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by Eduardo Morgan Jr.
October 2008
The attacks by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) against Panama and other Financial Centers deemed by it to be tax havens, has as the sole intention to put an end to the competition that such centers, thanks to the technological revolution, pose to the members of their Club. (See, “The double standard of the OECD and the Offshore Financial Centers”).
The OECD steamroller seemed unstoppable until the affected countries expressed their wish to subject themselves, provided what became known as “Level Playing Field” be applied. The OECD counted on being able to obtain world unification in fiscal cooperation and that its members, many of them renowned tax havens ─that do not tax interests earned on deposits held by foreigners in their banks, or like England, that has the famous “non dom,” by virtue of which wealthy foreigners residents do not pay taxes on their income, and the largest, the USA, which in addition does not tax capital gains and allow bank depositors and Stock Market investors allowing them complete anonymity ─would also accept the conditions the OECD wanted to impose to the so-called Offshore Centers.
The largest disappointment of the OECD took place when the United States Congress, with full public support, led by the financial sector, flatly refused to furnish information to foreign tax authorities regarding deposits and investments of their citizens and Switzerland took a similar stand with the European Union. Faced with this defeat, the OECD opted to forego the notion of “Level Playing Field” and now intends to force, because it says so, all non-OECD financial centers to furnish any requesting OECD member with tax information and information regarding the identity of the accountholders of bank deposits,. This new imposition has been dubbed the principle of transparency and effective exchange of information, the philosophical basis of which is none other than cooperation ─please read submission─ owed by smaller countries to rich ones. The premise of a “Level Playing Field” disappears because of the impossibility for the same to be accepted by the main OECD partners, led by the USA, and is then replaced by the blatant imposition of the strongest over the weakest.
The OECD was not able to recommend any measures that might have prevented or mitigated the very grave financial crisis we are currently experiencing and which could also trigger an economic crisis even worse than the one experienced by the world as a result of the economic collapse that began in 1929. The OECD countries are at fault for this crisis and its cause is the lack of transparency in their financial markets, as well as their unethical handling of the system. When interviewed by Spain’s El País newspaper on October 26, 2008, German President Horst Kohler, himself a former IMF Manager and President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, he stated literally:
“The lack of transparency of the markets has originated a situation in which the risks in the financial sectors have extended across the planet and have reached clients the worldwide. What makes it a monstrous system is the fact that, at the end, nobody knows anymore who, in fact, has purchased these risks.”
On the other hand, the immorality of the absurd earnings produced by such vulgar speculation –executives with annual incomes over US$100MM and dummy corporations with billions of dollars in annual revenue–failed to raise any red flags for the very-well-compensated Secretary General of the OECD and its very-well-paid Directors.
What is unheard of, and unacceptable, is that the OECD is now attempting to cover up its own incompetence, as well as the immorality of its partners and intends to blame the debacle on the Centers that they call Offshore. Thus, on October 21, 2008, amidst a monster of a crisis, in a speech before 17 member countries, the Secretary General of the OECD lashes out against the financial centers that he calls tax havens and with threats and pressures proposes to (please read carefully this irony) “totally implement TRANSPARENCY and standards of exchange of tax information”. The OECD is not, however, handled by inept people who would believe that we are to blame for the worldwide financial disaster. No; they have realized that with the loss of confidence in the traditional financial centers, countries such as Panama and Singapore will emerge as the great victors. This is why they threaten us once again with punitive measures if we do not self-destruct by eliminating the banking confidentiality and our territorial tax systems, that would render our international financial centers non-existent. We know that they will not succeed against Singapore. That is a proud, dignified nation with a history of standing up to foreign pressures and is now so wealthy and holding such large reserves that they need it, just as they need China and Japan, as a sources of funds to alleviate the financial downfall. And so, they are left with Panama. We must be ready for these attacks and it is imperative for our Government to pay attention to the many petitions from all the trade associations related to international services and to the letters sent during the months of May and July of 2008 to the President of the Republic by the Banking Association and the Chamber of Commerce, urging him to apply the Retaliation Law, as the only means for us to be excluded from the so-called black lists. Such action becomes all the more important now, in order to successfully confront the future and immoral attacks that will be launched against us by the arrogant rulers of the OECD.
October 28, 2008
By Brian Monroe
Shell companies created in the United States under lax incorporation laws are allowing sanctioned countries to engage in illicit activities, according to three law enforcement officials testifying before a U.S. Senate panel Thursday.
The current incorporation system is plagued by “opacity and secrecy…the best friend of the money launderer, the child pornographer, the tax cheat, the fraudster, the corrupt politician, and indeed, the financier of networks of terror,” said Adam Kaufmann, Assistant District Attorney for New York County. He read from a prepared statement attributed to his boss, Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, and spoke off-the-cuff in follow-up answers to questions from Senators.
Kaufmann appeared at the Senate Committee on Homeland Security in support of the Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement Assistance Act, which was introduced in the Senate in March. Janice Ayala, of the Office of Investigations, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Senior Counsel to the Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, Jennifer Shasky Calvery, also spoke in support of the proposed legislation.
Each characterized it as an important step toward stemming the creation of shell companies that have opaque ownership structures that are all too often used to launder money and facilitate other criminal activity.
Criticism of the bill came from Harry J. Haynsworth, chairman of a committee that addressed beneficial ownership issues for the Uniform Law Commission, and Elaine F. Marshall, Secretary of State, State of North Carolina. They asserted that the proposed legislation would create undue burdens on states and domestic and foreign businesses seeking to incorporate in the United States.
