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From: "Dave Kuehne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Dave" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: The governments' secret trillions
Date: Sunday, August 06, 2000 10:45 AM

Taxes for us, Trillions for them! Can you say T-Y-R-A-N-N-Y? -DaveK-

"These so-called governments are in reality only great bands
of robbers and murderers, organized, disciplined, and
constantly on the alert." - Lysander Spooner, 1869

-------------------- begin attachment --------------------

Source:

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_metcalf_news/20000806_xngme_the_govern.shtml

The governments' secret trillions

Geoff Metcalf interviews
Walter Burien on hidden public money


By Geoff Metcalf
� 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

Are local and state governments strapped with severe
budgetary constraints? Far from it, according to
public investment expert Walter Burien. Credited
with discovering the existence of an elusive
government document called the Comprehensive
Annual Financial Report, Burien provides a
fascinating peek inside the true financial worth of
governments today. Thousands of these reports
nationwide document the trillions of dollars of assets
held by everything from the local water district to
large state governments. WorldNetDaily columnist
Geoff Metcalf recently interviewed Burien about his
work in educating the taxpaying public.

Metcalf's daily radio show can be heard on
TalkNetDaily weekdays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Eastern time.

Question: For those who do not already know the
story, how did you ever find out about these
Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports?

Answer: About 10 years ago, I had been a commodities
broker on Wall Street for 15 years. I was one of the first
tenants in the World Trade Center. I did an international
newsline coast to coast on commodities. I thought I knew
what was going on; I thought I was one of those sharp
little crackers. I always thought government was maybe
hiding 5 to 10 percent maximum of the revenue and not
reporting it to the public.

There was a governor who got elected named Jim Florio
in New Jersey back in 1990 on a new tax platform. As
soon as he got into office, there was a $2.8 billion tax
increase -- the largest in the state's history. The public
was not too happy, and a couple of DJs, John and Ken
out in Los Angeles, they started doing some
rabble-rousing and taking calls from listeners on
examples of waste and misspending in government. I
heard small figures -- $15,000, $25,000. The highest
figure I heard was $85,000.

Q: Chump change.

A: Right. Being a commodity-trading adviser, I pulled out
the Budget Report, which was the only thing I was aware
of at the time. They had $11 billion on-budget, $6 billion
off-budget, so the total service budget was $17 billion for
the year. Net available: $25.6 billion.

So I called into the radio show and said, "Come on guys;
you're missing the whole point. The state is dealing with
billions of dollars. The highest figure I heard was
$85,000." I said if there is fraud, waste and misspending
taking place, it's taking place on the order of tens of
billions if not hundreds of billions. The DJs challenged us
to start an organization.

So, the next day, I got together with nine other people
and incorporated a group called "Hands Across New
Jersey." John and Ken rabble-roused and, when we had
our first rally, 115,000 people converged on Trenton and
shut the Capitol down. I decided to start looking at the
budget revenue and finance so if I were approached with
questions, I'd know what I was talking about.

Q: So where did you look?

A: When I looked at the budget, which was all I knew
about, I noticed large, cash-cow investment agencies of
state government were not on the report, the New Jersey
Turnpike, the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey -- no large returns from investment funds. Now
they gave mention of the different agencies on the report
but not the revenue.

Q: Don't state treasurers have to report this stuff when
they are investing on Wall Street?

A: Here's where it broke down. I knew the director of
the budget was on vacation until the following Tuesday of
the next week. I called his office and found out who his
two lower assistants were.

I said, "Hi. This is Walter Burien. I'm working on a report
for Richard and I have to have it done by Tuesday when
he gets back from vacation. I need all the figures on all
the autonomous agency accounts and trust accounts and
investment accounts."

And he said, "Oh, you want the Comprehensive Annual
Financial Report."

I said, "Could I have a copy?" He said I'd better ask
Mark (the next one down the line from the budget
director).

Q: Notwithstanding your 15 years on Wall Street, you
had never heard of this animal before?

A: First time. But I played the cards as they were dealt. I
knew it was the most important thing I needed to get my
hands on. So, I called Mark and said, "Hi Mark, this is
Walter Burien. I just got off the phone with Jim. I'm
working on a report for Richard and I have to have it
done by Tuesday. I need a copy of the Comprehensive
Annual Financial Report."

