UBS's Offshore Shell Game
News: Wondering where all those CEO bonuses went in the current economic meltdown? Here's how bankers hid their cash and cheated the IRS.
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The investment firm where former McCain adviser and ex-Sen. Phil Gramm serves as a vice chairman is taking heat for helping affluent Americans cheat the US Treasury out of some $2 billion—but the world might never have known had Bradley Birkenfeld not sung like a canary.
The Boston-bred Birkenfeld was a banker for ubs, a Swiss financial behemoth with major US operations. His specialty: devising tax shelters in the form of offshore shell companies and peddling them to the superrich. According to court documents, 85 to 90 bankers in ubs's wealth-management divisions drummed up business at high-roller events like the America's Cup yacht race and Miami's prestigious Art Basel exhibition; Birkenfeld took pains to keep his customers happy, going so far for one client as to purchase diamonds overseas and smuggle them into the US in a toothpaste tube to avoid taxes and duties.
It was one of Birkenfeld's biggest clients who would prove his undoing—Igor Olenicoff, a Forbes 400 billionaire and major developer in Florida, Illinois, Nevada, and the Southwest. Olenicoff's fortunes took a dive in 1994, when the Internal Revenue Service, in the course of monitoring fund transfers, noticed large sums moving from Olenicoff's accounts to countries with a reputation as tax havens. The suspicious irs agents eventually called in the Justice Department; Olenicoff, they discovered, had stashed some $200 million in unreported assets in ubs accounts offshore. In 2007, Olenicoff agreed to pay $52 million in back taxes, interest, and penalties for tax evasion, and for lying about his accounts.
Once the feds had Olenicoff, it was a short jump to Birkenfeld, who left ubs in 2006 and began to cooperate. He admitted to the agents that he and fellow ubs bankers had helped Olenicoff and other wealthy clients hide their assets via fictitious firms in Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Panama, and the British Virgin Islands. Birkenfeld and a Liechtenstein banker—now a fugitive—also advised Olenicoff to destroy banking records and use only Swiss credit cards to throw Uncle Sam off the trail. In June, Birkenfeld arrived in a Fort Lauderdale courtroom in his gray pin-striped suit, looking forlorn as he pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and facilitating tax fraud. (He faces up to five years in jail and $250,000 in fines, but legal experts expect his sentencing will be put off as long as he continues to cooperate.)
Birkenfeld's takedown was a milestone for the Justice Department—its first conviction of a foreign-based banker for conspiring to defraud the irs. But his crimes were no anomaly. More than a decade of lax law enforcement has allowed tax havens to flourish in the open, even as the Bush administration has cut taxes for the wealthy here at home. "There's been a huge growth in the offshore game," says Jack Blum, a DC lawyer who worked on money laundering and tax fraud as a congressional investigator during the early 1990s. "Foreign institutions are doing a lot of selling." A new Government Accountability Office report notes that Ugland House, a five-story office building on a tree-lined street in the Caymans, has witnessed a jump in its foreign corporate entities from roughly 12,000 in 2004 to nearly 19,000 this year; around 900 are American companies.
Strapped for resources, the irs has adopted a strategy of selective prosecution: Nail a few big fish, and hope the others will get the message. The agency plans to add 10 new audit teams to combat offshore abuses, Blum says. But some legislators, like Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), say much more remains to be done. As chair of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Levin has been looking into ubs as well as lgt, a Liechtenstein bank owned by that principality's royal family. "The irs doesn't have the money, the time, or the legal tools it needs to stop offshore abuses," he told me via email.
Meanwhile, the Birkenfeld conviction has rocked the lucrative world of tax-haven promotion. The banker told Levin's committee that ubs had even trained him in illegal procedures, and outfitted his laptop with encryption software to make its contents inscrutable to US agents. ubs doesn't deny that its American clients keep some $18 billion in 19,000 undeclared Swiss accounts—investments that earned ubs about $200 million per year, Birkenfeld told prosecutors.
Called before Congress in July, a senior ubs exec was contrite, stating that the bank would shut down its offshore services to US clients and "take responsibility" for what he called compliance failures. "On behalf of ubs, I am apologizing. I am committing to you that we will take the actions necessary to see that this does not happen again."
