Los Angeles Times

How the rich hide their cash

The ‘ Panama Papers’ leak apparently reveals a complex network of financial shenanigan­s.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — From Vladimir Putin’s best friend to the prime minister of Iceland and a revered soccer star, many of the world’s rich and powerful on Monday were scurrying for cover after the release of the socalled Panama Papers, possibly one of the largest leaks of secret intelligen­ce ever and one that apparently reveals a vast network of financial shenanigan­s.

The documents from a Panamanian law f irm were obtained by several internatio­nal news outlets and published over the weekend. They appear to show how a who’s who in the global political and business elite — and maybe drug trafficker­s — have mounted complex systems to hide money in offshore accounts.

By itself, it is not illegal to hold money overseas. But the implicatio­n is that many of those mentioned evaded taxes or that money illicitly obtained was laundered through such clandestin­e networks.

As the scandal widened, country after country, as well as many of the prominent f igures mentioned, issued denials and statements of indignatio­n. Activist groups, meanwhile, demanded investigat­ions into the tax havens provided by countries such as Panama and the Seychelles.

The ability to move and stash money secretly is the key weapon in any prosperous illicit business. It allows tyrants to loot nations, tycoons to rob consumers.

Laundered money is the fuel that keeps organized crime, smugglers and drug cartels running smoothly and profitably.

The Panama Papers could provide investigat­ive leads to authoritie­s as well as journalist­s for months if not years.

The Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, which took the lead in examining and publishing the trove of more than 11 million documents dating to 1977, said the informatio­n appears to show that the Panamanian law f irm Mossack Fonseca establishe­d shell companies and offshore accounts to help hundreds of people move their money.

Twelve current or former top government leaders, 61 of their associates, other politician­s and thousands of businesses are named in the documents, the group said. An anonymous source f irst leaked the papers to the Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung newspaper in Munich, Germany, last year, and it in turn shared them with a number of outlets.

From Russia to China, from Iceland to Argentina, the revelation­s were explosive.

There was no official reaction in China to allegation­s that relatives of President Xi Jinping were squirrelin­g away money. It appeared the reports were being censored on the Chinese mainland.

Iceland’s prime minister, Sigmundur Gunnlaugss­on, rejected opposition calls to resign after his wife’s name surfaced in the documents.

Two of Mexico’s leading television executives were among those named, along with a major constructi­on tycoon, Juan Armando Hinojosa Cantu, whose work for President Enrique Peña Nieto already sparked allegation­s of corruption. There was no immediate response from Hinojosa.

France and Australia immediatel­y opened investigat­ions into possible moneylaund­ering and tax evasion.

Italy’s tax agency plans to request access to the names in the Panama Papers as it prepares to launch its own inquiry. There are about 1,000 Italians listed, according to the magazine L’Espresso, which helped sift through the leaked data.

As for Putin, the Russian president, associates were reportedly tied to more than $ 2 billion in secret loans. The associates include Sergei Roldugin, an unassuming cellist described as Putin’s best friend.

“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 Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s said.

“Honestly speaking, I can’t comment on this,” Roldugin was quoted as saying in the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta. “I have to see and understand what I can say and can’t. I am simply afraid to be interviewe­d.”

On Monday, the Kremlin dismissed the allegation­s as part of a smear campaign targeting Putin.

Khulubuse Zuma, the nephew of South African President Jacob Zuma, appeared in the Panama Papers because of interests in oil f ields in the Democratic Republic of Congo through an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands. The deal was made several years ago amid suggestion­s he might have received favoritism through his uncle. The younger Zuma denied wrongdoing in the deal then and asserted now there was nothing new in the latest reports.

In Pakistan, an already embattled Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif found himself on the defensive after the documents alleged that three of his children maintained offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands that they use to own half a dozen properties overlookin­g London’s Hyde Park. Sharif himself was not implicated, and his government defended the children’s property arrangemen­ts.

In yet another twist involving the scandal- plagued FIFA organizati­on, which governs worldwide soccer, the documents revealed a business relationsh­ip between a member of the group’s ethics committee and three men indicted on charges of paying bribes and other misdeeds, the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s said.

Meanwhile, soccer’s best player, the Argentine Lionel Messi, is tied to a Panamanian shell company in the papers, the consortium reported. He is already under investigat­ion on suspicion of tax evasion in Spain, where he plays.

Mossack Fonseca, the law firm, denied wrongdoing and issued a statement saying that the informatio­n ricochetin­g around the planet was full of inaccuraci­es and that its industry practices are misunderst­ood.

“The facts are these: While we may have been the victim of a data breach, nothing we’ve seen in this illegally obtained cache of documents suggests we’ve done anything illegal, and that’s very much in keeping with the global reputation we’ve built over the past 40 years of doing business the right way, right here in Panama,” the statement said. “Obviously, no one likes to have their property stolen, and we intend to do whatever we can to ensure the guilty parties are brought to justice.”

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal, a nonprofit organizati­on that studies corruption and secret f inancial practices, praised the document dump for “shedding light into the murky world of secret offshore companies.” Companies can incorporat­e in the U. S. without revealing sources of money.

tracy. wilkinson @ latimes. com Times staff writers Shashank Bengali, Jonathan Kaiman and Robyn Dixon contribute­d to this report from Mumbai, India, Beijing and Johannesbu­rg, South Africa, respective­ly. Special correspond­ents Mansur Mirovalev and Aoun Sahi reported from Moscow and Islamabad, Pakistan, respective­ly.

 ?? Birgir Por Hardarson European Pressphoto Agency ?? PROTESTERS in Reykjavik, Iceland, call for the prime minister to resign after his wife’s name surfaced in the “Panama Papers.”
Birgir Por Hardarson European Pressphoto Agency PROTESTERS in Reykjavik, Iceland, call for the prime minister to resign after his wife’s name surfaced in the “Panama Papers.”
 ?? European Pressphoto Agency ?? I CELAND Prime Minister Sigmundur Gunnlaugss­on said he would not step down.
European Pressphoto Agency I CELAND Prime Minister Sigmundur Gunnlaugss­on said he would not step down.

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