A class action complaint filed in Illinois alleges that five foreign banks are liable for the Holocaust-era looting of financial accounts belonging to Hungarian Jews. The heirs of some of the Hungarian Jews filed this complaint in the case known as Holocaust Victims of Bank Theft v. Magyar Nemzeti Bank, et. al., Index No.
asset recovery
Asset Search News Roundup: September 7, 2011
Freezing bank accounts maintained by nominees and Scottish prosecutors investigate a suspected tax fraud.
- Fraudulently conveyed assets may be recovered even if they are concealed in bank accounts maintained by straw persons / intermediaries (i.e. nominees). A post-judgment creditor for example, can conceivably freeze or restrain nominee bank accounts in New York, as partly suggested
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MoneyLaundering.com Article About Looting With Impunity
It is well known that corrupt politically exposed persons can conceal their illicit assets in money laundering circuits. My recent comments regarding politically exposed persons are included at MoneyLaundering.com’s August 9th article:
International Groups Say Corrupt PEPs Can Often Loot With Impunity*
August 9, 2011
By Colby Adams and Brian Monroe
Three intergovernmental groups are questioning the effectiveness of anti-money laundering controls meant to curb abuses of corrupt political figures who steal from their countries.
The World Bank and United Nations said in a joint June 21 report that at least 74 of 124 jurisdictions examined have not complied with anti-money laundering (AML) recommendations to quash kleptocracy by political figures. The record indicates that financial institutions and the agencies that regulate them may be “deficient” in enforcing the controls, the report said.
In a separate report published July 29, the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) warned banks and other companies that government officials, also known as politically exposed persons (PEPs), can exploit the “natural advantages” of their positions to launder ill-gotten funds through institutions, and then stymie investigations into the crimes.
The three organizations recommended requiring financial institutions to review their PEP accounts annually, sharing suspicious activity reports on the accounts of foreign politically-tied figures with their home country and eliminating the distinction between foreign and domestic PEPs.
“More specific guidance may be needed because there are specific challenges related to the persistent problem of PEPs that we don’t see with drug trafficking and organized crime,” said Vincent Schmoll, principal administrator with the FATF secretariat, in an interview. FATF plans to publish guidance in the next six months on how to identify such funds, he said.
Looting by the former Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha, who siphoned assets out of his country into banks in Switzerland, the United States and the United Kingdom, illustrates how difficult it can be to stop powerful figures from abusing their positions, said Schmoll.
“Even if all the receiving countries of Abacha’s funds had all their PEP laws up to par, and were able to identify the beneficial owners, his control of the country meant that there was no way for Swiss, U.K. and U.S. banks to return the money to his victims,” said Schmoll.
In cases when corrupt foreign officials exercise direct power over a bank, “the hardest part of money laundering, introducing the funds into the financial system, is already done,” said Fred Abrams, a New York-based attorney specializing in asset recovery. Pavlo Lazarenko of Ukraine and Zine El Abidene Ben Ali of Tunisia both used such means to launder funds they stole from state coffers, he said.Continue Reading MoneyLaundering.com Article About Looting With Impunity
Asset Search News Roundup: July 31, 2011
Posts concerning asset searches and the recovery of more than 1000 antique coins, an Egyptian sarcophagus and other cultural artifacts.
- Past posts mentioning a few different asset searches are: “A Low-Cost Asset Search“; “An Asset Search With Letters Rogatory“; and “Turning To Financial Investigators During Asset Recoveries.”
- A July
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Searching For Bank Accounts Secretly Opened In Switzerland
An IRS webpage identifies U.S. residents accused of engaging UBS AG to maintain secretly opened Swiss or other foreign bank accounts:
(Click On The Image To View The Webpage)*
One person cited by this webpage is Ms. Lucille Abrahamsen Jackson, of Hillside New Jersey. She reportedly concealed assets in a Swiss bank account by using a Panamanian company as her nominee, (i.e. intermediary). To detect these kinds of Swiss bank accounts, claimants ranging from the IRS to divorcing spouses may pursue different legal remedies.Continue Reading Searching For Bank Accounts Secretly Opened In Switzerland
Former Premier Misick Reportedly Subject To Worldwide Asset Freeze
“The Premier And The Hip-Hop Magazine” published by Forbes on March 3, 2010, observed that special prosecutor Helen Garlick had so far not filed public corruption or other charges against former Turks & Caicos Islands premier Michael Misick. The March 3rd article also pointed out that the former premier and his ex-wife U.S. actress LisaRaye McCoy, were alleged to have invested monies in the US-based Hip Hop Weekly magazine.
$300,000 dollars for example, might have been transferred in 2007 to Hip Hop Weekly through companies known as My Way Productions 2 and the Windsor Investment Group. The former premier and Ms. McCoy seemed deeply involved in My Way Productions 2, as more fully set forth at “The Former Premier’s Nexus To Hip Hop Weekly Magazine” and “The Actress, An Ex-Premier & Hip Hop Weekly Magazine“. Windsor Investment Group meanwhile, was apparently partially owned by the former premier and his brother, Chal Misick.
The former premier, Ms. McCoy, Chal Misick and the Windsor Group are now thought to possibly be subject to a June 23, 2011 restraining order which allegedly froze the former premier’s assets worldwide. The Turks & Caicos Sun has reported that the alleged June 23rd order “was made” by special prosecutor Garlick and that it lists the former premier, Ms. McCoy, Chal Misick, the Windsor Group and others.Continue Reading Former Premier Misick Reportedly Subject To Worldwide Asset Freeze
Asset Search News Roundup: June 24, 2011
At an April 26, 2010 Moneylaundering.com article*, I basically explained that the damaged investors of a Ponzi scheme can not successfully recover money damages on the ground that a financial institution violated the Bank Secrecy Act:
(To Read The Article, Click On The Image Above)
This Moneylaundering.com article mentioned a 2009 lawsuit…
Asset Search News Roundup: May 23, 2011
Piercing trusts and competing over $1.2 million dollars in the Trevor Cook asset recovery case–
- “Concealing Assets In More Than 150 Trusts?” describes some matters in which assets were fraudulently hidden. When available, the right to pierce a trust could lead to a recovery in these situations. In New York for example, Courts
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Seeking Holocaust-Era Restitution From A French Railway
"French Bank Agreement" indicates that Jewish Holocaust victims were paid restitution because French financial institutions had wrongfully seized Jewish-owned bank accounts during WWII. Holocaust victims who possess claims against the French railway Société Nationale des Chemins de Fer Français (SNCF), might similarly receive restitution.
These claimants seek compensation from SNCF because it…
Asset Search News Roundup: April 23, 2011
“Retired bus drivers lose everything in Ponzi scheme” discussed securities fraudster Thomas Mitchell who just pleaded guilty to violating 18 U.S.C. § 1341. (Mail Fraud). Mr. Mitchell asserted at page 8 of his plea agreement that he induced over 150 victims to invest their retirement monies in a Ponzi scheme:
(For Hi-Res…