The bill, S.569, mandates that states collect information on beneficial owners and provide the data to law enforcement if subpoenaed. It was introduced by Senator Carl Levin, a Democrat from Michigan, and cosponsored by Sens. Charles Grassley, an Iowa Republican, and Claire McCaskill, a Democrat from Missouri. Company formation agents would also be required to implement anti-money laundering programs and individuals incorporating an organization who deliberately provided false information would be criminally liable.
Levin introduced the same bill, then cosponsored by Senator Barack Obama, in May 2008 but it didn’t pass out of committee.
In illustrating the current abuses, Kaufmann said that between April 2005 and March 2007 the same U.S.-based incorporation service was named in more than 300 suspicious activity reports (SARs), tied to more than $200 million in suspicious transactions.
Kaufmann also spoke of several high-profile criminal actions his office pursued involving the use of shell companies and hidden beneficial owners. Two involved shell companies used to hide ownership interests and move money tied to Iran, a U.S. country that is the subject of numerous U.S. and international sanctions. Other shell companies were used for tax evasion, mortgage fraud and to move money for bribery and political corruption in Haiti. In many cases, the related transactions were characterized as payment for “consulting services.”
One case involving Iran that was a major news story in New York included the seizure of portion of an office tower by the New York District Attorney. The Manhattan building was owned in part by a domestic shell company secretly controlled by Iran.
In another case, the shell company was used by the Iranian government to move money from the U.S. to secret accounts in an offshore jurisdiction. Ironically, when investigators pressed the unnamed jurisdiction for information, they got more than what was available in New York, Kaufmann said.
Under the latest iteration of the bill, if a criminal uses a false name, it would establish criminal intent and give law enforcement ammunition to bring charges against the individual and the agents intentionally assisting them, Kaufmann said.
However, in her arguments against passage of the bill, Marshall said it would place “additional record keeping requirements” and an undetermined amount of costs on states, which are already suffering under strained budgets.
The Levin bill would also cause confusion for state workers collecting the information, said Marshall, who is also the co-chair of the Company Formation Task Force formed by the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS). She added that state employees shouldn’t be tasked with defining or identifying beneficial owners.
But the alternative proposals by NASS and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) suffer from deficiencies that won’t make key information accessible and will keep law enforcement “chasing their tails,” Levin said during Thursday’s hearing.
In highlighting how great the problem is, Levin pointed to incorporation companies that sell “aged” shell companies a few years old that allow the buyer to more easily get bank and corporate account services because they can provide three or four years of tax returns to give the operation the appearance of legitimacy.
Under the NASS proposal, an “owner of record,” which would hold beneficial ownership and other information, could be “another shell company, straw owner or incorporation service – anything,” Kaufmann said.
Moreover, the NCCUSL initiative, which calls for a “record contact” and a “responsible individual” to be named is “complex and confusing,” said Levin. The proposal requires law enforcement to call up the agent to get the information, rather than going confidentially to the states, he said. “That’s not the way you want to investigate someone.”
At a hearing in November 2006 by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations officials from the Internal Revenue Service, Government Accountability Office and Department of Justice agreed the lack of ownership data for companies has been a weakness in the financial system for more than 20 years.
When asked for solutions, however, and calls by Levin, the subcommittee’s ranking Democrat, to be bold, the answers from the agencies included statements such as “out of my scope of responsibility,” the issue is being “studied” and the agency couldn’t decide “policy” on the issue.
The 2006 hearing pitted Richard Geisenberger, Delaware’s assistant secretary of state, against Laurie Flynn, Massachusetts chief legal counsel. She stated that the Commonwealth is able to collect and catalogue company information, while Gisenberger was pressed to answer why his state refused to collect that information.
Flynn, who said Massachusetts doesn’t publish the home addresses of company officials due to privacy concerns, does collect information including the business activity of the operation, name and address of the president, treasurer, registered agents, shareholders who formed the company, and where its records are kept.
The 2006 PSI hearing followed one held in August of the same year after reports by the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force condemned the lack of transparency of ownership and growing incorporation of shell companies that exist only on paper without adequate oversight.
That the FATF deemed the U.S. “non-compliant” related to beneficial owners is an “embarrassment” and that the laws have not significantly changed since is “absurd,” Kaufmann said during the nearly three-hour hearing of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security chaired by Senator Joseph Lieberman (ID-CT).
The national transparency standards of the U.S. “should be something more than: ‘Better than Lichtenstein and trying to catch up to Panama,'” he said. “Simply put, we lag behind many other countries in the world in this regard, and it makes our statements concerning transparency and tax evasion ring hollow and hypocritical.”
by Eduardo Morgan, Jr.
October 2007
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is a cartel formed by Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico, Holland, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, England, and the United States. As it can be noticed, it is, basically, a club of wealthy countries that includes the seven members of the G7 who, in turn, are the creators of organizations such as the Financial Stability Forum and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), and with decisive influence in the economic organizations of the United Nations.
