$90 Million Found In Allen
Stanford Case
March 4. 2009
Peanuts Compared To What Has Been Stolen
R. Allen Stanford (Photo courtesy of Reuters)
$90 Million Dollars Found
The FBI announced the receiver in the
R. Allen Stanford ponzi scheme has found $90 million dollars. Considering $8 billion has gone missing, that is very
unimpressive and will be infuriating to victims. Furthermore, why is he still free? Is it due to a rumored
connection to the CIA and George Bush sr., that you knowingly let
this man rob so many people, for so many years and still allow
him to walk the streets.
Jurisdiction
Photo courtesy of Reuters
There is a battle for jurisdiction brewing in the Stanford
case. The U.S. government seeks to seize Stanford’s assets in
the Caribbean nation of Antigua, who also seek to move in on
the disgraced fraudster’s property and cash, to repay investors
that were fleeced on the island.
Considering the
FBI and
SEC knew
for well over a decade that Stanford was committing various
financial crimes, yet allowed him to turn the small nation of
Antigua into a colonial slave outpost, racking up more and more
financial losses over the last decade, whilst ripping off
investors on said island, Venezuela and South America, they need
to bow out of trying to scrape up chunks of Antigua.
After all, it is squarely the FBI and SEC’s fault that it got
to this terrible stage. The FBI and SEC’s complicity for all
these years has brought a small nation to the brink of collapse.
That’s bad foreign policy. Stanford has turned their nation upside down, as the FBI and
SEC sat idly by. Therefore, said law enforcement agencies need
to back off and let them regain their footing. Respect their
jurisdiction.
Venezuela
George W. Bush (center)
It is being reported that Venezuelan citizens are going to
take a big financial loss as well, due to Stanford’s dealings in
their country, with losses totaling $3 billion. George W. Bush will no doubt be happy at this news, regarding
Stanford’s misconduct, which he has known about for years, as he hates
Chavez.
U.S. Workers Worried
It has been reported that many of Stanford’s employees in
Texas, Mississippi and Florida are worried they have been
tainted by association. I don’t believe every employee knew what Stanford was doing.
There are many workers that have no clue as to what goes on at
the management level of the companies they work for.
It’s usually the Chairmen, CIOs, CEOs, CFOs, accountants and
lawyers that often know about misconduct in companies they work
for. Three years ago, two newly hired employees crunched
Stanford’s numbers, realized they did not add up, brought it to
his attention and he angrily fired them. They promptly sued him
and the case is still in court. Therefore, not every employee is engaging in a criminal conspiracy.
STORY SOURCE
Stanford receiver finds $90
million in assets: FBI
Fri Feb 27, 2009 5:44pm EST -
HOUSTON (Reuters) - The court-appointed receiver overseeing the
financial empire of Texas billionaire Allen Stanford, who is
charged with fraudulently selling $8 billion in certificates of
deposit, has located $90 million in assets so far, an FBI agent
said on Friday.
http://www.reuters.com
Stanford receiver: Company's
situation 'dire'
Investors looking for a glimmer of
hope regarding their chances of getting their money back from
Stanford Financial Group heard more troubling news on Monday…In a statement issued delivered to
a U.S. District Court judge in Dallas in a packed courtroom,
attorney Ralph Janvey said the “liquidity situation and overall
financial condition of the Stanford entities can only be
described as dire.”…
The SEC has accused company
chairman Robert Allen Stanford, as well as Jim Davis, the
company’s chief financial officer, and Chief Investment Officer
Laura Pendergest-Holt of running the Ponzi scheme and
misappropriating as much as $1.6 billion of investors’ funds…
http://www.bizjournals.com
Stanford bank collapse threatens
Venezuela
THE collapse of a Venezuelan bank
owned by R. Allen Stanford is raising concerns about a run on
deposits. It is feared the run on deposits
could threaten the nation's economy and financial system. Mr
Standford, a Texas financier and cricket promoter, has been
accused of fraud,
On Saturday, President Hugo Chávez
blamed his political enemies for rumours about mass withdrawals,
and urged depositors not to pull their savings from domestic
banks...
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au
Antigua's senate OKs bid to
seize Stanford assets
ST. JOHN'S, Antigua (AP) —
Antigua's Senate voted Friday to seize R. Allen Stanford's
property, setting up a possible showdown with a court-appointed
receiver who is securing the billionaire's assets for investors
in his allegedly fraudulent offshore bank scheme.
The measure passed easily, with 12
senators in favor and three abstentions, a day after the lower
house of Parliament also voted to confiscate about 250 acres,
including businesses that formed the basis of Stanford's empire
on the twin-island nation of Antigua and Barbuda.
http://www.google.com