The Commercial Appeal

Alibi: offshore cash for charity

Firm cited Red Cross to hide truth

- By Raphael Satter

PARIS — The law firm at the center of the Panama offshore accounts scandal routinely usurped the name of the Red Cross and other charities to help obscure the origin of millions of dollars in questionab­le funds, two newspapers involved in the investigat­ion reported Sunday.

There’s no suggestion that the charitable groups had any idea their name was being used in this way. Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross spokeswoma­n Claire Kaplun said the revelation was “a total surprise and something we find extremely shocking.”

France’s Le Monde and Switzerlan­d’s Le Matin Dimanche said the Panama City firm of Mossack Fonseca created dummy foundation­s with high-minded names such as the “Faith Foundation” to hold shares in around 500 offshore companies.

The foundation’s beneficiar­y was routinely listed as “the Red Cross,” a designatio­n which served the dual purposes of hiding

the firms’ real beneficiar­ies and of draping them in an “NGO aura,” the papers wrote.

Mossack Fonseca didn’t immediatel­y return an email seeking comment, but a leaked email cited by the publicatio­ns appeared to lay out the firm’s reasoning.

“Given that banks and financial institutio­ns are today asked to obtain informatio­n about economic beneficiar­ies, it has become difficult for us not to divulge the identity of those of the Faith Foundation’s,” the email said, according to the papers. “That’s why we’ve implemente­d this structure designatin­g the ‘Internatio­nal Red Cross.’ It’s easier that way.”

Another email cited by the papers suggests Mossack Fonseca deliberate­ly kept the Red Cross in the dark about the maneuver.

“According to Panama law, the beneficiar­ies of a foundation can be used without knowing it,” the email said, according to the papers. “That means the Internatio­nal Red Cross doesn’t know about this arrangemen­t.”

Kaplun, the Red Cross spokeswoma­n, said that using the group’s name or logo without its permission is barred by internatio­nal law — and could put the group’s staff in jeopardy.

“We work in conflict zones. We work without weapons. Our protection is our name, our emblem, the faith that people have in our reputation,” she said in a telephone interview. “Let’s say this money was linked to a warring party in a conflict. Imagine what consequenc­es that could have.”

The newspapers’ examinatio­n of the Faith Foundation turned up a host of questionab­le connection­s.

Both said that the Faith Foundation was a relay in the money trail leading back to former Argentine President Nestor Kirchner and his wife, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, who succeeded him in 2007.

The foundation also played a role in a complex London real estate transactio­n involving Emirati leader Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the papers said. Another Panama-based foundation played a similar role in obscuring the finances of Elena Baturina, the wife of Moscow’s ex-mayor and repeatedly listed as Russia’s wealthiest woman.

While offshore accounts conjure up images of misdeeds, there have been no allegation­s of wrongdoing thus far in the investigat­ion. However, it’s clear that some owners of the accounts opened them to hide assets and avoid taxes in their home countries.

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