The genesis of the so-called “black lists” is found in documents of the OECD itself, where it can be appreciated that these are born as a reaction of its partners to the lawful competition that small countries and jurisdictions, aided by the technological revolution, started to pose to the traditional financial centers, mainly England and the United States. Fearing competition, the brains of the OECD designed strategies that may only be called Machiavellian, seeking total destruction of the viability of emerging financial centers. To that end, they resorted to all kinds of imaginable resources, regardless of any moral considerations, among them, fabrications and all sorts of tricks to hinder and discredit their new competitors. These plans, designed in the seventies, were kept secret until the year 2000, when the Committee on Fiscal Affairs of the OECD decided to make them public in a document called, IMPROVING ACCESS TO BANK INFORMATION, which may be consulted at the OECD’s Internet site (www.oecd.org). The confession of the conspiracy is particularly portrayed in paragraphs 36, 37, and 38 of this lengthy document. They express there, with the impudence characteristic of their arrogance, that the liberalization of the financial markets was promoted by them as “a response to the threat to financial markets posed by offshore financial centers. Such financial centers were able to attract foreign financial institutions in the 1960’s and 1970’s, offering a minimally regulated banking system and minimal taxation, at a time when technological advances made them more readily accessible. Since capital flows to offshore financial centers threatened to affect the traditional financial markets, a number of reforms were undertaken to level the playing field between onshore and offshore banking. Exchange controls were eliminated. Some countries established markets to compete directly with the offshore financial centers. In addition, measures were taken to harmonize the regulation framework of financial markets on a global basis.” (36) In paragraph 38, they acknowledge that even though “the liberalization of financial markets has increased economic growth, it has also facilitated new opportunities for non-compliance with tax laws” providing individuals and legal entities access, at reduced costs, to banking systems throughout the world, to conduct both legitimate and illegitimate transactions and also to have access to jurisdictions that limit access to bank information for tax purposes. It they add “It has also made it harder for Tax Administrations to detect non-compliance, unless they have adequate exchange of information with the relevant administrations”.
It was a two-phase plan. First, to compete on equal terms, to which end they created the international banking system in the USA and in almost all European financial centers, with the same conditions and advantages offered by Panamanian law to International License Banks –zero taxes on international operations and foreign account holders. But this was not enough. The offshore financial centers had to be eliminated, and nothing better or easier than to damage their reputation and make it difficult for them to conduct business. This is how the black lists, which originated in the USA with the infamous ANNUAL CERTIFICATION of countries, were born under the excuse of the global fight against the traffic of illegal drugs and laundering of money therefrom. Thus, in 1996 and 1997, they accused Panama of laundering TEN BILLION DOLLARS of drug money through the Colon Free Zone. They proceeded, haughtily and shamelessly, to accuse Panama in an official document circulated throughout the world, of something that is not just a big fat lie, but an absolute absurdity, as proven by the mere fact that at the time Panama’s total GDP was US$7 Billion and the Free Zone business was nowhere near that amount. In addition to the accusations to the Free Zone, they also criticized the Financial Center and the Panamanian corporations system, alleging that both lend themselves for illegal transactions.
Given that there appeared criticisms immediately, in view of the unilateral nature of the CERTIFICATION, they then decided to attack us through the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) created by the executive committee of the OECD, which is made up of the G7. And so, FATF produced its black lists of non-cooperative countries in money laundering matters and included Panama, despite the fact that our country is a pioneer in the implementation of controls to avoid money laundering in the banks (it is the first country in Latin America to regulate the obligation to Know your Customer and have an independent Financial Analysis Unit [UAF, per its acronym in Spanish]), as it also was in the control of stock corporations (unlike the USA, Panamanian corporations are constituted only by lawyers, who are required to know their clients). Despite all that, we repeat, and without any justification, the FATF included us in its discriminatory list alleging that our laws failed to include money laundering as a stand-alone crime. And they did this even though in the last 10 years, there had not been in Panama a single notorious case of money laundering, as there have been in OECD countries. (Let us remember the scandals of Raúl Salinas de Gortari, Benazir Buttho, Sani Abacha, the 7 billion dollars of the Russian mob, and lately, the accounts of the notorious Vladimiro Montesinos, which were discovered in banks in Miami, Switzerland, London, and New York). Quickly and with the utmost cooperation from the civil sector, the Executive and the Legislative Assembly of Panama approved the new laws and regulations they demanded, leaving them with no choice but to remove us from the list.
But the attacks did not end there and almost immediately they included us in a new list, prepared by the same Rich Countries Club, the OECD itself, with the ostentatious name of NON-COOPERATIVE TAX HAVENS. They did not care that we proved that Panama had none of the characteristics that they attributed to tax havens, and that the territorial tax system was perfectly legitimate. They PERCEIVED, I repeat, PERCEIVED that we were a tax haven and that was enough for them. In view of the outrageous reality that many of its members, if not all, were, openly, tax havens, and the United States, the largest, they said that the difference with us was that they did cooperate furnishing information; that before a certain date we had to change our laws and, in addition, sign with any country that so requested, treaties for the exchange of tax information and of transparency on our banks, corporations, and other elements of our service economy. As it is well known, without privacy and confidentiality, there cannot be any kind of commercial activity let alone an international service center.
In short, the failure of the conspiracy they concocted at the beginning of the ‘70s to destroy us and prevent us from competing in the international service sector, has kept them in a state of constant alert. They know that Panama has all the components to become a Services Center par excellence: a Canal that moves 4% of the world trade; the best ports on both seas; the Continent’s Free Zone par excellence; a Regional Financial Center regulated in compliance with the best international standards; the dollar as legal tender; a territorial tax system; the best international communications; a first rate aerial hub; a democracy and political stability well established in three exemplary elections; but above all, a capable, efficient labor force, with a proven and renowned professionalism.
The attempts by the OECD were frustrated by the equal treatment demanded by countries classified as Tax Havens (Panama among them, of course), what came to be known as: the Level Playing Field. That is, the Financial Centers affected refused to furnish tax information unless all financial centers did the same, including OECD member countries, such a Switzerland, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the United States.
