Tag: R. Allen Stanford

  • R. Allen Stanford charged with fraud and obstruction

    Texas financier R. Allen Stanford has been indicted on fraud and obstruction charges in a $7 billion investment scam, the Justice Department announced today.

    Three other Stanford company executives were also named in the indictment.

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    Stanford was arrested by FBI agents yesterday outside his girlfriend’s home in Virginia.

    According to the indictment unsealed today, Stanford and his co-defendants defrauded investors who bought $7 billion in certificates of deposit administered by Stanford International Bank in Antigua. About $1.6 billion allegedly was diverted in personal loans to Stanford.

    Stanford and the other execs are accused of lying about the bank’s assets, saying that they grew from $1.2 billion in 2001 to approximately $8.5 billion in December 2008.

    Also charged were Laura Pendergest-Holt, chief investment officer of Stanford Financial Group; Gilberto Lopez, chief accounting officer; Mark Kuhrt, global controller; and Leroy King, the former administrator and CEO of Antigua’s Financial Services Regulatory Commission.

    Pendergest-Holt was previously charged with misleading investigators in their probe of Stanford International Bank’s dealings.

    Stanford and three of his companies were named in an SEC civil lawsuit in February, accused of conducting a Ponzi scheme involving billions of dollars of investor funds.

    The commission said Stanford and “the close circle of family and friends with whom he runs his businesses” had fraudulently promised investors high returns, based on fabricated profits from past years.

    After the suit was filed, Stanford’s companies were placed in receivership and ceased operations. Office furnishings and artwork are being sold off by liquidators.

    James M. Davis, former chief financial officer of Stanford Financial and Stanford’s former roommate at Baylor University, is cooperating with investigators.

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    • Mark Walsh gets another crack at Lehman funds

      June 21, 2009 at 10:10am

      The man some blame for the investments that brought Lehman Brothers Holdings down is getting a second chance to profit from those investments.

    • Stanford’s ties to Madoff helped sink him

      Consider it a joke from the universe: It was Bernard Madoff’s financial meltdown that helped implicate R. Allen Stanford, the flamboyant Texas billionaire accused of defrauding investors of $8 billion.

      Of course, the men share certain similarities one might expect from shrewd con men: Both cultivated wealthy investors. And both claimed “premium” returns that regulators say never existed.

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      But here the plot thickens: Employees of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission told the Associated Press that after the embarrassing revelations about how they had let Madoff through their sights despite multiple tips, they feared getting another black eye with Stanford.

      And so the pace of their investigation into Stanford’s finances dramatically quickened.

      Investigators felt they had the goods on him shortly after Madoff’s arrest, when Stanford put out a memo to investors that a team of 20-plus financial analysts for Stanford Financial Group had vetted all potential investments and that his bank had no “direct or indirect” exposure to Madoff’s scheme.

      Those reassurances were false on both counts, the SEC noted.

      “Contrary to this statement, at least $400,000 … was invested in Meridian, a New York-based hedge fund that used Tremont Partners as its asset manager. Tremont invested approximately 6-8% of the SIB assets they indirectly managed with Madoffs investment firm,” according to the complaint.

      Moreover, the complaint says, the so-called “vetting team” was, in fact, just three people – Stanford, his former college roommate-turned-chief financial officer James M. Davis and his chief investment officer, Laura Pendergest-Holt – all of whom are charged civilly by the SEC.

      But that’s just the beginning of the odd coincidences surrounding Stanford’s business dealings.

      In a post this week, TPMMuckraker called the Stanford saga “a kind of harmonic convergence of recent high-profile muck,” and we have to agree.

      Besides the connection to Madoff, Stanford has a series of ties, most of them indirect, to former Illinois Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich and even to associates of jailed Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

      For starters, John R. Wyma was a paid lobbyist for Stanford in 2002, helping him oppose proposed regulation of financial services companies.

      Wyma, an influential lobbyist and fund-raiser, was once a confidante and close friend to Blagojevich – that is, before last October, when he agreed to cooperate with U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald’s investigation of the former governor in hopes of gaining immunity from prosecution himself.

      At the time of Blagojevich’s arrest, The Chicago Tribune reported that Wyma had been one of Blagojevich’s most trusted allies: “The governor routinely reported exchanging personal gifts and often appeared at Wyma-sponsored fundraisers where Wyma’s clients hobnobbed with the governor before turning over checks for his campaign fund.”

      The link to Abramoff is more circuitous: Some of the congressmen who were close to Abramoff appear on the list of those who took trips to Antigua and Barbuda funded in part by Stanford through the Inter-American Economic Council, a business-funded group with the aim of promoting “dialogue about current and future economic strategies in the Hemisphere.”

      Stanford was described in several media reports as a principal backer of the Washington-based group, who used the trips as opportunities to personally talk to lawmakers about “the need to streamline regulatory regimes that make it difficult for investors to take advantage of all of the opportunities that exist in the region.”

      Among the lawmakers who took those junkets were Bob Ney, the former Ohio Republican who went to jail after admitting trading favors for gifts from Abramoff and Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX), who received generous contributions from several Indian tribes represented by Abramoff.

      In 2006, Stanford received the organization’s “Excellence in Leadership” Award, according to TPMMuckraker. A press release put out by the group declared that Stanford “has strongly supported the work that the IAEC is doing in Latin America and the Caribbean.”