He said, "Oh, where do you want it sent to?"

I got it that Friday and started crunching numbers. Here's
a state with a declared service budget of $17 billion
showing a net available on their budget report of $24
billion. The year's totals on the Comprehensive Annual
Financial Report: $188 billion.

Q: $188 billion!?

A: Correct. Investment funds, assets and so forth. The
income I started looking for was total cash gross receipts
-- the number one item the IRS asks you for in an audit.

Q: Would this be interest on investments?

A: Total income. Whether it be cash collected by state
agencies, federal grants, the whole nine yards -- total
income. I found it on page 174 of the 1989
Comprehensive Annual Financial Report under cash
additions. Here's a state with a declared service budget
of $17 billion that was bringing in, "in cash,"
$86,799,000,000. I learned the definition of syndicated
organized crime on the spot and the principle of
operation. Anything that was a cost and an expense, an
outright cost on a budgetary basis, the public footed 100
percent of the bill for 100 percent of the services.
Anything that was a substantial profit center was totally
restricted by statute from inclusion whatsoever with the
budgetary basis.

Q: This is above and beyond the off-budget stuff.

A: Whenever you hear the word "off-budget," that is
something that is inclusive in the budget. When you look
at the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, you will
see complete separate areas totally restricted by statute
for inclusion with the budgetary basis. A lot of people
would refer to it as "two sets of books," although it's not
exactly two sets of books. The budget report is in one
book, and the Consolidated Annual Financial Report is
THE book, the showing of the complete pizza pie.

Q: There are two things I want us to make real clear.
You conducted your investigation in New Jersey. But this
is not unique to New Jersey.

A: I'm going back 10 years. When I found out about
New Jersey, especially when I found out they had
approximately $80 billion in common-stock ownership,
as a commodity trading adviser ...

Q: You wanted them as a client.

A: That was actually true to a certain extent. But I was
mad more than I was greedy. I said, "How could I have
not heard of this?" Here's New Jersey holding $80 billion
in common stock. I was a commodity-trading adviser. I
dealt with a lot of the CEOs of some of the major
investment firms and I never heard it mentioned -- in any
circles. I found out when I called the mailroom of the
Department of Treasury for New Jersey. It was sent out
to every editor of every paper up and down the East
Coast. It was sent to the directors and CEOs of ABC,
CBS, NBC and CNN. And now I'm getting mad. I was
seeing a cooperative effort at non-disclosure and it wasn't
as if it was just created that year and the word hadn't
gotten around.

Q: This Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, is it
just a stack of numbers or is it something that has an
executive summary and can actually be read and
understood?

A: The CAFR is set up to be a simple, quick evaluation
book to show: total income, total assets, total
investments, total net worth. What's been going on in this
country for the last 65 years is government will always
focus the public's attention -- intentionally so -- on the
budgetary basis of the budget report. And the only thing
the budget report is, is their annual operating expenses.

Q: Give me an example.

A: Say it cost us $30,000 a year to maintain our house.
Say our salary or income was $100,000 a year and we
had a million dollars in investments, and say our total net
worth was $3 million. What if we talked about our
$30,000 budget as being our net worth? It would be
ludicrous.

Q: So this is an intentional scam?

A: You've had a shell game played on the public where
governments are constantly talking their budget, their
budget, their budget. They just happen to leave out the
decades and decades and decades of investment wealth
that has been building up, the decades and decades and
decades of enterprise and venture projects they have
created separate from the budgetary basis.

Q: Just how ubiquitous are these Comprehensive Annual
Financial Reports?

A: The Comprehensive Annual Financial Report was
created by a group called Government Financial Officers
Association in 1946. It was a program created to
standardize accounting in all local governments so the
federal government could easily see what the true picture
was. In 1981, the federal government mandated that all
local governments prepare a CAFR or, in the alternative,
a combined financial statement. To qualify this, there are
over 54,000 separate corporations within local
government.

Q: What kind of corporations are you talking about?

