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BCCI liquidators awarded US$2.1 billion in damages

The Court of Appeals in the Cayman Islands has awarded damages of US$2.1 billion to the liquidators of BCCI-affiliate International Credit and Investment Company and ICIC-subsidiary Finance International and Investment Limited.

Satellite firm re-domiciles from Norway to Cayman

A US$500 million major international satellite launching company will move its headquarters from Norway to the Cayman Islands later this year for tax purposes, the company has announced.Sea Launch, which is owned by Boeing, Kvarner Shipping of Norway, a Russian technology firm and two Ukrainian companies, expects the move to take place in December.

Bankruptcy action in Cayman against Peter Kruger

Four years after filing an apparently false bankruptcy in Switzerland, Swiss national Peter Kruger is again subject to bankruptcy proceedings - this time in his adopted home of the Cayman Islands.

First Cayman Bank and Gulf Union in financial trouble

The future of First Cayman Bank and its parent, Gulf Union Bank, which also has a Bahamas subsidiary, has been subject to speculation over the last month after the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority blocked the appointment of a new general manager, forced through its own choice and alluded to "problems" at First Cayman.

Ansbacher fires its New York correspondent bank

Ansbacher (Bahamas) Ltd. has fired its New York correspondent bank for providing confidential information about its account to the IRS without notifying the offshore bank first.And Ansbacher itself has been reprimanded by the Central Bank of the Bahamas for failing to inform the body quickly enough that the IRS was seeking information about its clients.

Have you heard the one about John Felderhof’s lie detector test?

Lawyers acting for John Felderhof, the former chief geologist at Bre-X Minerals who by simple logic is either one of the most incompetent geologists in the history of geology or a crook, caused some amusement this week when they claimed he had passed a lie detector test - held in private at a Cayman hotel without a policeman in sight.

PLP lose Pindling seat in Bahamas

The ruling Free National Movement party gained another seat in the Bahamian parliament when it won a by-election in the South Andros constituency, which the opposition Progressive Liberal Party had held for 41 years.The seat had been vacated by former Prime Minister and PLP leader Sir Lynden Pindling, who had represented South Andros for 30 years before retiring from politics after his party's humiliating defeat in the March 14 general election.

Cayman businessmen reunite (in prison)

Ernest Foster, a Caymanian citizen who was sentenced to 14 years in prison by a US court in 1992 for money-laundering offences, has been returned to Cayman to serve out the remainder of his sentence in Northward Prison, where he will be reunited with his former business partner, Barry Randall.

John Tugwell announces resignation as Bank of Butterfield CEO after just 15 weeks

The shock resignation of Bank of Butterfield CEO John Tugwell last week just 15 weeks into a five-year contract remains a mystery.Unusually for a small community like Bermuda, no-one appears to know with any certainty exactly why Tugwell announced his resignation, which will take effect once a replacement is found.

Robin Spencer-Arscott attempts to set up new Bermuda insurer

Robin Spencer-Arscott, who lost his position as chairman of Aon Re and Aon Risk Services in Bermuda after Aon's acquisition of Alexander & Alexander, is believed to be close to setting up a new $300-$400 million reinsurer in Bermuda.Details of the new reinsurer have not been announced but Spencer-Arscott has been telling insurance people that he hopes to have the company up and running by the Rendezvous de Septembre gathering in Monte Carlo next month.

US Security Alert on Bahamas is lifted

A US Security Alert warning Americans of the dangers of being in The Bahamas was lifted after several days, much to the relief of the tourism industry.

Caribbean islands target offshore gaming industry

Already home to many of the world's phone sex companies, the Dominican Republic has now firmly established itself as the domicile of choice for another controversial area of offshore business and one of the fastest-growing - gambling via ‘800' telephone numbers and over the internet.With annual licences running from $20,000 to $100,000, several Caribbean islands are looking to the sector as a lucrative revenue-earner.

UK reviews status of tax free citizens

British citizens living in Dependent Territories must wait and see whether a review of global British taxation affects their tax-free status.A high level spokesperson for the UK Treasury Department, who did not want to be named, said that "reviews of areas of tax avoidance" are currently underway at the Inland Revenue Service.

Over 100 BCCI-related lawsuits filed in Cayman, Crown Prince of Dubai among defendants

Lawyers acting for the liquidator of the Bank of Credit & Commerce International have swamped the Cayman court system by bringing over 100 lawsuits against people who borrowed money from the bank and foreign banks and insurers it did business with.A defendant in two of the actions brought at the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands is the Crown Prince of Dubai and the Minister of Defence for the United Arab Emirates, His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum.

Yugoslavia government sues Cayman bank

The Bank of New York's Cayman branch is being sued for allegedly failing to repay deposits placed by the Federal Directorate of Supply & Procurement in Yugoslavia and for allegedly transferring US$2.1 million to a blocked account on Wall Street without the client's permission.

F. Lee Bailey flies to Cayman to meet with Felderhof

Lawyer F. Lee Bailey, best-known for being part of OJ Simpson's ‘Dream Team' of defence attorneys, flew to the Cayman Islands recently and met with an attorney acting for John Felderhof, the disgraced former vice-president of Bre-X mining company.Andreas Kontrimas, a Houston-based lawyer for Felderhof, confirmed that Bailey and Toronto attorney Joe Groia, also a member of the Felderhof defence team, met recently in Cayman.