This became an impossible task for the OECD so they introduced the issue of cooperation in tax matters and to continue demanding the signing of tax information exchange treaties from small countries. It is clear that countries such as Panama with a territorial tax system do not have to sign treaties that will be one-sided. But, in addition, it cannot oblige to the underhanded attitude of the OECD, that is seeking nothing but to eliminate the competition of what they call offshore centers. The banner of “harmful tax competition” used by the OECD to allege evasion of tax payments is nothing more than a subterfuge that does not withstand the minimum analysis whatsoever. For instance, the largest tax evasion by foreign taxpayers takes place within the most influential member of the OECD, the United States, that does not tax foreign deposits in their banks, much less the multimillion investments of foreigners in their Stock Exchanges, neither does it furnish information on these investments to any country other than Canada. Why the OECD does not pressure, instead of signing an information agreement that they will not enforce, to tax the profits from those investments or banking interests and deliver the money to the corresponding countries, as does Switzerland with the European Union countries? What does the OECD think of the scandal that took place not long ago when the Internal Revenue Service tried to have banks furnish that information? And what about the objection from then Florida’s governor, Jeff Bush, President Bush’s brother, and from a Congress majority that refused to approve this measure? Does the OECD ignore the US Senators and bankers arguments in the sense that furnishing that information would cause an alarming exodus of trillions of dollars from the American economy?
Which is, then, the country that contributes the most to tax evasion in the world? Of course that everything points to the United States, the most conspicuous member and greatest contributor to OECD´s very fat annual budget of 340 million Euros.
Does the OECD ignore that it was, precisely, the United States Government Accountability Office (GAO) itself, the organism that made the following statement: “CRIMINALS USE PLIABLE STATE LAWS TO SET UP SHELL COMPANIES THAT EVADE TAXES OR LAUNDER MONEY. THESE COMPANIES CREATED IN THE UNITED STATES, HAVE BEEN USED TO LAUNDER AS MUCH AS $36 BILLION IN ILL- GOTTEN PROFITS FROM THE FORMER SOVIET UNION, ACCORDING TO FBI SOURCES QUOTED IN THE REPORT. THE FBI HAS 103 OPEN INVESTIGATIONS ON MARKET MANIPULATION, THE MAJORITY OF WHICH INVOLVE UNITED STATES SHELL COMPANIES”? And if that statement was not enough, we ask whether the OECD also ignores the following paragraph from the same statement: “GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS INTERVIEWED FOR THE REPORT SAID THAT THE LACK OF INFORMATION CAN KILL AN INVESTIGATION. CUSTOMS OFFICIALS TOLD THE CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATORS THEY COULD NOT INVESTIGATE THE NEVADA-BASED CORPORATION, WHICH RECEIVED MORE THAN 3,774 CABLE TRANSFERS TOTALING US$81 MILLION OVER A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS, BECAUSE THEY DID NOT KNOW WHO THE OWNER WAS” . And to top it all, does the OECD ignore this last assertion? “LAST YEAR, THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE RECEIVED 75 REQUESTS FOR ASSISTANCE FROM UKRAINIAN AUTHORITIES SEEKING, IN ORDER TO IDENTIFY THE OWNERS OF UNITED STATES SHELL COMPANIES. RUSSIAN AUTHORITIES ALSO MADE 30 SUCH REQUESTS. IN ALL CASES, THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE WAS HINDERED FROM FURNISHING IT DUE TO THE LACK OF INFORMATION”. The statements transcribed can be consulted in GAO’s web page (www.gao.gov). And for a more productive task, I refer the readers, to the USA TODAY newspaper, February 23 and March 19, 2007 issues, where they will be able to verify, just like OECD members, how easy it is to open accounts in some of their banks and how much more difficult it is to open them in, for example, Panamanian banks. Finally, we also recommend reading The Economist, April 19, 2007 issue, which carries a very interesting and revealing article regarding the OECD intimacies. Perhaps we can find there an explanation as to why all that the bureaucrats who run it do is to look after the interests of the countries that pay them their juicy salaries free of any taxes whatsoever, in addition to other benefits, like the remodeling of a luxury apartment in Paris for the Director General, who, by a quirk of fate, used to be Mexico’s Ministry of the Treasury, a fellow country that was one of the first to include Panama in their black list. The Economist reads: “Many of the delegates are unhappy at the pay deal Mr. Gurría negotiated on top of the rent-free residence. His basic salary of €183,000 was increased by a confidential package; a €33,000 expatriate’s allowance (unprecedented for the top chief), a “household” expenses allowance of €11,000, and a “representation” expenses allowance for €50,000. The latter can be spent as he thinks best and is not subject to audit. A rather loose definition of “normal expenses” led to some raised eyebrows among Officials who saw an invoice for a wedding anniversary dinner for Mr. Gurría and his wife, according to a document seen by The Economist. Officials pointed out that this type of expense could not be reimbursed. A spokesman said that these were personal expenses and were not processed”.
It is public knowledge that our economy is based by more than 80% on the services sector. This is so, basically, because of its geographical position, which made the Canal possible, and has turned us into a communications hub, not only for the Americas, but between other Continents as well. This geographical position was sequestered all throughout the past century, since the Canal was not returned to Panama until the year 2000 and the ports, until 1979 (until 1948 we were, additionally, a country without an airport). Both required and continue to require significant investments to make them suitable for global trade. Being deprived of its geographical position, Panama had to find out how to survive and thus, our forefathers created in 1919 the Open Ship Registry, complementing it in 1927, with the law of stock corporations. Both have been essential vehicles since the beginning of the globalization, allowing different countries to conduct business among them through a neutral instrument- (Currently, our Open Ship Registry represents close to 20% of the world merchant marine). At the beginning of the ‘70s, Panama created the first International Financial Center outside the traditional financial centers of the OECD countries. The development of telecommunications has reduced distances and spaces. Everything is in the Internet, and the universal language is no longer English or Mandarin, but the binary system. This technological revolution and the other complements offered by Panama, such as the new law of Regional Headquarters, offers our country the possibility of becoming a Financial and Services Center of the same stature as London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Singapore. The OECD, of course, wants to prevent it, as shown in this document.
