Houston Chronicle

Fugitive’s trail reveals how assets hidden

- By Martha Mendoza

The Bangkok billionair­e family that co-founded Red Bull, the world’s leading energy drink, uses offshore companies to cloak purchases of jets and luxury properties, including the posh London home where the clan’s fugitive son was last seen.

The Yoovidhya family’s efforts to hide assets show how easily major global financial players can routinely — and, usually, legally — move billions of dollars with little or no oversight.

The family’s confidenti­al deals were inadverten­tly exposed by the jet-setting son Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, who has attracted cries of impunity in Thailand after repeatedly failing to show up in court for allegedly racing away in his Ferrari after a deadly accident with a motorcycle police officer almost five years ago. More than 120 Instagram and Facebook postings by friends and family led the Associated Press earlier this year to the Yoovidhyas’ London vacation home, where Vorayuth refused to comment.

Thai authoritie­s revoked his passport and issued an arrest warrant but say they don’t know where he is.

Now the investigat­ion into Vorayuth’s whereabout­s has led to the Panama Papers, a collection of 11 million secret financial documents that illustrate how the world’s wealthiest families hide their money, including some of the Yoovidhya family’s financial arrangemen­ts.

The Panama Papers leak first was obtained by the German newspaper Sudeutsche Zeitung and shared with the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, which began publishing collaborat­ive reports with news organizati­ons in 2016, putting wealthy and powerful people in more than 70 countries under scrutiny.

Since then, political leaders have been ousted, an estimated $135 billion was wiped off the value of nearly 400 companies, and government­s are cracking down on offshore tax havens. Founders of the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, which owned the leaked documents, were charged earlier this year with money-laundering.

The Yoovidhya family’s network of offshore companies — set up by Mossack Fonseca — was so complex that, until now, the family name and Red Bull brand had not been exposed. But the Panama Papers shared with the AP show the family has used at least a half-dozen anonymous companies in tax havens for more than two decades.

The Yoovidhyas, who share ownership of Red Bull with Austrian Dietrich Mateschitz, did not respond to requests for comment. Red Bull said in a statement that Vorayuth’s legal situation “is not a matter for Red Bull” and that the company’s financial matters are private.

Vorayuth was last seen in public in April, outside his family’s London home.

The five-story brick house is the address Vorayuth’s father, Chalerm Yoovidhya, provided when incorporat­ing Thai Siam Winery Ltd. in the UK in 2002, and that his mother, Daranee Yoovidhya, used when opening a food-related business there in 2006.

The listed owner of the home, and at least four other multimilli­on-dollar properties in London, isn’t the Yoovidhyas — it’s Karnforth Investment­s Ltd., incorporat­ed in the British Virgin Islands, according to the Panama Papers.

Even though the Yoovidhyas and Mateschitz own Red Bull, the main shareholde­r of the energy drink’s United Kingdom business is another British Virgin Islands company called Jerrard Company Ltd.

Here’s where it gets complicate­d: Karnforth has just one shareholde­r: Jerrard. And Jerrard is held by a third offshore company, which controls a fourth, JK Fly. Who owns JK Fly? Karnforth.

The Yoovidhyas’ offshore companies overlap with stand-in brokers, secretarie­s, directors and officers — people legally paid small amounts to sign forms and attend directors meetings in lieu of the true owners, whose names remain confidenti­al.

For years, money has flowed between the various entities, documents show. For example, in 2005, Jerrard loaned Karnforth $6.5 million to buy two London properties. In 2012, Jerrard canceled the mortgages, giving Karnforth ownership. Since 2010, JK Fly has owed Karnforth, its sole shareholde­r, about $14 million in an interest-free loan to purchase aircraft.

“Anonymous money transfers? Those are pretty common in illegal schemes, but they’re also common in legal schemes,” said Australia’s Griffith University professor Jason Sharman, who researches financial corruption.

What matters, Sharman said, is that the agents moving the money know who the true owners are.

Thailand doesn’t meet basic internatio­nal frameworks to combat moneylaund­ering and terrorist financing, said Sumaporn Manason, a legal expert at the Thai Ministry of Finance. And tax avoidance — that is, keeping money anonymousl­y in offshore accounts — is legal and common.

As a result, she said, Thailand misses out on much-needed revenues that could build bridges, highways and schools.

“Here we call it tax planning,” she said.

 ?? Matt Dunham / Associated Press file ?? Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, whose grandfathe­r co-founded Red Bull, leaves a house in London in April. The investigat­ion into his whereabout­s has led to the Panama Papers, which illustrate how the world’s wealthiest families hide money.
Matt Dunham / Associated Press file Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya, whose grandfathe­r co-founded Red Bull, leaves a house in London in April. The investigat­ion into his whereabout­s has led to the Panama Papers, which illustrate how the world’s wealthiest families hide money.

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