Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

BoooshCo Racketeering at a minimum

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

A

Sun, 16 Apr 2006 16:05:28 -0700 (PDT)

BoooshCo Racketeering at a minimum - Absolutely correct doctor

 

 

 

 

That's Racketeering at a minimum

 

Overthrowing Governments for Power, Money, Oil

and Other Strategic Locations & Materials

 

Absolutely correct doctor

 

Subterfuge, Fraudulent Artifices, Civil Rights Violations, Criminal

use of office, Wires, Telephones, Federal Grant Money, Voting

Machines, Computers and Public Saleries, the Public Treasury etc.,

etc., etc ......

 

SUBVERTING A NATIONAL ELECTION using Card Tricks, you bet your ASS

that's what the BooshCo and the Carlyle MAFIA have done.

 

When you rob A nation blind and use their kids as collaterial damage

in waging wars of mass deception so that they can steal.

 

That's raceteering at a minimum.

 

 

 

 

 

Richard Hayes Phillips <richardhayesphillips wrote:

 

Hey.

 

(CENSORED FOR SECURITY.)

 

I am not a lawyer. But as I understand it, when you stack the decks of

cards in a high-stakes game -- that's racketeering.

 

Dr. Phillips

 

 

 

WAKE UP

 

When you steal billions, National Elections (Ohio & Florida) and wage

wars of mass deception you have to have what?

 

PS. There is also: WTC- Pentagon - Hanging chads and Osama (Ollie North's Buddy)

Bin Ladin.

 

http://www.geocities.com/jurisnot

 

 

 

 

Son Of Swamp Fox <jurisnot wrote:

 

ImpeachBushNOW

" Son Of Swamp Fox " <jurisnot

Sun, 29 Jan 2006 14:47:33 -0000

[impeachBushNOW] TRUST OR HUSTLE: The Bush Record

(partial)

 

 

TRUST OR HUSTLE: The Bush Record (partial)

David E. Scheim

 

Additional information

 

BACKGROUND ON THE S & L BAILOUT.

 

The failure of hundreds of U.S. Savings and Loans during the 1980s, as

detailed in such sources as Stephen Pizzo's Inside Job1 and Pete

Brewton's Untold Story,2 cost U.S. taxpayers an estimated $500

billion.3

 

A U.S. House committee concluded that over three-quarters of all S & L

insolvencies appeared to be linked to serious misconduct by senior

insiders or outsiders.4 In 1988, the comptroller of the currency

found that less than 10 percent of recent bank failures had been

caused solely by economic factors.5

 

One indication of the role of criminal conduct in S & L losses was the

workings of just one New York figure, Mario Renda, who worked in

conjunction with the Mob, according to a sworn federal deposition.6

Renda brokered as much as $5 billion per year in deposits into 130

S & Ls across the county, all of which failed.7

 

As Kwitny noted, " many of these deposits were made on the specific

condition that the S & Ls would lend money out to borrowers Renda would

recommend, who turned out to be local Mafia people or strangers from

out-of-state. " 8

 

The Bush family's dealings illustrate some of the ways this S & L loot

was extracted. In some loan transactions, money was simply siphoned

out fraudulently to outsiders under lucrative arrangements with bank

directors; Neil Bush's record illustrates these type of transactions.

 

In other instances, as exemplified by Jeb's S & L dealings, loans were

made for speculative investments or ventures without attempts to

secure repayment if they were not profitable.

 

Political connections often helped protect S & L misconduct;9 in the

Bush's case, George senior's record demonstrated laxity toward the

perpetrators, several of whom were in his own social circles.

 

 

1. Stephen Pizzo, Mary Fricker and Paul Muolo, Inside Job: The Looting

of America's Savings and Loans. New York: McGraw- Hill, 1989.

2. New York: SPI Books, 1992.

3. LA Times, 7/31/1990, p. 1.

4. Pizzo, Inside Job, p. 305.

5. Ibid.

6. 123-6, 302

7. Jonathan Kwitny, " How Bush's Pals Broke the Banks, " The Village

Voice, 10/20/1992, p. 27.

8. Ibid.

9. Id., pp. 24ff.

 

 

NEIL BUSH.