The purpose of writing it, is to alert the community of the perverse goals and methods of the OECD, and to convince our Governments that the OECD’s attacks against Panama, to force us to sign tax information exchange treaties with all its members, are immoral and groundless, under International Law, and unacceptable within the context of relations between countries of the OECD itself. We also believe we have proven that what they seek is to eliminate us as an International Financial and Services Center. With the strength of this truth, the National Government must take all measures within its reach, with the support of local and international laws, for all the countries that harm us to cease on their attacks and exclude us from their black lists.
We have to acknowledge that our former President and his Foreign Affairs Minister treated the subject with the Heads of State from those countries, but results in three years of Government and personal negotiations proved fruitless. Our President must now put into motion the instruments provided in our Law of Retaliation. There are two aspects to this law: retaliation, itself, and reciprocal measures. Retaliation may consist of excluding companies with capital from those countries that keep us in black lists, from participating in bids for Government contracts. Reciprocal measures, as indicated by their name, is the application of the same or similar measures to those applied by such countries against Panama, or to its individuals or companies.
The Law of Retaliation was modeled after the “Retaliation Statute” of the United States and its goal, both in that country and in ours, is to have measures to discourage countries from discriminating against its own products and services. In Panama, the law was the answer to the black lists, and the upcoming multimillion dollar works for the expansion of the Canal were taken into account, for companies interested in participating in the juicy contracts, many of which come from countries that keep us in their black lists, would put pressure on their respective Governments to exclude the country from them, given the threat of being barred from participating in this grand endeavor. The past Government took the first steps toward the application of the retaliation, but the action was not continued by the present Government, that preferred to begin a personal negotiations policy, as we have mentioned before. The delay in applying the retaliation measures has caused that it is no longer appropriate to do so as it may interfere with the bidding for the expansion works of the waterway, and because it is in Panama’s best interest to have the largest concurrence of international companies without any kind of restrictions whatsoever. But the Government should apply the other variant of the law, that is, the application of reciprocal measures. These measures would not affect at all the large participation that is sought for the Canal works, but it would be a legitimate instrument for companies operating, or planning to operate, in Panama, and that come from countries that keep us in their black lists, to put pressure on their Governments to exclude us from such black lists, given the threat of being subjected to the same discriminatory measures that their Governments apply to Panama and its companies. These involve, mainly, the obligation to withhold surcharges or taxes above those applied to ordinary transactions in case of currency remittances to Panama. In the case of Mexico, for example, any remittance to banks, companies, or Panamanian individuals carry the obligation to apply and withhold a surcharge of 40% as a special tax. If an equal measure was to be applied by Panama, Mexican companies like ICA and Cemex, in the case of Mexico, would have to withhold the same additional surcharges and pay them to the Panamanian Treasury, also as a special tax on all remittances made to Mexico. In the case of Spain, the surtax the impose us by virtue of the Black List is 20%, which would apply to Union Fenosa, Spanish banks, and the Telefónica company. We feel certain that if we applied such reciprocal measures, the law would serve its purpose, which is that before the withholding becomes effective, the companies from such countries would pressure their respective Governments to keep Panama out of those black lists. These black lists are, in turn, an insult to the dignity of a country, and prevent us from fully developing our service economies, specially, our Financial Center. It is here where the true wealth of Panama lays, the one that would help us to reduce poverty levels and elevate all of us to the Canal’s level: becoming a First World country, without barefoot children, nor empty stomachs. Our Government has the moral strength of the wide mandate conferred by the voters to face the OECD, whose only arguments are arrogance and double standards.
Panama, October 2007
Eduardo Morgan Jr.
Former Ambassador of Panama to the United States of America
February 29th, 2008
To the Editor of Financial Times:
I make reference to the article “A Tax haven that needs to clean up its act”, published in your February 20, 2008 issue, whose author is Mr. Angel Gurría, Secretary General of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). It captures the attention that in said article Mr. Gurría employs a language that seems to be drawn from the crudest phase of the colonial period of the XIX and XX centuries, in order to threaten small countries that compete with OECD partners in the financial sector.
It is unacceptable that the official that represents an organization that group together the 30 most prosperous and, supposedly, most civilized and democratic countries in the planet, including the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Japan, and Italy, would use, in as reputable a journal as the Financial Times, expressions such as: “It is time for the governments of countries where such practices are prevalent to accept their responsibilities and crack down on them – or face the consequences.”
Mr. Gurría, maliciously, confuses money laundering of funds originating from abominable crimes, which, as such, are internationally prosecuted, with the internal legislation with which countries determine their fiscal system and tax rules, inalienable and unquestionable prerogatives of every State. But perhaps even more reprehensible in the above referenced article is the accusation directed against countries that he calls uncooperative tax havens, as well as against all those who would not sign treaties for the exchange of tax information with OECD member countries – that such countries have laws and regulations that facilitate tax evasion by taxpayers from third party countries. And this is because Mr. Gurría is well aware that the countries that facilitate tax evasion by foreigners the most are, precisely, the two most important OECD countries: the United States and the United Kingdom. Just how significant can foreign deposits in Liechtenstein and other small financial centers be compared to the trillions of anonymously-invested dollars, none of which pay taxes, in the banks and stock exchanges in the United States? What does Mr. Gurría have to say about the “non-dom” special residence offered by the United Kingdom for very wealthy foreigners, so that they may live in the UK without paying taxes or disclosing their enormous assets to anyone?