Cayman tax initiative – latest

Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the UK and Cayman Islands governments are still denying the existence of an initiative from London requesting that Cayman begin co-operating with tax investigations carried out by G7 countries, as was reported last month by Offshore Alert.The ‘does it or doesn't it exist' debate has reached almost farcical proportions, largely as a result of the Foreign & Commonwealth Office in London refusing to discuss the subject in any depth and the Cayman government refusing to discuss the subject at all.

Existence of Cayman tax directive confirmed by Cayman sources

Offshore Alert can today confirm that the Cayman Islands Governor, John Owen, HAS received a directive from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London instructing the island to introduce legislation to assist foreign countries with tax investigations.Yesterday, we ran a story indicating that the directive existed but also quoting senior government and business sources as categorically stating that it did not.Today, after further investigations, Offshore Alert can clear up any confusion and confirm that FCO correspondence seeking co-operation on foreign tax investigations has indeed arrived in Cayman and its existence is well-known in the top echelons of power.

Cayman delegation meets with US officials

A series of recently-concluded talks between the US government and a Cayman government/private sector delegation that began last week in Washington have been termed "extremely beneficial" by Cayman governor John Owen, who headed the delegation.The meetings were designed to "continue to foster good relations with the US government" and to discuss problems of mutual interest, said Owen, who initiated the first series of talks last year.

UK tax initiative in Cayman

Does it exist or doesn't it? That was the question being asked in the Cayman Islands this month after widespread reports that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London sent a directive to Governor John Owen instructing Cayman to pass legislation opening up bank accounts for tax investigations carried out by the world's major countries.

Black and Cascio resign from Stockton Re

The ability of finite risk reinsurer Stockton Re to continue its impressive growth since it was formed three years ago is in question following the resignations last month of chief underwriters Richard Black and Michael Cascio, who effectively ran the insurance side of the company.Their departures followed differences with senior management over the future direction of the firm following the recent sale of its investment manager and sister company, Commodities Corporation, to Goldman Sachs.

Bermuda Fire & Marine insolvent by $1.4 billion

Bermuda Fire & Marine Insurance Company, which was stripped of over $40 million of assets two years before it went bust without Bermuda's regulators so much as batting an eyelid, is now estimated by its liquidators to be insolvent by an astonishing $1.4 billion. If the figures are accurate, Bermuda Fire would become not only by far the biggest insolvency in Bermuda's history but also one of the biggest insurance insolvencies anywhere in the world.

Bermuda jeweller ‘steals’ name of Caribbean jeweller

In an extraordinary move, a Bermuda jeweller has set up an operation in the name of a leading Caribbean jewellery chain in an apparent bid to disrupt the chain's attempt to muscle in on its territory.The action by HS & JE Crisson Limited is likely to lead to a complicated dispute with Bahamas-based Colombian Emeralds International, which had not trademarked its name in Bermuda.

Bank of Butterfield takes on dubious business

Butterfield Securities Ltd., a subsidiary of the Bermuda-based Bank of N. T. Butterfield & Son, has replaced London firm Teather & Greenwold as the stock-broking advisors to Mackie International, the Belfast-based textile engineering company, following Mackie's decision to suspend its shares in April when the company said it may have to restate its accounts, reported the Financial Times.

Cayman trust company caught up in money laundering case

AMEX International Trust (Cayman) Limited and Cayman International Trust Company Limited were innocently used to launder the proceeds of cocaine trafficking from Mexico to the US in the early 1990s, it has been alleged in a Texas court case. Jose Jesus Echegollen and Guillermina Chavez are accused of using a string of Cayman companies to help launder $30 million in cocaine proceeds which were transferred to Cayman from banks in the US and Mexico.

Cayman passes mutual legal assistance law for drug-related offences

The Cayman Islands has introduced another piece of anti-money laundering legislation with the passage this month of the Misuse of Drugs (International Co-operation) Law 1997, which allows foreign countries to apply for legal assistance when investigating drug-related offences.

Deloitte & Touche attacked over bid to increase liquidation fees

Investors in a failed Cayman-registered mutual fund have criticized the fund's liquidators, Deloitte & Touche, for going behind their backs in applying for a large increase in their liquidation fees. A group of about 20 shareholders of The Global Opportunity Fund, who claim to have lost more than $40 million in the fund, have accused the accounting firm of greed and underhandedness.

Cayman authorities catch Canadian con men

A would-be con artist from Ontario, Canada, received a 15 month prison sentence on June 9 after attempting to pass bogus cheques worth CDN$943,485 to fund an offshore company he tried to set up.Denis Rene Desjardins, 57, told the court he owed CDN$230,000 in his native Toronto and was facing bankruptcy when he arrived in Cayman in May.

New US law hits offshore funds

The offshore mutual fund industry has been dealt a potentially significant blow by changes to US tax laws proposed in the 1997 US budget.