In 1990, federal regulators filed a $200-million lawsuit against Neil

Bush and other officers of the Silverado Banking, accusing them of

" gross negligence " contributing to its $1 billion collapse.1 " Our

conclusion is that Silverado was the victim of sophisticated schemes

and abuses by insiders and of gross negligence by its directors and

outside professionals, " FDIC Senior Deputy General Counsel Douglas H.

Jones said in a statement.2

 

Bush was reprimanded by the Office of Thrift Supervision for " multiple

conflicts of interest " as a paid director of the S & L, including his

approval of $132 million in loans from Silverado to two business

partners, Bill Walters and Kenneth Good.3

 

Bush, in turn, had received $550,000 in salaries from a company funded

by Walters and Good plus a $100,000 loan from Good that was

subsequently forgiven.4

 

Walters and Good looted an estimated $330 million from Silverado; one

Silverado director had shared instructions on how to establish family

trusts to protect such secreted funds from repossession by the

government.5

 

A top federal regulator testified to Congress that Washington

officials postponed Silverado's shutdown from October to December

1988, after George Bush's presidential campaign was successfully

culminated.6

 

The director of the Office of Thrift Supervision asked the Treasury

Department to investigate whether political considerations caused the

delay, but no such probe was conducted.7 Neil got off paying only

$50,000 in a settlement of the $200 million federal suit against him

other Silverado directors.8

 

He didn't have to worry about his $250,000 legal bill, as Thomas

Ashley, a friend of George Bush senior and the head of a banking

association that was lobbying the federal government for bank

deregulation, formed a legal defense fund to pay the bills.9

 

1. LA Times, 9/23/1990, p. 1.

2. Ibid.

3. LA Times, 5/10/1992, p. 1; The Washington Post, 7/4/1992, p. A1.

4. Ibid.

5. Kwitny, The Village Voice, 10/20/1992, p. 32.

6. LA Times, 5/10/1992, p. 1.

7. Ibid.

8. Ibid.

9. Ibid.

 

 

 

JEB BUSH.

In 1987, Miguel Recarey, a longstanding business associate of Tampa

Mafia boss Santos Trafficante, fled the U.S. under three indictments

for labor racketeering, illegal wiretapping, and Medicare fraud.1

 

His firm, International Medical Centers (IMC), which was America's

largest health maintenance organization for the elderly and which had

received $1 billion in Medicare funds, collapsed.2 Recarey's HMO left

$222 million in unpaid bills,3 and was suspected of up to $100 million

in Medicare fraud.4

 

" IMC is the classic case of embezzlement of government funds, " said

William Teich, who headed the U.S. Office of Labor Racketeering in

Miami. Teich called it a " bust-out operation " where money was " drained

out the back door " and disappeared down " a black hole. " 5

 

But in 1985, Recarey had faced a major obstacle to building his

Medicare empire: a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

regulation that restricted an HMO to drawing no more than 50% of its

revenue from Medicare.6

 

Jeb Bush came to the rescue: he called both HHS Secretary Margaret

Heckler and a top aide, C. McLain Haddow and successfully convinced

them to waive the regulation for Recarey, Haddow testified to

Congress.7

 

Bush's lobbying of HHS took place during the same period that

top-level Republican lobbyists whom Recarey had hired for $1 million

were also courting HHS for the waiver.8 Bush said that said he did

not recall making any calls to Heckler or Haddow, but confirmed that

he made one call on Recarey's behalf to Haddow's assistant, to secure

Recarey a " fair hearing " within HHS.9

 

Haddow added in a news interview that in November 1984, Jeb had also

called Heckler and Haddow for Recarey about another problem -

complaints to HHS from doctors and patients about IMC's medical care

and allegations that Recarey had embezzled funds a few years earlier

from another hospital.10

 

Bush had told Haddow that " contrary to any rumors that were floating

around concerning Mr. Recarey, that he was a solid citizen from Mr.

Bush's perspective down there [in Miami], that he was a good community

citizen and a good supporter of the Republican Party. " 11

 

In 1986, the year after he successfully lobbied HHS to allow Recarey's

Medicare business to grow ultimately to a total of $1 billion, Jeb

Bush's small real estate firm received $75,000 from Recarey's HMO for

the purpose of finding it a new headquarters.12 Bush said that the

payment was unrelated to his lobbying for Recarey.13 But Bush never

did actually locate a headquarters for IMC, and the record suggests

that the HMO had already selected the headquarters it ultimately moved

into when it hired Bush.14 Jeb confirmed that he received $75,000

from Recarey without closing any real estate deals.15

 

Jeb's defaulted loan from Broward Federal Savings and Loan in Sunrise,

Florida transpired as follows.16 On February 1, 1985, Broward Federal

loaned $4,565,000 to real estate developer J. Edward Houston, secured

only by Houston's personal guarantee.