The article on which we are commenting is part of the OECD conspiracy to eliminate competition from the Offshore Financial Centers (see paragraphs 36, 37, and 38 of the document titled “Improving Access to Bank Information” (www.oecd.org), which was planned and put into motion fearing the competition made possible by the technological revolution. Competition should not be contested through outdated policies, nor through the making up of crimes that are not so. The way to compete is through better service and, above all, recognizing that competition in tax matters benefit taxpayers and, therefore, the world economy. Ireland is a good example.
Very truly yours,
Eduardo Morgan, Jr.
Former Ambassador of the Republic of Panama to the United States
by Eduardo Morgan Jr.
February 2008
This past January 12, Taiwan held its parliamentary elections. President Chen Shui Bian’s Democratic Progressive Party, which advocates the independence of Taiwan and its participation as an independent State in the United Nations, suffered a catastrophic electoral defeat in said elections at the hands of the Kuomintang (KMT), the party that supports a “One China” policy. The KMT won 81 out of the 113 seats in Parliament, against only 27 seats for the President’s party. So embarrassing was the defeat, that President Chen Shui Bian was left with no other option but to accept responsibility for such an electoral beating and resign from the leadership of the party.
The result of the elections clearly demonstrates that the Chinese people of Taiwan do not want the independence advocated by President Chen. On the contrary, they wish to tighten the bonds with mainland China to the point of reaching a total reunification, within the framework of the offer made by the People’s Republic of China of “one China and two systems,” similar to what occurred with Hong Kong a little over ten years ago.
The Taiwanese people will be able to keep the free market economy and democratic systems they adopted many years ago, a fact that is looked upon favorably by the United States.
The recovery of Taiwan is the final link in the long struggle of the Chinese people to complete the reunification of the territories that were occupied by the colonial powers that obtained great advantages and enormous profits during the XIX century and at the beginning of the last-century. Hong Kong reintegrated itself into the Chinese sovereignty in 1997 and so did Macao in 1999.
Snatched from China by Japan in 1895, Taiwan returned to China in 1945, at the conclusion of the Second World War. In 1949, the defeated government of Chiang Kai-shek – the Kuomintang – took refuge in the island along with its army and established its new capital in Taipei, always under the argument that it represented China as a whole. The Cold War determined that the United States would become Chiang Kai-shek’s protector, and its powerful naval forces safeguarded him from an eventual invasion by the legitimate Government. Additionally, he used his influence in the United Nations to maintain the fiction that the Government in Taipei represented all of China, thus preventing the People’s Republic from occupying its rightful place in the world organization.
However, on October 25, 1971, by decision of the majority of the General Assembly, Taiwan was expelled from the Organization and China went on to occupy the place that legally belongs to it. Without leaving Taiwan unprotected, the United States established diplomatic relations with China, officially recognized the principle of “One China”, limited its relations with Taiwan to simple trade relations and since then has advocated a peaceful reunification.
It is difficult to conceive that in the 58 years that elapsed since that first day of October, 1949 when Mao Zedong, victorious in the civil war, proclaimed the rebirth of his country, which had been impoverished and disjointed due to more than a century of hardship, internal decomposition, occupations, and by vile foreign exploitation – the Opium Wars come to mind – China has finally been rebuilt on the basis of its millenarian culture and the spiritual strength of its people, in order to shine once again as a great Nation, for the benefit of the Chinese people and all humankind.
It is hard to believe, we repeat, that Mao’s prophecy is a reality today and that China has been reborn as one of the most important and influential countries in the planet. China is, as is stands today, the world power that not only preaches respect for the sovereignty of all countries, but also practices what it preaches through an absolute non-interventionist policy and trade relations framed within the principle of mutual respect, without trying to take advantage of its great wealth and enormous economic power to exploit weak countries.
The January elections marked the beginning of the countdown towards the peaceful reincorporation of Taiwan and anticipate the moment when the world will join the Chinese people and their government to celebrate that event. Within this inexorable process, Panama must not be a mere spectator and, but it is obligated, for historical reasons, to contribute to just such a peaceful reincorporation. Let us remember that, of all the countries in the Americas, we were the last to obtain full independence when the Torrijos- Carter Treaties eliminated the American enclave located in the center of our territory and the military bases that offended our dignity and asphyxiated our country.
China contributed to this with its active participation in the historic meeting of the Security Council in Panama City in 1973 when, through its representative, Huang Hua, it publicly stated its support to the Panamanian government’s position. The United States was forced to veto the resolution that condemned its presence in Panama, which prompted our then Foreign Relations Minister, Juan Antonio Tack, to summarize in one historic phrase the feeling prevailing in the room: “The United States vetoed the draft resolution in support of the Panamanian cause, but the entire world vetoed the United States.”
In view of all the foregoing, it is difficult to understand why the sons of Omar Torrijos and Gabriel Lewis, two of the most important persons involved in the negotiation and subsequent ratification of the treaties that completed our independence and who climbed the last step of the generational struggle, have not yet taken advantage of their positions as the ones currently entrusted with Panamanian diplomacy, to recognize the one and true China and, instead, allow Panama to still be a part of the ever-shrinking group of underdeveloped countries that, for purely chrematistic interests, still cling to the historical and legal anachronism of recognizing the Island of Taiwan as the representative of the more than one billion Chinese people.
There is still time to rectify this and the time is now, when the people of Taiwan have sent the world such a clear message.