A: A city is a corporation; a state is a corporation; a
school district is a corporation. Each is filing their own
separate report, each with their own investments. I've
had a lot of people looking at their state reports. They
see the tens of billions of dollars they never knew existed
-- and they are floored. Then I bring to their attention:
"You're just looking at the state report."

Q: Give us an example.

A: I'll use the state of Washington as an example. It lists
$64 billion in liquid investment funds. Now the state of
Washington has 2,300 separate local government
corporations filing their own separate reports: cities,
counties, school districts, authorities. You have 2,300
other reports.

Q: And still no one does anything about this?

A: Recently, a person was running for city council in
Corona, Calif., with a population of about 10,000. He
saw a video I put out called "The Biggest Game in
Town." This individual is an attorney. He'd been pressing
the county on different issues concerning financial fraud.
He saw the video and said, "Naw. This can't be." But he
saw it on the weekend and it motivated him to check. He
discovered the city had a Comprehensive Annual
Financial Report.

He got a copy of it. He didn't see any large numbers in
the combined financial columns, but he observed in the
notes of the report that it directed you to four other areas
outside the report. The first area he looked into, he found
$144 million in U.S. Treasury Bonds sitting there. Now
divide that by a population of 10,000. That's $14,000 for
every man, woman and child.

Q: How do they report the income?

A: On the CAFR. That's why it's noted to refer to other
reports for an accounting.

Q: So there is no way this money gets applied to the
general fund for expenses?

A: When you look at the general-purpose funds, they
have very stringent rules on managing taxpayer dollars.
For example, you can only invest in Treasury bills, triple
rated bonds, 4.5, 5 percent max. The game has been
over the past 25 years in whatever way, shape or form,
to shift revenue outside of the general-purpose operating
fund. Whether it be through a local-government
investment pool, bond refinancing accounts, insurance
company equity participation -- anything that will be
outside the general-purpose operating fund, which is very
restrictive.

Q: Two questions I've always wanted to ask you and
never gotten around to: 1) Is there anyone providing
oversight for all these things, and 2) if there is, do they get
a piece of the action?

A: I get a lot of phone calls, and folks ask, "Where's all
the money sitting? What account is it in? And who's
managing it?" I would say, this is the principle of
operation. There are over 54,000 separate corporations.
The public left the vault door open.

I give the example: If you had 12 and 13-year-old boys
and you gave them carte blanche to let them write their
own allowance check every week, and you make $1,200
a week, within no time, they would be cutting a check for
$1,000 a week. If you told them you were going to cut
them back to $800 a week, they would scream, holler,
kick and use any logic available to them to justify how 12
and a 13-year-old boys could not survive on just $800
per week. There's no difference here -- you just have
bigger boys and sharper players.

People mention conspiracies and so forth. I say there is
no conspiracy here. You just have the vault door wide
open. The public allowed it. The bank left the doors open
over the weekend with cash lying on the counter and no
one guarding it.

Q: So who is the primary beneficiary of this vast wealth?

A: The investment revenue. There is $60 trillion in
investment revenue. You have tens of thousands of little
empires being built all over the country, people
controlling those monies that are invested. You know
when you go to the bank and you get a mortgage on your
house, you think you are borrowing private funds. When
I look at the [government] revenue flows, I see hundreds
of billions in different pension funds, investment funds,
invested with the local banks under their mortgage
division. The banks are acting as the "in between" agent
getting a half a point or two-thirds of a point for cutting
the loan.

Q: Walter, there is a mountain of information you have
that we won't have time to get to. So please let our
readers know how they can find more information on this
chilling topic.

A: The e-mail address is [EMAIL PROTECTED] If anyone
would like a copy of the video "The Biggest Game in
Town," just put in the subject line "requesting video" and
I'll send it out. I also include various links for getting
assorted information.



Geoff's note: I have interviewed Burien a few times
over the past two or three years. His information is
remarkable. The CAFR has been around for over half
a century and, despite the vast money involved, this
story has remained virtually ignored by the
mainstream. Sarah Foster of WorldNetDaily wrote
about this shortly after I first put Walter on the air in
San Francisco. Read her stories:

The government's secret slush funds

Secret 'slush funds' new government scams

Go to TalkNetDaily.


Geoff Metcalf is a staff reporter for WorldNetDaily.





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