 

The same day, a company headed by Houston turned around and loaned the

same amount to a partnership of Jeb Bush and Miami real estate

developer Armondo Codina for them to buy a five-story building in

Miami's financial district.

 

Curiously, the Bush-Codina partnership was required to repay the loan

from Houston " only as, if and to the extent that the cash flow from

the building was sufficient to support those payments. " In fact, Bush

and Codina made no payments at all on the loan prior to the final

default settlement.

 

In 1987 Houston defaulted on the $4.5 million Broward Federal loan,

and the S & L sued both him and the Bush-Codina partnership. In an

unusual settlement with the FDIC, Bush and Codina were obligated to

repay just $500,000 of the loan and got to keep the building in the

Miami financial district that collateralized the loan.

 

In 1991, federal regulators sued the officers and directors of

Broward, charging that the loan used by Bush and Codina cost the

savings and loan at least $4.97 million and was representative of the

association's negligent lending practices.17 The Bush-Codina loan

contributed to the collapse of the Florida S & L, which cost taxpayers

$285 million.18

 

1. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1.

2. Ibid.; Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4.

3. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1.

4. Austin American- Statesman, 5/17/92, p. G1.

5. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1.

6. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1; Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4.

7. Ibid.

8. Ibid.

9. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1; Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4.

10. Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4

11. Ibid.

12. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1; Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4.

13. Ibid.

14. Newsday, 10/3/1988, p. 4.

15. Ibid.

16. Washington Post, 10/15/1990, p. A24.

17. Austin American- Statesman, 5/17/92, p. G1.

18. Washington Post, 10/15/1990, p. A24.

 

 

 

GEORGE W. BUSH. In 1992, US News and World Report concluded that in

one important respect, " George W. Bush has less in common with his

father than with his younger brother Neil, " having " also benefited

from some questionable but less well-known business associations. " 1

It noted, in particular, that

 

Bush sold $828,560 worth of Harken stock [on June 20, 1990] just one

week before the company stock posted unusually poor quarterly earnings

and Harken stock plunged sharply. Shares lost more than 60% of their

value over 6 months.

 

When Bush sold his shares, he was a member of a company committee studying the

effect of Harken's restructuring, a move to appease anxious creditors.

According to documents on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, his

position on the Harken committee gave Bush detailed knowledge of the company's

deteriorating financial condition.

 

The SEC received word of Bush's trade eight months late. Bush has said he filed

the notice but that is was lost.2

 

UPDATE. On September 7, 2000, Associated Press reported that U.S.

Securities and Exchange Commission documents newly released under the

Freedom of Information act demonstrated that before he sold the stock,

George W. Bush was fully aware that Harken was suffering from a severe

cash crisis and was poised to lose millions.3

 

Two months before the stock sale, Harken President Mikel Faulkner had told Bush

and other directors that " the full capacity of the company is dedicated toward

resolving this liquidity crisis. " 4

 

Bush's lawyer, Robert Jordan, explained that these documents had been

provided to the SEC a decade ago and contributed to its finding that

Bush's trading was appropriate.5 Jordan also related some

circumstances of the trade that he said demonstrated this was the case.6

 

In fact, however, the SEC had not exonerated Bush. On October 18,

1993, Bruce A. Hiler, the SEC's associate director for enforcement,

wrote a letter to Bush's lawyer stating that " the investigation has

been terminated as to the conduct of Mr. Bush, and that, at this time,

no enforcement action is contemplated with respect to him. " 7

 

Bush claimed he had been cleared, and the head of the SEC's enforcement

division, William McLucas, went beyond the letter and stated that " there was no

case there. " 8

 

Yet Hiler's official letter had added that it " must in no way be

construed as indicating that the party has been exonerated or that no

action may ultimately result from the staff's investigation [emphasis

added]. " 9 It is also noteworthy that the head of the SEC at the time

of the probe was a staunch supporter of then-President Bush, as was

the SEC's general counsel (who later acted as George W's private

attorney),10 which could provide some context for McLucas's differing

perspective.