Thank you for the opportunity to submit written testimony on behalf of the Uniform Law Commission(ULC, also known a the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws). I am the Chair of the ULC’s Drafting Committe on Uniform Law Eforcement Access to Entity Information Act(the Uniform Act)
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Chairman Lieberman, Ranking Member Collins, and Members of the Committee, on behalf of my colleagues at the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS), I would like to extend our appreciation for your invitation to participate in this hearing. I am wearing two hats today; one as North Carolina Secretary of State, a job I have proudly held since 1997, and the other as the Co-Chair of the Company Formation Task Force formed by the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) in February 2007.
As Co-Chair of the NASS Company Formation Task Force, I oversaw the drafting and release of the body’s report and recommendations, which were adopted by the full membership in July 2007 and reaffirmed in July 2008. I also helped to introduce a resolution to oppose the first iteration of the bill we are here today to discuss, S. 2956: “The Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement Assistance Act,” a resolution which was unanimously supported by my peers and adopted by NASS in July 2008.
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STATEMENT
OF
JANICE AYALA
DEPUTY ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
OFFICE OF INVESTIGATIONS
U.S. IMMIGRATION AND CUSTOMS ENFORCEMENT
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
REGARDING A HEARING ON
“EXAMINING STATE BUSINESS INCORPORATION PRACTICES: A DISCUSSION OF THE INCORPORATION TRANSPARENCY AND LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSISTANCE ACT (S. 569)”
BEFORE THE
UNITED STATES SENATE
COMMITTEE ON HOMELAND SECURITY AND
GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS
Thursday, June 18, 2009 @ 2:30 pm
342 Dirksen Senate Office Building 2
INTRODUCTION
Chairman Lieberman, Ranking Member Collins, and distinguished Members of the Committee:
On behalf of Secretary Napolitano and Assistant Secretary Morton, I would like to thank you for the opportunity to testify today on the efforts of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to protect the United States from the growing threat of international money laundering. ICE has expansive investigative authority and the largest force of investigators in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). We protect national security and uphold public safety by targeting transnational criminal networks and terrorist organizations that seek to exploit vulnerabilities at our borders.
ICE investigates individuals and organizations that exploit vulnerabilities in financial systems for the purpose of laundering illicit proceeds. ICE also addresses the financial component of every cross-border criminal investigation. ICE’s financial investigative authorities and unique capabilities specifically given to and used by ICE enables it to identify, dismantle, and disrupt the financial criminal enterprises that threaten our nation’s economy and security. The combination of successful financial investigations, Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) reporting requirements, and Anti Money Laundering (AML) compliance efforts by traditional and non traditional financial institutions has, historically, forced criminal organizations to seek other means to launder their illicit funds across our borders. One of the most effective methods to confront, dismantle, and disrupt these often violent, transnational criminal organizations is to target the criminal proceeds that fund their operations. However, in the attempts to accomplish this mission, law enforcement is often hindered by the lack of information available as to the true ownership or control of shell companies. Further, this impediment limits our abilities to work jointly with our international law enforcement partners and can inhibit our ability to take quick action where it may be required.
In addition, ICE participates in a working group chaired by the National Security Council focused on the United States Government response to large-scale corruption by foreign public officials, also referred to as “kleptocracy.” ICE has played an integral role in the development of the strategy, as it is uniquely positioned as a U.S. cross-border investigative agency possessing international money laundering expertise, customs and immigration authorities, and extensive international investigative assets. In 2003, ICE established the Federal Foreign Corruption Task Force, which conducts investigations into the laundering of proceeds emanating from foreign public corruption, bribery, or embezzlement. The investigations are conducted jointly with representatives of foreign governments to prevent laundered money from entering the U.S. financial infrastructure, seize identified assets in the U.S., and repatriate these funds to the victimized governments.
ICE has long recognized the misuse of corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs) formed under State law as a serious threat to the ongoing effort to combat international criminal activities. The lack of corporate transparency has allowed criminal entities a gateway into the financial system and further veils their illicit activity. Investigations can be significantly hampered in cases where criminal targets utilize shell corporations. The difficulty for law enforcement to obtain true beneficial ownership information impedes investigators’ ability to follow criminal proceeds. Furthermore, the 2005 U.S. Money Laundering Threat Assessment, the first government-wide analysis of money laundering in the United States, specified that “legal entities such as shell companies and trusts are used globally for legitimate business purposes, but because of their ability to hide ownership and mask financial details they have become popular tools for money launderers.”
Obtaining information on true beneficial corporation owners and LLCs formed under State law, and providing the information to civil or criminal law enforcement upon receipt of a subpoena or summons, would assist DHS in its endeavor to protect the country. Currently, due to the disparity in the type and amount of corporate ownership information collected by individual States, law enforcement is often faced with the unavailability of needed information as to the true ownership of funds, accounts, or assets that are deemed to be linked to criminal activity. The collection by States of a standard minimum level of corporate ownership information, and the ability of law enforcement to access this information in a timely manner, would greatly assist law enforcement efforts.
At this time, I would like to share with you a few examples of investigations that demonstrate how “shell” corporations established in the United States have been utilized to commit crime against individuals throughout the world.
NEW YORK MONEY LAUNDERING INVESTIGATION – INVESTMENT FRAUD
Based on a tip, an investigation was initiated by our New York office against a criminal organization involved with defrauding investors out of millions of dollars and laundering the fraudulently obtained proceeds. The investigation revealed an enterprise of individuals offering fictitious instruments for investment programs described as “currency leasing trading programs,” leading to more than $14 million in fraudulent transactions. These funds were laundered through a network of domestic and foreign bank accounts utilizing shell corporations, many of which had been established in the United States.
