matters". [EDITOR: NEFARIOUS HUMBUG].
Prosecutors have tried to halt money laundering at American Express Bank
International twice. In 1994, the bank, then a subsidiary of New York-based
American Express Co., pledged not to allow money laundering again after two
employees were convicted in a criminal case involving drug trafficker Juan
Garcia Abrego.
In 1994, the bank paid $14 million to settle. Five years later, drug money
again flowed through American Express Bank. Between 1999 and 2004, the bank
failed to stop clients from laundering $55 million of narcotics funds, the
bank admitted in a deferred-prosecution accord in August 2007.
It paid $65 million to the United States and promised not to break the law
again. The government dismissed the criminal charge a year later. American
Express sold the bank to the London-based Standard Chartered PLC in February
2008 for $823 million.
WESTERN UNION TURNED A BLIND EYE TO DRUG-MONEY LAUNDERING
Banks aren't the only financial institutions that have turned a blind eye to
drug cartels in moving illicit funds. Western Union Co., the world's largest
money transfer firm, agreed to pay $94 million in February 2010 to settle
civil and criminal investigations by the Arizona Attorney General's office.
Undercover state police posing as drug dealers bribed Western Union
employees to illegally transfer money, says Cameron Holmes, an assistant
Attorney General.
"Their allegiance was to the smugglers", Holmes says. "What they thought
about during work was 'How may I please my highest- spending customers the
most?'"
Workers in more than 20 Western Union offices allowed the customers to use
multiple names, pass fictitious identifications and smudge their
fingerprints on documents, court records say.
"In all the time we did undercover operations, we never once had a bribe
turned down", says Holmes, citing court affidavits.
Western Union has made significant improvements, it complies with
anti-money-laundering laws and works closely with regulators and police,
spokesman Tom Fitzgerald says.
For four years, Mexican authorities have been fighting a losing battle
against the cartels. The police are often two steps behind the criminals.
Near the southeastern corner of Texas, in Matamoros, more than 50 combat
troops surround a police station.
US officers take two suspected drug traffickers inside for questioning.
Nearby, two young men wearing white T-shirts and baggy pants watch and
whisper into radios. These are los halcones (the falcons), whose job is to
let the cartel bosses know what the police are doing.
BILLIONS MOVED ACROSS BORDERS ROUTINELY: THERE IS NO CHANGE
While the police are outmaneuvered and outgunned, ordinary Mexicans live in
fear. Rojas, the man who lives in the Tijuana slum near the border fence,
recalls cowering in his home as smugglers shot it out with the police.
"The only way to survive is to stay out of the way and hope the violence,
the bullets, don't come for you," Rojas says.
To make their criminal enterprises work, the drug cartels of Mexico need to
move billions of dollars across borders. That's how they finance the
purchase of drugs, planes, weapons and safe houses, Senator Gonzalez says.
"They are multinational businesses, after all", says Gonzalez, as he slowly
loads his revolver at his desk in his Mexico City office. "And they cannot
work without a bank."
To contact the reporter on this story:
Michael Smith in Santiago, Chile, at
mssmith@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: June 29, 2010 00:00 EDT
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THE FOLLOWING DATA HAS BEEN PUBLISHED AT THE FOOT
OF MOST OF THESE REPORTS FOR THE PAST THREE YEARS++:
• COMPILED BY U.S. SECURITIES EXPERT MICHAEL C.
COTTRELL, B.A., M.S..
LIST OF U.S. STATUTES, SECURITIES REGULATIONS AND LEGAL PRINCIPLES OF WHICH
THE CRIMINALISTS AND ALL THE MAIN FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS REMAIN IN BREACH:
LEGAL TUTORIAL: The Steps of Common Fraud:
Step 1: Fraud in the Inducement: “… is intended to and which does cause one
to execute an instrument, or make an agreement… The misrepresentation
involved does not mislead one as the paper he signs but rather misleads as
to the true facts of a situation, and the false impression it causes is a
basis of a decision to sign or render a judgment”.
Source: Steven H. Gifis, ‘Law Dictionary’, 5th Edition, Hauppauge:
Barron’s Educational Series, Inc., 2003, s.v.: ‘Fraud’.
Step 2: Fraud in Fact by Deceit (Obfuscation and Denial) and Theft:
• “ACTUAL FRAUD. Deceit. Concealing something
or making a false representation with an evil intent [scanter] when it
causes injury to another…”. Source: Steven H. Gifis, ‘Law Dictionary’, 5th
Edition, Happauge: Barron’s Educational Series, Inc., 2003, s.v.: ‘Fraud’.