 

While Bush's lawyer, Robert Jordan, readily explained away Bush's

stock sale a decade after the fact, all parties involved were less

talkative when the incident was initially reported. George W.

declined repeated requests for interviews from U.S. News and World

Reports in 1992, explaining that he " [did] not wish to read about

himself. " 11 He likewise declined phone calls from The Wall Street

Journal seeking comment.12 When questioned in 1999 by The Washington

Post, Jordan, who had also represented Harken, referred to a Harken

communiqué and minutes that he claimed would support his story, but

refused to provide them.13 The company president, who had spoken with

reporters on several prior occasions, refused the Post's request for

an interview about Bush's stock sale, as did the company counsel.14

 

Indeed, Bush's delayed explanation for his Harken sale is

questionable, especially in the context of financial misconduct by

several others in his family and of Bush's lack of credibility

concerning a recent campaign impropriety. Also questionable were, as

The Wall Street Journal detailed, Harken's links to the infamous Bank

of Credit and Commerce International (BBCI), which was shut down in

1991 after a $10 billion global looting spree.15 " The mosaic of BCCI

connections surrounding Harken Energy may prove nothing more than how

ubiquitous the rogue bank's ties were, " The Wall Street Journal noted.

" But the number of BCCI-connected people who had dealings with Harken

-- all since George W. Bush came on board -- likewise raises the

question of whether they mask an effort to cozy up to a presidential

son. " 16

 

George W's financial history exhibits other similarities to brother

Neil's. Just as Apex Energy paid Neil Bush over $300,000 in salaries

and oil deed compensation while on the verge of insolvency,17 Harken,

despite its small size, poor performance and large losses, paid

unusually high salaries and benefits to Bush and other directors.18

 

Although Harken, as US News and World Report noted, was " characterized

by a pattern of financial deal making so burdened with debt and

tangled stock swaps that its largest creditors threatened to shut the

company down, " Bush and other directors were allowed to purchase stock

options at a 40% discount through company loans that were often

forgiven.19

 

In 1990, without any experience drilling an oil well overseas or in

water, Harken received a contract to drill offshore wildcat wells from

the government of Bahrain, reminiscent of a contract Neil Bush's small

oil firm had received in 1987 to drill for oil in Argentina.20

 

Bahrain officials explained they had no idea the President's son was involved

with Harken, but a Harken source told The New York Times there was " never any

question " about George W. Bush's involvement.21

 

The Wall Street Journal noted that in his purchase of the Texas

Rangers baseball team, following " a pattern repeated through his

business career, Mr. Bush's play did not quite make the grade. " 22 In

1989, an investment group he led was given preferential treatment to

buy the Texas Rangers baseball team by its seller, a friend of George

senior.23

 

When his bid proved deficient, baseball commissioner Peter

Ueberroth brought another financier into the deal; he did this in part

" out of respect for his father, " President Bush, according to a source

close to the negotiations.24

 

Bush later successfully promoted a controversial arrangement in which the City

of Arlington provided a $135 million subsidy for a new ballpark, funded by a

sales tax increase, with an option for the team to repurchase the park at a

vastly reduced price.25 The upshot was that George W. earned $15 million on a

$600,000 investment when he sold his share of the team in 1998.26

 

1. US News and World Report, 3/16/1992, pp. 57-59.

2. Ibid.

3. Peter Yost, " Crisis at Bush's Oil Company, " AP Online, 9/7/2000.

4. Ibid.

5. Ibid.

6. Ibid.

7. Washington Post, 7/30/1999, p. A1.

8. Ibid.

9. Ibid.

10. Peter Yost, " Crisis at Bush's Oil Company, " AP Online, 9/7/2000.

11. US News and World Report, 3/16/1992, pp. 57-59.

12. Wall Street Journal, 4/4/91, p. A4.

13. Washington Post, 7/30/1999, p. A1.

14. Ibid.

15. Wall Street Journal, 12/6/1991, p. A4; see Wall Street Journal,

9/28/1999, p. A26.

16. Ibid.

17. San Francisco Examiner, 9/15/92, p. A9; LA Times, 5/10/1992, p.

1; Washington Post, 7/4/1992, p. A1.