The investigation revealed that one of the perpetrators operated an Internet web site out of Las Vegas, Nevada, which offered investors the opportunity to “lease” $1 million for a fee of $35,000. Once “leased,” victims were told these funds would be placed into a high yield international trading program. The contracts provided to the investors indicated an expected return on their investment of as much as 25 percent every two weeks.
An additional co-conspirator in the scheme was responsible for establishing a complex web of bank and brokerage accounts, and shell companies. This individual established corporations in Delaware, Nevada, California, and Massachusetts in the United States along with companies in Denmark, Sweden, Luxembourg, and the Bahamas. Another co-conspirator opened cash management accounts at brokerages utilizing the shell corporations. Investors were told to send their $35,000 fee to the accounts established utilizing the shell corporation names. Once in this account, the funds were transferred to secondary accounts. From these accounts, the funds were then disbursed to various foreign and domestic accounts and liquidated through the use of checks, debit cards, and ATM cards.
The investors never realized the profits they were promised. They merely received a litany of excuses for the delays and promises that the transactions would be completed. When they requested refunds, the investors were told that they were not entitled to a refund since they had received the service that they paid for, namely that the funds had been successfully leased.
In the end, six individuals pled or were found guilty of violating money laundering, wire fraud, and international transportation of stolen funds statutes. The defendant’s use of domestic and foreign shell companies to layer the funds prevented full recovery of the fraudulently obtained funds.
MIAMI MONEY LAUNDERING INVESTIGATION-BID RIGGING-BRIBERY
Another example of how these shell corporations are utilized for criminal activity is illustrated in a Miami office investigation. In this investigation, the violators utilized shell corporations to defraud the Government of Trinidad and Tobago out of more than $100,000,000. The foreign and domestic shell companies enabled them to engage in a bid-rigging scheme and then launder the fraudulently obtained proceeds. In this “bid-rigging” fraud scheme, the co-conspirators bribed members of a Trinidad and Tobago bid committee of the Piarco International Airport in order to win a competitive construction bid. The U.S. targets of the investigation operated a construction company and architectural firm in South Florida, which submitted a competitive bid for work in the construction of the airport. A Trinidadian Government Accessor believed the bid was too high and requested that the bid committee obtain a second bid. As a result, the targets of the investigation utilized a shell company to submit a second, much higher valued bid for the work. As a result of this much higher second bid, the contract was awarded to the targets of the investigation.
Once they had been paid by the Trinidadian Government, they laundered the proceeds of the fraud by layering them through a series of shell companies in the Bahamas, Lichtenstein, and the United States. Through handwritten notes kept by Bahamian bankers, ICE investigators identified the true beneficiaries of the funds. Six of eight indicted individuals were found guilty of violating money laundering, and wire fraud statutes. The two remaining indicted individuals are still pending extradition to face the charges. As part of the sentence, the court ordered approximately $22 million in restitution be paid, but the majority of that ordered restitution has not been realized.
NATIONAL INITIATIVE – OPERATION PAYCHECK – DISGUISED PAYMENTS TO ALIEN WORKERS
In July 2006, ICE launched Operation Paycheck, a national initiative designed to combat criminal schemes involving the exploitation of the financial industry by businesses to pay the wages of illegal alien workers. Through ICE investigations, numerous financial schemes have been uncovered throughout the U.S., such as money laundering, structuring funds into and out of financial institutions, and the operation of unlicensed Money Service Business (MSB) to disguise the payment of illegal alien workers. To combat this threat, all ICE Offices of Investigations are leveraging their combined investigative expertise in financial crimes and worksite enforcement to identify, disrupt, and eliminate organizations seeking to exploit our financial industry to facilitate the employment of illegal aliens.
In most cases identified, many involving the construction industry in the southeastern U.S., the employer of illegal aliens establish shell companies that appear to operate as sub-contractors of the actual employer. The employers are then able to pay the shell company for their services, often in the form of one large check or numerous checks. The shell company (sub-contractor) then cashes the check or checks, frequently through a culpable MSB, and pays the illegal alien workforce in cash. In most instances, the person or persons posing as the sub-contractor charge a fee for this service, as does the culpable MSB.
This type of scheme may also involve a host of other state and federal violations. For example, by using the shell company and the payment of the illegal alien workers in cash, the employers avoid withholding state, federal, and social security taxes from employee’s paychecks in violation of state and federal tax and labor laws.
CONCLUSION
As noted in our testimony, the use of shell companies to engage in illicit activities, including money laundering and financial fraud, presents a number of investigative challenges for law enforcement. The lack of transparency and information on beneficial ownership of these entities has made their use an ideal mechanism for money laundering and the commission of other illegal activities, and has allowed criminals an entry into our financial system. Greater transparency of beneficial ownership of corporate entities and providing law enforcement reasonable access to this information would greatly assist our efforts to combat the use of shell companies for illegal activities.
I would like to thank the Committee Members for this opportunity to testify and for your continued support of ICE, CBP, DHS and our law enforcement mission. I will be happy to answer any questions that you may have at this time.
Good afternoon, Chairman Lieberman, Ranking Member Collins and distinguished Members of the Committee. I am honored to appear before the Homeland Security Committee to discuss the critical need for greater transparency in corporate formation in this country. Nearly three years ago the Department testified before the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs about the difficulties that U.S. shell companies often pose to law enforcement efforts—and the need for improved access to beneficial ownership information of these companies. In this context, we use the term “shell company” to refer to a legal entity, established under the laws of a State, that has no independent operations or assets of its own. Unfortunately, since the Committee last examined this issue, the problem has not improved. So I am pleased that the Department has another opportunity to speak with you about this important issue and that the conversation has now moved from framing the problem to developing possible legislative solutions.
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