European Commission could target tax havens

Action is being finalized by the taxation policy group of the European Commission that could have serious implications for European-based tax havens, according to a report published on May 25 in Sunday Business, a UK-based newspaper.

Werner Rey hearing postponed

The Bahamas Appeal Court has postponed a hearing into the appeal by Swiss businessman Werner Rey against his extradition to Switzerland. Proceedings had been scheduled to begin on May 26.Rey is appealing a Bahamas Supreme Court decision in April to extradite him to his homeland, where he is wanted on charges of fraud, forgery and bankruptcy offences in connection with the Omni group, which collapsed in 1991 with losses exceeding SwFr1 billion.

Bahamas ditches Taiwan for China

The future of Taiwan's economic link with the Bahamas has been jeopardized after the Bahamas broke its eight-year diplomatic relationship with Taiwan in favour of China, the Nassau Guardian reported.The policy shift followed the opening of an $80 million container port in Freeport, in which Hutchison Port Property, a subsidiary of Anglo/Sino firm Hutchison Whampoa, has a 50 per cent stake, reported the Guardian.
jerry-nims-nimstec

NimsTec’s appalling track record

Investors thinking of buying into high-tech firm NimsTec, which last month became the latest company to list on the Bermuda Stock Exchange, may want to look closely at the track record of its technology and its senior management before parting with their funds. Bermuda-based NimsTec, which manufactures and markets 3-D products, including cameras, has raised $3 million so far from investors in Bermuda, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. Investors include Deloitte & Touche (Bermuda) partners Bill Jack and Roger Titterton, who have invested $40,000 between them. The company bears striking similarities to a company called Nimslo, which lost investors in the US, the UK and Bermuda tens of millions of dollars over the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s with the same technology now owned by NimsTec.

Kruger loses Cayman extradition battle as another fugitive, John Felderhof, arrives

As one millionaire fugitive was finally forced to leave his paradise island hiding place to face the music back home, another took his place to cause further embarrassment to the Cayman Islands.Swiss businessman Peter Kruger gave up a 16 month battle to escape justice by leaving the Cayman Islands on May 15 to return to Switzerland to face charges of bankruptcy fraud involving nearly US$272 million.But his place in the public eye has already been taken by John Felderhof, the former chief geologist of Bre-X Minerals, a would-be mining firm that defrauded investors of about $4 billion through false claims of gold finds in Indonesia.

Money launderer convicted in Cayman

In a case that has triggered investigations on both sides of the US-Canadian border, Pietro Paolo Codispoti, of Montreal, was convicted in the Cayman Islands on May 22 of three counts of money laundering.

Centre Re facing legal action over Anglo American

Bermuda-based Centre Reinsurance Holdings is facing legal action following the recent provisional liquidation of UK firm Anglo American Insurance Company, which Centre Re both owned and reinsured.Inside Bermuda has been told that creditors are going to sue Centre Re, alleging that Centre Re and its parent, Swiss-based Zurich Insurance Company, have misled Anglo creditors and acted in its own interests to the detriment of creditors through a series of actions since 1992.

John Tugwell takes over as Bank of Butterfield CEO

The Bank of N. T. Butterfield & Son Ltd., which is headquartered in Bermuda and has regional offices in several overseas jurisdictions, including a large presence in the Cayman Islands, has appointed John Tugwell as president and chief executive officer, effective May 5.

North American Fidelity & Guarantee – a Bermuda tragedy

A British television programme claiming that a "mysterious Irishman" called Steven Baker was being sought in connection with the worldwide insurance fraud that goes by the name of Dai Ichi Kyoto Re caused a lot of interest in Bermuda. One of Dai Ichi's sister companies, North American Fidelity & Guarantee, had a brief but extremely profitable and very fraudulent one-year trading spell in Bermuda in 1992/1993. The company began life as a shelf company set up in October, 1989, by ambitious Bermuda lawyer Lynda Milligan-Whyte.

More details on new law to protect Bermuda officers and directors from complaints of negligence

Last month's story about amendments to The Companies Act in Bermuda that effectively severely hinders the ability of creditors and disgruntled shareholders to sue auditors, officers and directors for acts of negligence caused uproar on the island among those who penned the law.John Campbell, a senior lawyer in Bermuda, was quoted in an article in The Royal Gazette daily newspaper as saying: "The whole article is so far wide of the mark that it would be a pointless exercise to dignify it with a response.

Bahamas telecommunications nightmare

Featrure on State of Bahamas Telecommunications IndustryIf you like hissing noises, line echoes, unreadable faxes, disconnected conversations and high rates, the Bahamas is the place for you.E-mail has been known to take three days to arrive, telephone lines can take several months to be installed and you may well be restricted in the number of lines you can have, even in the business centre of New Providence.

Start date set for Bermuda Fire & Marine trial

A trial date has finally been set for what will be one of the most eagerly-awaited business-related civil trials in the history of Bermuda.Bermuda Supreme Court has provisionally set aside a date in the spring of 1998 to begin hearing allegations that some of the island's most influential businessmen stripped Bermuda Fire & Marine Insurance of assets valued at over $40 million even though they allegedly knew the firm was insolvent.