18. US News and World Report, 3/16/1992, pp. 57-59.

19. Ibid.

20. Wall Street Journal, 12/6/1991, p. A4.

21. Wall Street Journal, 9/28/1999, p. A26.

22. Ibid.

23. Ibid.; NY Times 5/8/1999, p. 1.

24. Wall Street Journal, 9/28/1999, p. A26; NY Times, 5/8/1999, p. 1.

25. Washington Post 7/25/2000, p. A1, 7/31/1999, p. A1.

26. Wall Street Journal, 9/28/1999, p. A26.

 

 

GEORGE BUSH, SENIOR.

 

A 20,000-word report by the late Jonathan Kwitny, an award-winning

investigative journalist for PBS and The Wall Street Journal, on

President Bush's record with respect to S & L misconduct, is excepted

here. Also noteworthy was the disbanding of the federal independent

strike forces against organized crime during the first year of Bush's

presidency.

 

In December 1989, the Bush Administration dismantled all 14 of the

regional strike forces and folded them into the Justice Department.1

Attorney General Richard Thornburgh took this step despite widespread

protests from Congress and law enforcement officials that it would

cripple federal efforts against organized crime.2

 

Indeed, during their two decades of operation, the independent strike

forces had made enormous progress against organized crime, and had

played key roles in convictions of Mafia bosses in major U.S. cities

throughout the country.3 In contrast, after strike forces were

abolished in New Orleans, New York City, Pittsburgh and St. Louis in

1977 years ago by then-Assistant Attorney General Thornburgh,

gangland-related crime increased in each city, and the New Orleans

strike force was subsequently re-established under the Carter

administration.4

 

A federal strike force against organized crime in Miami had brought an

indictment against Miguel Recarey,5 for whom Jeb Bush had successfully

lobbied the federal government, while others such strike forces

nationwide prosecuted Mob figures involved in S & L fraud.6 Strike

Force efforts helped convict, among others, Mario Renda, who, working

with the Mob, brokered deposits into 130 S & Ls nationwide, all of which

failed.

 

 

 

1. Washington Post, 12/28/1989, p. A21; San Diego Union-Tribune,

1/1/1990, p. B8.

2. Ibid.

3. San Diego Union-Tribune, 1/1/1990, p. B8.

4. Ibid.

5. Wall Street Journal, 8/9/1988, p. A1.

6. Pizzo, Inside Job, pp. pp. 112, 120-23, 303, 337

 

 

JONATHAN BUSH.

 

The securities chief for the Massachusetts Secretary of State, Neal

Sullivan, said that Jonathan Bush compounded his situation by taking a

" cavalier " attitude toward the violation of the Uniform Securities Act

when he continued to carry out stock transactions within the state

even as state regulators were negotiating a consent decree with him.

 

" That created great concern for us. We were dismayed, " Sullivan

commented. " Anyone who has been notified that he is violating state

law and continues to do so certainly exemplifies a cavalier attitude

toward the registration laws. " Sullivan also said that Bush, an

experienced stockbroker, could not explain his failure to register in

the state as a technical or minor issue. " Any time you have 880

transactions over several years, I wouldn't characterize that as

minor, " he said.1

 

1. Boston Globe, 7/26/1991, p. 1

 

 

PRESCOTT BUSH.

In 1989, when Japanese organized crime elements were seeking to extend

their financial interests into the U.S.,1 Prescott Bush arranged

investments by a Japanese Mob front company in two U.S. businesses and

a large piece of U.S. land.2

The Japanese company, West Tsusho, was identified by Japanese police

as a front company for one of Japan's largest organized crime

syndicates.3

 

Bush was paid $500,000 for help in arranging the company's purchase of

a controlling interest of one U.S. firm, Assets Management,4 and also

helped the Japanese Mob front to invest in Quantam access, a U.S.

software firm; it ultimately took complete control.5

 

Both U.S. companies subsequently filed for bankruptcy.6 Bush denied

any knowledge of the Japanese Mob's role in these deals,7 which came

under investigation by both a U.S. bankruptcy court-appointed

trustee,8 and the Japanese police.9

 

Also in 1989, Prescott flew twice to China as a paid advisor for

Assets Management to promote a company plan to link Chinese

universities and businesses into a Satellite communications network.10

Later that year, President Bush granted a national security waiver

for the sale of two Hughes Aircraft company satellites to China, a

move that Assets Management officials described as advantageous for

its proposed plans.11

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...