• “THE TORT OF FRAUDULENT DECEIT… The elements
of actionable deceit are: A false representation of a material fact made
with knowledge of its falsity, or recklessly, or without reasonable grounds
for believing its truth, and with intent to induce reliance thereon, on
which plaintiff justifiably relies on his injury…”. Source: Steven H. Gifis,
‘Law Dictionary’, 5th Edition, Happauge: Barron’s Educational Series, Inc.,
2003, s.v.: ‘Deceit’.
Step 3: Theft by Deception and Fraudulent Conveyance:
THEFT BY DECEPTION:
• “FRAUDULENT CONCEALMENT… The hiding or
suppression of a material fact or circumstance which the party is legally or
morally bound to disclose…”.
• “The test of whether failure to disclose
material facts constitutes fraud is the existence of a duty, legal or
equitable, arising from the relation of the parties: failure to disclose a
material fact with intent to mislead or defraud under such circumstances
being equivalent to an actual ‘fraudulent concealment’…”.
• To suspend running of limitations, it means
the employment of artifice, planned to prevent inquiry or escape
investigation and mislead or hinder acquirement of information disclosing a
right of action, and acts relied on must be of an affirmative character and
fraudulent…”.
Source: Black, Henry Campbell, M.A., 'Black’s Law Dictionary’, Revised 4th
Edition, St Paul: West Publishing Company, 1968, s.v. ‘Fraudulent
Concealment’.
FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE:
• “FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE… A conveyance or
transfer of property, the object of which is to defraud a creditor, or
hinder or delay him, or to put such property beyond his reach…”.
• “Conveyance made with intent to avoid some
duty or debt due by or incumbent or person (entity) making transfer…”.
Source: Black, Henry Campbell, M.A., ‘Black’s Law Dictionary', Revised 4th
Edition, St Paul: West Publishing Company, 1968, s.v. ‘Fraudulent
Conveyance’.
U.S. SECURITIES REGULATIONS OF WHICH INSTITUTIONS
HAVE BEEN SHOWN TO BE IN BREACH [SEE REPORTS]:
• NASD Rule 3120, et al.
• NASD Rule 2330, et al
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and 3040
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and IM-2110-1
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and SEC Rule 15c3-1
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and 3110
• SEC Rules 17a-3 and 17a-4
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and Procedural Rule
8210
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and 2330 and IM-2330
• NASD Conduct Rules 2110 and IM-2110-5
• NASD Systems and Programme Rules 6950 through
6957
• 97-13 Bank Secrecy Act, Recordkeeping Rule
for funds transfers and transmittals of funds, et al.
U.S. LAWS ROUTINELY BREACHED BY THE CRIMINAL OPERATIVES AND INSTITUTIONS:
• Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act
• Anti-Drug Abuse Act
• Applicable international money laundering
restrictions
• Bank Secrecy Act
• Crimes, General Provisions, Accessory After
the Fact [Title 18, USC]
• Currency and Foreign Transactions Reporting
Act
• Economic Espionage Act
• Hobbs Act
• Imparting or Conveying False Information
[Title 18, USC]
• Maloney Act
• Misprision of Felony [Title 18, USC] (1)
• Money-Laundering Control Act
• Money-Laundering Suppression Act
• Organized Crime Control Act of 1970
• Perpetration of repeated egregious felonies
by State and Federal public employees and their Departments and agencies,
which are co-responsible with the said employees for ONGOING illegal and
criminal actions, to sustain fraudulent operations and crimes in order to
cover up criminalist activities and High Crimes and Misdemeanours by present
and former holders of high office under the United States
• Provisions pertaining to private business
transactions being protected under both private and criminal penalties [H.R.
3723]
• Provisions prohibiting the bribing of foreign
officials [F.I.S.A.]
• Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act [R.I.C.O.]
• Securities Act 1933
• Securities Act 1934
• Terrorism Prevention Act
• Treason legislation, especially in time of
war.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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INSERTING TEXT NOT WRITTEN BY THE EDITOR.
• This is a very old, malevolent US
counterintelligence DIRTY TRICK.
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In so doing, the criminal pirates proclaimed that they knew perfectly well
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copyright.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• Please be advised that the Editor of
International Currency Review and associated intelligence services
cannot enter into email correspondence related to this or to any of the
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We are a private intelligence publishing house and have no connections to
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‘About Us’ on the red panels under the Notes on the Editor,
Christopher Story FRSA,
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••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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