As of mid-September, ubs was working to comply with a federal "John Doe" summons seeking the names behind those 19,000 accounts. If the funds in question are indeed taxable assets, ubs's clients may have cost the federal government $2.1 billion or more over seven years. All told, Levin estimates, offshore tax shelters deprive the Treasury of a staggering $100 billion a year.
With the economy in a slump and America's coffers drained by war spending, some congressional Democrats have been talking tough about tax cheats. Levin introduced a bill last year, cosponsored by senators Barack Obama and Norm Coleman, that would strengthen penalties, give the Treasury Department power to pursue foreign firms, and label 34 countries or territories "offshore secrecy jurisdictions." But so far it has languished in committee.
The probe of ubs is faring better, though. Federal prosecutors expect it will yield more indictments in the coming months. "There was a failure to appropriately assess the regulatory and reputational risks," says one source close to the probe. "It seems to be a pattern similar to Enron."
Illustration: David Gothard

--Ben Franklin
Maybe Robert Rubin has one. Or Larry Summers. Or Arthur Levitt. Or Franklin Raines. Or Barney Frank's Freddie/Fannie boyfriend.
Many people measure and reward others not by their integrity, intelligence, virtue, or charity, but by their "net worth". Those with the most money get the best houses, medical care, vacations, wives, parties, food, lawyers, and the most respect and political access to perpetuate their power.
The wealthy may not be the happiest people, but their limitless greed certainly pinches others and creates tremendous and needless human misery and suffering for those who are starving, losing their home, unable to afford medical care, college, and in debt because of a warped economic system that promises the American Dream but does not deliver it.
These are the natural, understandable, and inevitable fruits of Capitalism where morals about integrity, responsibility, and hard work are "a nice idea" but only pertain to the have-nots. Those who acquire and retain wealth and power operate in an entirely different universe and enjoy freedom without responsibility.
What to do? Salary caps of $1 million maximum yearly wage, and a 100% estate tax on estates valued above $5 million to return money to the system instead of lieing in idle offshore illegal accounts.
Mandatory jail sentences for large scale fraud and retroactive taxes on millionaires and billionaires to reclaim unearned, unneeded, undeserved wealth courteousy of the Bush tax breaks for billionaires.
Will it be done by the Democrats or Republicans? No. Those who are beneficiaries of the largesse will be last to halt their own party. Nor will the Christian Right heed the Bible's warnings about the 'The love of money is the root of all evil' and 'it is harder for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven than a camel to pass through the eye of a needle.' Multi-millionaires like televangelist Pat Robinson will conveniently ignore that passage.
Only an independent candidate like Ralph Nader or Cynthia McKinney will fix the problems. Since they are unlikley to be elected, we must content ourselves with gross and serial injustice for the many while the wealthy enjoy freedom and power at public expense.
Check it out folks:
http://www.gameasoldasempire.com/
It is same old Repugnican hypocracy dating back to Raygun's "Get the government of your backs". By starving the IRS and the rest of the govt agencies, they got the government off THEIR backs--the rich cheating pig's.
Nobody is looking at the shipping containers, nobdy is minding the banks, no body is minding the FDA, nobody is minding Consumer Products Safety. That is what they mean by "small goverrment"--a free for all for the cheaters, poisoners, polluters, and ultimately, the terrorists.
The Vice President of UBS is the venerable Phil Gramm, McCain’s financial advisor and close confidant, who accused Americans of excessive whining while he was busy stashing his client’s secret funds out of the sight of the IRS. The fairytale of trickle-down-economic has produced the most lopsided redistribution of wealth in the history of mankind. Alas, it was an upward redistribution in favor of Phil Gramm’s clients. Yet, McCain goes on with his campaign’s circus-like gatherings, accusing Obama of wealth redistribution to the cheer of his Joe-Six-Pack fans. It is abundantly clear that those who elected George W. Bush are yet to learn a lesson from history.
Why are the Senator in Congress allowing this? AIG gets money, then Greenberg, who escaped a DOJ Va Maguire investigation cashes out $100 Million in stock. Nice GOP present.