-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.iht.com/articles/3101.htm
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.iht.com/articles/3101.htm">IHT: Paris Finds
Breaking the Bank in Monte Car�</A>
-----
 Paris Finds Breaking the Bank in Monte Carlo a Tough Deal
Joseph Fitchett International Herald Tribune
Friday, December 1, 2000 PARIS By any measure, France should have no trouble
putting a stop to money laundering in Monaco, the minuscule playground for
the rich tucked into the French Riviera.

After all, France controls almost every aspect of government in the
principality, including the appointment of Monaco's prime minister, who is
always French.

But Monaco and its long-ruling Prince Rainier III are waging a "Mouse That
Roared" defense against France's demands for greater transparency in the
banking system and other financial operations, including the famed Monte
Carlo casino.

Even if France eventually prevails, its fierce, often hidden little war with
Monaco illustrates how hard it can be to impose new global financial
standards.

If Monaco is fighting back, it is because the principality wants to protect
its thriving financial activities - at last count, it boasted 45 banks with
200,000 accounts belonging to nonresidents - which generate more than a third
of national revenues.

People close to the 77-year-old prince say he thinks Paris has made tactical
miscalculations that he can exploit to turn the tables on France and improve
Monaco's fortunes.

Paris has powerful political reasons to make Monaco change its financial
ways. In portraying itself as a leader in the crusade against abuses, the
Socialist government in France hopes to blunt domestic complaints that
globalization is making a few people very rich and creating hardships for
most French people. For this, France has to clean up its own backyard.

The French also aim to pressure Britain to move against Guernsey and other
Channel Islands widely viewed as havens for hiding hot money, including money
hidden from French tax authorities.

Behind the drumbeat of French complaints are underlying murmurs in Paris and
other European capitals that the Russian Mafia might take over Monaco's
banking system. Prince Rainier "may be losing control" to mobsters, said a
French Finance Ministry official, who agreed to discuss the subject on the
condition that he not be identified.

But France also has a hidden agenda: It wants to curtail Monaco's role as a
magnet for tax evaders. For generations, Europe's rich have stashed money in
Monaco - and in similar tax havens such as Luxembourg, Switzerland and
Liechtenstein - as a way of avoiding punitive taxation rates.

Until now, France has largely condoned Monaco's financial system. Monaco's
French residents have been subjected to French income taxes since a showdown
with Paris in 1962. But no other residents pay taxes on income or even on
interest, and none of the quarter-million offshore accounts held by people
outside Monaco are taxed.

France's tolerance has suddenly changed, officials said, partly because
Monaco wants to join the euro, the single currency of key countries in the
European Union. Once in, Monaco would be in an even stronger position to help
criminals funnel dirty money into the Western economy.

The EU has also started moving to end banking secrecy among its 15 member
states involving taxable income in nonresident accounts. That change was
sought by France, which feels penalized in international competition by its
comparatively high tax rates, but banking secrecy will only diminish if tax
havens such as Monaco fall into line.

But France's attempt to lump tax evasion with money laundering is meeting
resistance because the banking industry and law enforcement authorities in
Europe see money laundering as a much more serious crime. Tax evasion, while
illegal, is usually not a felony in Europe. As a result, Monaco has never
felt obliged to order its banks to name depositors in connection with tax
problems in other countries.

Monaco's champions insist that Prince Rainier can capitalize on this
distinction, which has been muted in a French campaign that has turned a
harsh spotlight on the principality. First came a French parliamentary
report, issued by Arnaud Montebourg, 42, a hard-line Socialist. His report
last summer assailed Monaco as a well-oiled machine for money laundering.

The Socialist government, not wanting to be outflanked by radicals within its
ranks, produced its own reports from the finance and justice ministries. The
unusual public onslaught provoked cries of "foul" from Prince Rainier and a
vague threat to seek greater independence.

Monaco's counterattack has now been outlined to the International Herald
Tribune by a key Rainier strategist, Jean Pierre Francois, a 78-year-old
international banker with connections to the Socialist Party in France who is
a resident of both Paris and Monte Carlo.

In an interview, he said that he had been "encouraged" by Prince Rainier to
intervene with decision-makers in both countries and with the media to lay
out Monaco's case.

Mr. Francois rejected the main thrust of French accusations as "silly
nonsense" that could not stand up to serious professional scrutiny. Mr.
Francois has not been alone in voicing doubts about the parliamentary report:
Conservative French parliamentarians in Mr. Montebourg's mission dissociated
themselves from its conclusions as overdrawn and one-sided.