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      • Biden’s son, brother had business ties to Stanford empire

        February 25, 2009 at 8:55am

        Just when you thought R. Hunter Biden’s retirement as a lobbyist had removed the possibility that his business dealings might embarrass his father, Vice President Joseph Biden, comes a report that he and his uncle had business ties with Texas financier R. Allen Stanford.

      • Stanford accused in a scam ‘of shocking magnitude’

        Anyone suffering from Madoff fatigue may have a new money manager to deplore.

        The Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday accused R. Allen Stanford and three of his companies with “orchestrating a fraudulent, multi-billion dollar investment scheme.”

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        The scheme was connected to an $8 billion program in certificates of deposit, the complaint alleged.

        A Texas judge has frozen Stanford’s assets to protect investors, according to an SEC statement.

        “We are alleging a fraud of shocking magnitude that has spread its tentacles throughout the world,” said Rose Romero of the SEC’s Fort Worth office in the statement.

        The New York Times reported on its website that police officers entered the Stanford Group’s offices in Houston yesterday.

        Stanford, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Antigua and Barbuda and the billionaire chairman of Stanford Financial Group, allegedly used false data to lure investors.

        The three Stanford Financial Group companies named in the complaint are: Stanford International Bank in St. John’s, Antigua, West Indies, Stanford Capital Management and Stanford Group Company of Houston.

        According to the SEC, Stanford International Bank sold $8 billion in certificates of deposit by “promising improbable and unsubstantiated high interest rates.”

        The commission’s complaint alleges that bank falsely claimed its investments lost only 1.3 percent in 2008 at a time when the S&P 500 lost 39 percent.

        The complaint also points up the improbable coincidence that the bank reported identical earnings of 15.71 percent in 1995 and 1996.

        And it alleges that only two people, Allen Stanford and James M. Davis, a director and CFO of Stanford Financial Group, are aware of the details of the bank’s investment portfolio.

        Davis, Stanford’s roommate when they attended Baylor University, is also named in the complaint, as is Laura Pendergest-Holt, the chief investment officer of the bank and of Stanford Financial Group.

        The complaint states that Stanford and Davis refused to testify in the investigation. Pendergest-Holt did testify.

        According to The Wall Street Journal, word of investigations into Stanford International Bank had already sent investors rushing to Antigua to withdraw their money.

        Allen Stanford had earlier told company employees that there would be a “temporary moratorium on early redemptions of CDs,” the paper reported.

        A native of Texas, Stanford is the chairman and sole shareholder of the Stanford Investment Bank in Antigua.

        According to the SEC, the bank claimed 50,000 clients in 2007. It does not loan money. Rather, it sells CDs through the Stanford Group Company.

        Stanford became a citizen of Antigua and Barbuda 10 years ago. He was knighted there and is referred to as Sir Allen Stanford on his company’s website.

        Stanford Financial Group sponsors a variety of sporting events, most recently a cricket tournament in Antigua with $20 million in prizes, reportedly the most lucrative in the history of the sport.

        The Stanford International Bank had told investors in an earlier report that it had no exposure to funds controlled by Bernard L. Madoff, the investment manager who may have run a $50 million Ponzi scheme.

        The Times reported, however, that the Stanford bank did lose $400,000 in an investment in a Madoff feeder fund.

        According to federal records, Stanford has made extensive campaign contributions over the years.

        Recipients of donations from Stanford, his companies or his employees include Democratic Senators Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut and Charles Schumer of New York and Republican Senators John McCain of Arizona and John Cornyn of Texas.

        Contributions have also gone to several members of the House of Representatives, including Charles Rangel of New York, a Democrat, and Republican Rep. John Boehner of Ohio.

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        3 Comments

        • #1.   Pellucid 02.18.2009

          Your headline said he as arrested.

          WHERE, HOW ???

        • #2.   Zyskandar A. Jaimot 02.18.2009

          The ‘SCAMSTER’ STANFORD’s friends in the US CONGRESS…
          The latest ‘SCAMSTER’ on the WORLD FINANCIAL SCENE is
          ALLEN STANFORD bilking people out of $8BILLIONS+[now of parts unknown cuz he has fled the US or made himself unavailable to authorities!] His ‘friends’ included among the top recipients and favorites getting the ‘SCAMSTERS’ illicit monies/favors: Senaturd Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), REPREHENSIBLE Congressman Pete Sessions (R-Texas), Senaturd John McCain (R-Ariz.), Senaturd Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and Senaturd John Cornyn (R-Texas), one of the members who took a trip to Antigua where he was entertained by Stanford. GREAT ROSTER OF SCUMMY SYCOPHANTS EH THESE US SENATURDS???

        • #3.   John Lloyd Scharf 02.18.2009

          National Ponzi Scheme – Recovery.Gov – ARRA – Stimulus Plan

          The $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) is an extention of the National Debt by $2580 for every man, woman, and child.

          Of that, President Obama claims $288 billion is “Tax Relief,” or $944 per person. Then, he claims the “Tax Relief” includes $15 billion for infrastructure and science, $61 billion for “protecting the vulnerable,” $25 billion for education and training, and $22 billion for “Energy.”

          So, after all those special tax cut programs are removed, that leaves $165 billion of more general “Tax Relief,” for all of us not in those categories, or $540 per person. So, you are going into debt for investing $2580 for $540 in tax relief.

          A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to investors from their own money or money paid by subsequent investors rather than from profit. Is the ARRA any less of a Ponzi Scheme when the Federal Government does this than when Charles Ponzi or Bernard Madoff does this? Does it matter whether Nicolas Cosmo, Allen Stanford, or Barack Obama does this?

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