-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.aci.net/kalliste/
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.aci.net/kalliste/">The Home Page of J. Orlin
Grabbe</A>
-----
Money Laundering


The Citibank-Raul Salinas Connection


Just don't ask John Reed about his hidden gold bars.

WASHINGTON � Citibank, a U.S. banking powerhouse with operations spanning the
globe, is under Senate scrutiny for its handling of millions of dollars in
alleged drug money for a brother of a former Mexican president.

The inquiry into activities of a unit of Citigroup Inc., the nation's largest
financial company, is shining a spotlight on the cloistered world of private
banking, which discreetly caters to the very wealthy.

But, Senate investigators say, drug traffickers, corrupt officials and tax
evaders around the world are using private banking to launder their illicit
profits through the banking system.

The abuses occur because private banking operations � which often require a
minimum deposit of $1 million � offer their clients secrecy with offshore
accounts, code names for account owners and shell companies, according to
investigators.

The inquiry also is bringing one of the most powerful U.S. corporate executive
s, Citigroup Co-Chairman John Reed, to Capitol Hill. He is scheduled to
testify Tuesday before the Senate Governmental Affairs subcommittee on
investigations.

For a year, the subcommittee has examined the private banking activities of
New York-based Citibank � most notably its handling of alleged drug money for
Raul Salinas, the eldest brother of Carlos Salinas de Gortari, who was
Mexico's president from 1988 to 1994.

In money laundering, illicit profits from criminal activities pass through a
series of transactions to hide their origin and make them appear to be
legitimate business proceeds.

The Senate investigation found that Reed, as the head of Citibank, failed to
take significant action in the early 1990s despite internal warnings that the
bank was failing to follow its own policies to prevent money laundering, said
a subcommittee investigator, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Reed was aware that Citibank's internal audits showed its private banking
operation was ignoring the control policies, the investigator said.

Reed is expected to acknowledge in his testimony that bank oversight was lax
and that, as a result, key executives in the private banking operation were
replaced, rules were tightened and computer systems were improved for
monitoring the transactions of wealthy clients.

Citibank also is more closely checking the backgrounds of foreign politicians
and other public figures before accepting them as private banking clients,
Reed is expected to tell the subcommittee.

Citibank officials point to a report in January by Federal Reserve examiners
saying the private banking operation "has demonstrated that it is committed
to achieving its goal of changing the culture ... and creating a
well-integrated global risk management and internal control structure.
Significant progress has been made in correcting control deficiencies noted
at the prior inspection."

The Senate investigators also have examined other suspicious foreign accounts
handled by Citibank's private bankers, who have offices in 30 countries and
offer services to some 40,000 clients with assets of $3 million or more.

Citibank officials declined to comment directly on the Senate subcommittee's
investigation, which follows several other government probes.

Raul Salinas was arrested by Mexican authorities in 1995 and imprisoned on
charges of masterminding the killing of a top ruling-party official. That
year the U.S. Justice Department began investigating Citibank's handling of
Salinas' money in an effort to determine whether the bank violated any laws.

A report in December 1998 by congressional investigators found that Citibank
transferred as much as $100 million in suspected drug proceeds for Raul
Salinas in 1992-94. The report, by the General Accounting Office, Congress'
investigative arm, criticized Citibank for failing to check the source of the
money.

The report found that Salinas' wife hand-carried checks to Citibank Mexico,
and they were transferred to Switzerland through a series of complex
transactions that hid their source.
Rumors abounded at the time that Salinas was linked to drug lords and had
dubious sources of income, but Citibank executives asked few questions when
the transactions were made, the report said.

Citibank has said the report "contains errors of fact and interpretation."
The bank, which has denied breaking any laws, pledged its full cooperation
with law enforcement authorities.
In addition to Citibank, the Senate committee investigators have also looked
into an episode at BankBoston Corp. in which former bank executive Ricardo
Carrasco, a Uruguayan citizen, was accused of embezzling $73 million by
making fraudulent loans in private banking transactions.
Fox News, November 7, 1999


Electronic Money


ECB Wants More Control Over Electronic Money


Oh, those anarchist electrons!

The European Central Bank has intervened over key proposals to regulate
electronic money and is lobbying for a bigger say in financial services
regulation.

However, an agreement on the proposals is expected to be struck today at a
meeting of European finance ministers despite the bank's reservations. The
ECB wants a bigger role in monitoring creation of electronic money.