Denouncing the French campaign as hypocritical, Mr. Francois noted the reach
of French civil servants in the principality's inner workings and said that
Paris "knows about and can control anything it wants in Monaco's financial
dealings."

As for the Russian mafia, he said, "These people thrive all over the French
Riviera, so they have no interest in trying to worm their way into a tightly
policed place like Monaco."

Even some officials in Paris agree privately that Russian mafia kingpins
would probably be uncomfortable in Monaco because of its size and
vulnerability to French intelligence.

Hinting at a possible deal with Paris, Mr. Francois seemed to offer a
compromise in which Monaco would reform its law enforcement in exchange for
being allowed to continue operating as a tax haven for some foreign
depositors.

"Nobody can defend practices that help organized crime finance more crime,"
Mr. Francois said, "but it is fruitless to seek effective cooperation between
governments or among banks on tax evasion, which many European countries do
not consider a major offense and which banks have historically been loath to
police."

Mr. Francois acknowledged that Monaco had sometimes refused to cooperate
fully with other governments, even in criminal cases. But he dismissed such
incidents as "dysfunctions" and insisted that the system was being corrected
to improve Monaco's responsiveness to international warrants involving
felonies.

If there were an impasse, he hinted, Prince Rainier could retaliate by
challenging the treaties setting Monaco's allegiance to France.

These accords "smack of colonial domination," Mr. Francois said, raising the
specter of diplomatic embarrassment and perhaps even legal sanctions if
France resorted to strong-arm tactics against Monaco, as Charles de Gaulle
did in 1962 when he imposed a customs crackdown on the principality over the
income tax demand.

On that occasion, Prince Rainier knuckled under, literally overnight, because
France controls Monaco's land outlets.

But an attempt to impose a similar blockade today could backfire against
Paris, Mr. Francois implied, if the French actions infringed the sovereign
status of Monaco, which has been a full member of the United Nations since
1993.

"There are plenty of people who would like a chance to get a foothold in
Monaco," Mr. Francois said, suggesting that companies and investors from
other countries such as Italy and elsewhere would be eager to fill any French
vacuum.

Despite this defiant tone, Monaco hopes to extract a deal, according to
sources in the principality. They say Monaco hopes to continue as an
international tax haven, even if it is forced whittle away at secrecy
covering accounts of people from European Union nations. France also may
succeed in applying its wealth tax to the accumulated fortunes of French
residents in Monaco.

In exchange for preserving a special taxation status, Monaco has started
contemplating ways to meet French demands on criminal offenses, these sources
said.

Many complaints center on the small size of Monaco's law-enforcement staffs,
and Prince Rainier might remedy that by hiring more local people and leaving
fewer slots to be occupied by French civil servants.

The rarity of prosecutions for money laundering in Monaco has convinced
outsiders such as Mr. Montebourg that the principality is be a hotbed of
crime. Indeed, Monaco's financial establishment has clearly been lax in
upholding the key rule for bankers: "Know your clients." In practice, banks
are supposed to know the identity of every depositor.

In the French parliamentary report, Monaco was compared unfavorably with
another offshore financial haven, Britain's Isle of Man. With 200 billion
French francs ($26.17 billion) in deposits, the island reported 1,200
suspicious transactions in 1998. Monaco, with 300 billion francs in accounts,
had only 266 such reports in all since 1994, the parliamentary report said.

Similarly, it said, a major French bank's branch in Monaco was found to have
only empty folders for a quarter of its depositors, a reflection of Monaco's
brisk business in accounts opened by trusts or by so-called fiduciary agents.
In effect, these amount to shell companies designed to conceal the real owner
of funds and reinforce banking secrecy.

Mr. Francois, while acknowledging that this system had been prone to abuse,
insisted that critics had blown the situation out of proportion. Trusts, like
foundations, are widely accepted in the United States and Britain. The
crucial test, he said, is whether banks can and will break banking secrecy on
deposits linked to serious crime.

Possibly signaling a new attitude in Monaco, the principality this week
agreed to freeze three bank accounts, containing $5.3 million, that a Swiss
prosecutor has linked to a scandal involving France's sale of frigates to
Taiwan in 1991.

Early this month, Monaco for the first time started enforcing the "know your
clients" doctrine. It put on trial four bankers accused of failing to report
a suspicious bank deposit - $1 million, which turned out to be Colombian
cocaine profits.

Even though the amount is comparatively small, the case is being watched in
Paris. Significantly, the defendants are executives of the Banque du Gothard,
a bank singled out for alleged laxity in the French parliamentary report.

So, "It's a test," a French official said.


Copyright � 2000 the International Herald Tribune All Rights Reserved
-----
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