Starkville Daily News

Capital idea: Seize the oligarchs' Manhattan penthouses

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The poisoning of a

Russian ex-spy in the

English countrysid­e has roused Britons to two truths: Vladimir

Putin regards their country as an easy mark, but it's also an extremely pleasant place for his oligarchs to live. Americans, take note.

Finally, finally, there's talk of hitting back at Putin where his filthy-rich cronies hurt — their mansions, Bentleys and other baubles of the posh life in Britain. A study released by Deutsche Bank in 2015 says that Russians were a major source of the $129 billion that had made its way into Britain through secret offshore dealings the previous nine years.

So many Kremlin insiders have made opulent nests in the environs of No. 10 Downing St. that an anti-Putin activist runs what he calls a "klepto tour" of London. As one example, Putin sidekick Roman Abramovich owns a $163 million house right across from Kensington Palace.

The Russian loot, much of it stolen under Putin's wink, flows into Britain greased by laws only pretending to monitor its source. The story repeated itself in Manhattan, where money of murky provenance has spiked the prices of palatal properties.

One cannot discuss Russian money and luxury real estate without touching on the subject of developer Donald Trump. His dealings with the klepto buyers are now legendary.

That helps explain the president's weakkneed response to Russian aggression against our democratic institutio­ns. And it helps explain Trump's apparent panic at special counsel Robert Mueller's growing interest in the Trump Organizati­on.

There is nothing illegal about foreigners buying U.S. property. People from all over do so, seeing choice real estate in New York, Miami and other elite cities as safe places to stash their money.

But the phenomenon has fostered an elaborate web of intermedia­ries tasked with cleaning up ill-gotten gains and moving them into respectabl­e real estate. That often involves using shell companies to hide the buyers' identities. The Treasury Department has begun tightening the rules governing such ownership.

Its Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network now requires U.S. title insurance companies to name the people behind all-cash offers for high-end homes in several geographic­al zones: New York City, Miami to Palm Beach, the Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego areas, and the county that includes San Antonio, Bexar County.

Three months before Trump announced his run for the presidency, the Treasury's financial crimes unit slapped a $10 million penalty against the Trump Taj Mahal casino resort in Atlantic City for "willful and repeated

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