Finance ministers due to meet in Brussels today are expected to nod through
European Commission plans for supervising credit institutions that issue
electronic money. But Wim Duisenberg, ECB president, wrote to the Finnish
presidency of the EU last week saying that the bank had some serious concerns
about the issue and wanted more discussion.

The Commission's proposals lay down a clear definition of electronic money
which can be used by consumers to buy goods over the internet. Electronic
money is monetary value stored on a chip card, or on a computer memory, which
is accepted as a means of payment.

The Commission says a stable framework for regulating electronic money would
assist the growth of e-commerce and also make it easier for consumers to make
small payments in euros in other member countries without having to convert
national currencies.

"Electronic money is not only the lifeblood of electronic commerce, but also
has the potential to replace a sizeable share of cash payments, notably
during the period before euro notes and coins are available," said Mario
Monti, commissioner responsible for the single market when the proposals were
made in July 1998.

The proposals would allow issuers of electronic money to offer their services
throughout the EU as long as they complied with the rules set up by
supervisory bodies in their home country.

The Commission's suggestions mean that issuers of electronic money would be
subject to reserve requirements imposed by the ECB as part of its monetary
policy measures. But if they do not offer other banking services, they would
be exempt from certain other banking supervision rules.

Mr Duisenberg has said he would like to address the EU's finance ministers on
these issues. But Reijo Kempinnen, Finnish spokesman, said the ECB's concerns
were not likely to delay the proposals as ministers had agreed politically to
go ahead with them. However, they will still have to be discussed by the
European parliament, which could call for changes.
The Financial Times, November 7, 1999


Digital Society


The Internet Takes Over the Stock Market


The near death experiences of traditional brokerage firms.

Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance: the definitions of
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, who achieved fame in the 1970s with her "five stages
of dying", is being dusted down for the new millennium. For John McKinley,
chief technology officer at Merrill Lynch, "Companies are going through the
same thing with the internet."

The 750 delegates at the annual conference of the Securities Industry
Association were clearly in their final internet-induced death throes in Boca
Raton, Florida. The brokers, mostly over their denial, were either bravely
accepting the new world or hiding their depression.

Speaker after speaker at the conference, which ended at the weekend, focused
on the technological changes in the industry. Traditional markets such as the
New York Stock Exchange are being threatened by the proliferation of
high-tech alternatives - the electronic communications networks (ECNs). That
is eroding the older exchange's price-setting power and putting pressure on
other areas such as speed of trade settlement.

On the retail side, brokerages are being assailed by the rapid growth in
online trading. That, in turn, is affecting the pricing structure for
executing investor trades and turning attention to the importance of
providing - and charging for - good broker advice.

The traditional industry groups are planning a variety of responses. The NYSE
announced it was forming its own ECN during the conference and also announced
some time ago its intention to go public. Merrill Lynch, said Mr McKinley,
had realised "our customers want instant gratification" and had invested in
ECNs. It was confident, he said, its online trading venture would thrive
because investors would still pay to tap into Merrill's vast research
resources.

But there was an acknowledgment that their strategies might not be enough,
that no one knew where technology would lead. James Brinkley, the SIA's
incoming chairman, said: "Of all the inventions this century, more than half
will come in the last 15 years."

Abby Joseph Cohen, the influential market strategist at Goldman Sachs, warned
delegates: "The technological shift is not yet over." She included her
discussion of technology under the section "what could go wrong" with the US
economy.

Hank Paulson, her chairman and chief executive officer, was quite clear about
what could go wrong. The NYSE's plan to become a for-profit organisation put
its role as a regulator in a new light. While the large exchanges should
still be monitoring, for example, breaches of trading rules, he said there
might have to be some separate body between them and the Securities and
Exchange Commission to "come up with the rules and a regulatory mechanism".

Mr Paulson also warned about fragmentation and the growth of the ECNs, saying:
 "There is a fine line between competition and chaos." That theme was
continued by Arthur Levitt, the SEC chairman. Like a headmaster threatening
his unruly charges, he decried the lack of links between the exchanges and
hinted that as a result some brokers were able deliberately not to offer the
best prices to blindfolded investors.

But David Pottruck called those arguments "the myth of fragmentation". He is
the president and co-chief executive officer of Charles Schwab, the company
that might legitimately claim to have written the "acceptance" chapter of the
five internet stages. For Schwab, whose 3m online customers trade $10bn
(�6bn) a week, up 500 per cent on just over a year ago, savvy Baby Boomers
are demanding the best prices already and forcing linkages between competing
exchanges.

