Houston Chronicle

‘Panama Papers’ raising questions

Putin, Iceland’s PM among those linked to shell companies

- By Tim Johnson and Marisa Taylor

The U.S. and British government­s vow to examine more closely the foreign politician­s and tycoons who hide fortunes in secret offshore accounts.

WASHINGTON — The U.S. and British government­s Monday vowed to examine more closely foreign politician­s and tycoons who hide fortunes in secret offshore accounts even as government­s across the globe felt a wave of public anger over leaders with hidden assets.

Thousands of protesters gathered in Iceland’s capital of Reykjavik to demand the ouster of that nation’s leader over revelation­s of his offshore holdings. Riot police stood nearby, but the protest remained peaceful.

Inside Iceland’s parliament, opposition legislator­s considered a no-confidence vote of Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on, a move that would lead to fresh elections, over news that he did not properly disclose his ties to Wintris Inc., a British Virgin Islands company with money tied to the nation’s collapsed banks. Gunnlaugss­on denied that his ownership was a conflict of interest, insisted he’d broken no laws and said he would not resign.

No U.S. politician­s of note

From the White House to the Kremlin, and on to Panama City, Vienna and London, government­s reacted to the disclosure of the so-called Panama Papers, a law firm’s once-secret database that details the offshore interests of 12 current or former world leaders, as well as 128 other politician­s and public officials.

No U.S. politician­s of note were found in the archives of the Mossack Fonseca law firm, a global leader in setting up offshore corporatio­ns. The U.S. Justice Department signaled that it could focus its gaze more intently on political corruption even when it occurs outside of U.S. borders.

“While we cannot comment on the specifics of these alleged documents, the U.S. Department of Justice takes very seriously all credible allegation­s of high level, foreign corruption that might have a link to the United States or the U.S. financial system,” Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest called the Obama administra­tion a leader “in working against illicit financial transactio­ns and in fighting corruption” and added that it would push to promote more financial transparen­cy.

But Earnest defended one key U.S. ally, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, who is under fire after the so-called Panama Papers revealed a secret offshore company in the British Virgin Islands set up in his name. Known as the “chocolate king” because of his candy business, Poroshenko is one of Ukraine’s richest men.

Names to be released in May

The Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, the Washington-based nonprofit that oversaw the collaborat­ive media project, is expected to make public the names of the thousands of clients, shareholde­rs and owners of offshore companies in May.

A former IRS official said the agency likely will look into the findings.

“Once the IRS becomes aware of the identities of these people, I almost can guarantee you that they will do some kind of triaging of the data to see if there are U.S. people in there and based on the results of that, they may elect to go after people,” said Daniel Reeves, who helped create the IRS offshore compliance unit before retiring in 2012.

Britain wants the leaked trove so it can “act on it swiftly and appropriat­ely,” said Jennie Granger, director general of enforcemen­t and compliance at the United Kingdom’s Revenue & Custom office.

“Our message is clear: There are no safe havens for tax evaders, and no one should be in any doubt that the days of hid- ing money offshore are gone,” Granger said in a statement.

Spokespeop­le for world leaders linked directly or indirectly to offshore holdings administer­ed by Mossack Fonseca challenged the revelation­s.

Musician is one focus

State-controlled media in Russia defended President Vladimir Putin. Some of his oldest friends manage offshore companies that have shuffled through as much as $2 billion, documents in the archives reveal.

One focus was Sergei Roldugin, a profession­al cellist and childhood friend of Russian president. Roldugin was listed as the owner of companies that obtained payments from other companies worth tens of millions of dollars, and of a stake in Bank Rossiya, described by the U.S. Treasury as “designated for providing material support to government officials.”

“The evidence in the files suggests Roldugin is acting as a front man for a network of Putin loyalists — and perhaps for Putin himself,” the consortium said. Roldugin was unavailabl­e for comment Monday. A receptioni­st at the St. Petersburg House of Music, where he is artistic director, said he was not in.

“The degree of ‘Putinophob­ia’ has reached a point where to speak well about Russia ?¦ is impossible,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in Moscow, according to RT News, a government­backed outlet.

Peskov lashed out at ICIJ, the group that obtained the leaked archives from Germany’s Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung newspaper and shared them with some 110 media organizati­ons around the world, including McClatchy, the only U.S. newspaper company with access to the data trove.

‘We need sharper action’

Media outlets in 76 countries took part in the collaborat­ive investigat­ion, and the fallout ricocheted around the globe. The same public anger bubbling in Iceland erupted in places like Austria, where two banks were mentioned in the investigat­ion for helping wealthy individual­s funnel money offshore to skirt taxes.

Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann issued a statement Monday calling for the European Union to monitor more rigorously money-laundering through offshore havens.

“We need sharper action against non-cooperativ­e third countries,” Faymann said. “For countries whose business model evidently consists of disguising tax fraud through companies with a mail drop, there must be sanctions.”

In Buenos Aires, the presidenti­al office said the father of President Mauricio Macri had declared a Bahamian offshore company, Fleg Trading Ltd, on his tax forms but that Macri had not because he was never a company shareholde­r. It was formed in 1998, long before Macri came to office.

Panama’s President, Juan Carlos Varela, said in a statement that his government would collaborat­e with any foreign government seeking informatio­n linked to the Mossack Fonseca law firm.

 ?? AFP / Getty Images ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin’s friend Sergei Roldugin has been implicated.
AFP / Getty Images Russian President Vladimir Putin’s friend Sergei Roldugin has been implicated.
 ?? Brynjar Gunnarsson / Associated Press ?? Thousands of protesters descended on Reykjavik on Monday to demand the resignatio­n of Iceland Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on over details in the “Panama Papers.”
Brynjar Gunnarsson / Associated Press Thousands of protesters descended on Reykjavik on Monday to demand the resignatio­n of Iceland Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugss­on over details in the “Panama Papers.”
 ??  ?? Gunnlaugss­on
Gunnlaugss­on

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