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<text id=91TT2903>
<title>
Dec. 30, 1991: Scandals:Is That All There Is?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 59
SCANDALS
Is That All There Is?
</hdr><body>
<p>B.C.C.I. pleads guilty to criminal charges and forfeits $550
million, but individual culprits are still on the loose
</p>
<p>By Jonathan Beaty and S.C. Gwynne
</p>
<p> It was the ultimate package deal, a grand compromise
designed to clean up one of the world's messiest piles of
financial wreckage. Bank liquidators, acting on behalf of the
moribund Bank of Credit & Commerce International, marched into
a crowded Manhattan courtroom last Friday and settled, in one
unexpected swoop, all U.S. criminal charges outstanding against
B.C.C.I. as a corporation. The bank, which in the U.S. is now
essentially just a hollow shell, pleaded guilty to federal and
state charges of racketeering, fraud and money laundering. The
liquidators agreed to surrender virtually every penny of
B.C.C.I.'s assets in the U.S., a total of $550 million, which
represents the largest criminal forfeiture in history.
</p>
<p> The guilty plea, hammered out during four months of
intense negotiations among banking authorities and prosecutors
in Washington, London and Luxembourg, was designed in part to
impose some order on the worldwide scramble to lay claims to
B.C.C.I.'s remaining assets. So far, auditors have found only
$1.5 billion in the coffers of a bank that once held $22 billion
in deposits. "We felt we could duke it out for years, or we
could accommodate each other. I think we found a fair
arrangement," says George Terwilliger, the acting Deputy U.S.
Attorney General.
</p>
<p> Half of B.C.C.I.'s forfeiture has been allocated to a
worldwide fund to compensate innocent depositors who lost their
money when the bank collapsed. The remaining half has been
reserved for a U.S. contingency fund to shore up financial
institutions that B.C.C.I. secretly controlled. Washington
regulators fear that the already depleted guarantee fund at the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation could be endangered by
banking problems at the Independence Bank in Encino, Calif., and
at Washington's First American. Their concern was so acute that
authorities immediately transferred $5 million of the forfeited
money to the Encino bank to prevent its collapse.
</p>
<p> But far more money is needed to compensate victims
worldwide, so authorities are seeking a much bigger bailout.
Their intended source: the ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheik Zayed bin
Sultan al-Nahayan, who is now the major shareholder in B.C.C.I.
For months banking authorities and liquidators have tried to
talk Zayed into donating billions of dollars to cushion the
losses of depositors around the world so they might recoup 30%
to 40% instead of the 10% now expected. B.C.C.I.'s agreement
with the U.S. may pave the way for that bailout.
</p>
<p> Zayed, who has already poured billions into the bank,
shows signs of wanting to make the best of a bad situation by
reviving portions of B.C.C.I. as a bank based in the Middle
East. "What B.C.C.I. was all about is the infusion of Arab
dollars into the U.S. and the political influence that goes with
it," says a B.C.C.I. investigator. Just what Zayed might demand
for pouring more billions into what's left of B.C.C.I. remains
unspoken, but Abu Dhabi has made it clear in the past that it
would prefer some sort of restructuring to outright liquidation.
</p>
<p> While the bank is shut down in most countries, B.C.C.I. is
still operating in Pakistan and Switzerland, as well as in
Zambia and Zimbabwe. In other countries, individuals or entities
with close ties to the old B.C.C.I. seem to be buying up the
bank's branches. At the same time, several Middle Eastern banks
are taking over the bank's role as a promoter of weapons deals,
sources have told TIME.
</p>
<p> B.C.C.I.'s corporate guilty plea will not slow down the
pending indictments of individuals connected to the bank. The
investigation has speeded up now that cooperation has improved
between federal officials, led by U.S. Attorney General William
Barr, and state prosecutors in New York, led by Manhattan
district attorney Robert Morgenthau. For months Morgenthau's
unprecedented worldwide probe had been running rings around the
foot-dragging Justice investigation. Plenty remains to be
uncovered. A grand jury in Manhattan is looking into the roles
played in B.C.C.I.'s schemes by First American's ex-chairman,
former Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, and his law partner,
Robert Altman.
</p>
<p> Political bribery is another ripe area of investigation.
In Georgia last week Governor Zell Miller and house speaker Tom
Murphy testified before a federal grand jury probing reports of
payoffs to legislators for passing a law enabling First
American to buy the National Bank of Georgia when both banks
were controlled by B.C.C.I. A report of those alleged bribes
originally came into the hands of the CIA in 1986, according to
TIME sources.
</p>
<p> Connections to B.C.C.I. are proving to be politically
sticky. Last week the Bush Administration denied any knowledge
of a business relationship between Charles Hostler, the U.S.
envoy to Bahrain, and B.C.C.I. An NBC News report had linked
Hostler, a major G.O.P contributor, to a Connecticut real estate
development controlled by reputed B.C.C.I. front man Mohammed
Hammoud. Hostler says he became involved in the Connecticut
project because of friendship with Hammoud and did not profit
from it, and denies ties to B.C.C.I. Hammoud's connections,
however, seem clear. Internal B.C.C.I. documents examined by
TIME show that the bank planned to move $5 million of Hammoud's
loans--including those related to the Connecticut project--to "offshore" branches to avoid examination by regulators.
Hammoud will not be able to clear matters up: the London-based
businessman reportedly died in May 1990 under mysterious
circumstances.
</p>
<p> While the surprising guilty plea last week settled many
issues, it may have been only a curtain raiser for new
disclosures on how the corrupt bank really operated.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>