Mr Pottruck, who eschewed the internet buzzwords of others in favour of what
seemed a genuine understanding of the dynamics, expanded his Baby Boomer
theme. That post-war generation, he said, had already fundamentally altered
every market it had touched as it had aged.

As that generation moved into its investor years, he said, it was affecting
the securities industry. It would continue to reject its parents' model,
aware of the "inherent conflicts" within Wall Street firms. He did not
believe the growth of information on the internet would allow companies to
hang on to research revenues for long. "Anyone who is a gatekeeper for
information should be looking over their shoulder."

Mr Pottruck - "I don't think they invited me here to say the same things as
everyone else" - was told by a number of people after the speech that it was
the best they had heard. But it also left many of them questioning their
strategies for the electronic future.
The Financial Times, November 7, 1999


Russian Follies


Are Russian Nukes Buried in the US?


The lost luggage in the FBI basement.

WASHINGTON � A Pennsylvania congressman is warning the FBI that there may be
old, suitcase-size Soviet nuclear bombs buried throughout the United States.
So far, FBI agents have already combed through Brainerd, Minn., hoping to
discover secret stockpiles of everything from nuclear weapons to pistols,
radios, maps and currency, congressional sources told The New York Post.
"There is no doubt that the Soviets stored material in this country. The
question is what and where," Rep. Curt Weldon, R-Pa., told The Post.
The FBI has refused to confirm that account, or to comment on the stories
that Soviet nukes may be floating around the country.
Weldon, an expert on Cold War Russia, says the former Soviet Union produced
132 suitcase-sized, 10-kiloton nuclear weapons, but hasn't fessed up to where
84 of them are, meaning they could have been sold to other countries or might
even still be stationed at secret sites in the U.S.
Right now, bombs could be laying in wait in upstate New York, California,
Texas, Montana and Minnesota, he said. He draws his conclusions from the
congressional testimony of KGB defector Vasili Mitrokhin and nationalist
Russian Gen. Alexander Lebed.

Weldon teaches a class on Russia at Widener University in Pennsylvania, and
has been to the country 19 times.

FBI Director Louis Freeh admitted to the congressman two weeks ago that there
might hidden weapons caches in the U.S., but he's refused to perform anything
but a perfunctory search, Weldon said.

The only way the FBI will be able to find these suitcase bombs is if Russia
hands over KGB files, Weldon said. Weldon said that until Russia agrees to
turn over KGB files on the location of the suitcases, it's highly unlikely
the FBI could find the stockpiles.

"The administration is not asking the right questions," Weldon said.

He says President Clinton doesn't want to rock the boat for ailing President
Boris Yeltsin, the administration�s strongest ally in the tumultuous former
Soviet Union.

Two weeks ago, a former KGB agent and a British scholar both added fuel to
the reports of buried weapons when they testified to the House Armed Services
subcommittee on military research and development, which Weldon chairs.

Col. Oleg Gordievsky, the highest-ranking KGB agent ever to defect, and
Christopher Andrew, a professor at Cambridge University and author of a book
about the KGB, both said that based on KGB documents and what's happened in
other NATO countries, they believe small nuclear bombs are buried in caches
across the United States. However, they said it wasn�t a certainty.
The KGB had standing orders to blow up power stations, dams,
telecommunications centers and landing strips for Air Force One in the event
of war, according to Russian experts, including Stanislav Lunev, a former
Russian military intelligence official who defected to the United States in
1992.

There have long been accusations that the Soviets smuggled weapons and other
equipment with a military use into the United States during the Cold War. But
the charges finally seemed to be turning into a reality in September, when
prosecutors in Belgium confirmed that they had found three secret depots
filled with radio sets that had been buried in the 1960s.

Steve Berry, an FBI spokesman, last Thursday told The Post the agency had "no
comment" about reports of possible suitcase bombs and buried weapons caches
in the United States.
But he acknowledged that FBI experts are familiar with the claims outlined by
Mitrokhin, who has passed scores of KGB documents to the West.

On Oct. 22, Weldon and Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minn., sent Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright a letter alerting her to the charges by the KGB agents and
urging the administration to "aggressively pursue the Russian government to
identify all pre-deployed weapons sites in the United States, and ...
eliminate such remnants of the Cold War."

Weldon said he will release her reply when he receives one.

Fox News, November 7, 1999

------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to