Global Dominion Financial Services

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Nolon Bush convicted of Nevis-based investment fraud

Seven years after his investment scheme was exposed by OffshoreAlert, a United States national who owned and operated a Nevis based offshore group in conjunction with offshore providers Nigel Scott Grant and his son, Nicolas Grant St. James, has been

Insider Talking: June 30, 2001

The First International Bank of Grenada loaned $30,000 to the wife of Grenada's then chief regulator, Michael Creft, so that she could buy a car and another $50,000 to the then President of the Grenada Bar Association, Reynold Benjamin, according to a document sent to OffshoreAlert; Dean Cantrell and Marcel Deinnet snap up domains in names of countries in the Bermuda-Caribbean region, fraud complaint filed against 'offshore banker' Douglas Castle, 72-year-old convicted fraudster is back in business, SEC continues trend of failing to menaingfully punish accused fraudsters, First Ecom.com Inc. acquires half of First Ecommerce Data Services Ltd. that it did not already own, Antigua gaming outfit World Sports Exchange Ltd. sues County Savings Association over three checks that allegedly bounced, First American International Bank becomes latest offshore bank to be operated in Nevis without a license by Global Dominion Financial Services, and Latvia-based Paritate Bank appears to be in financial trouble.

UK Official Receiver declines to halt Grant-St. James bankruptcy

Since last month's story about clients of Nevis-based Global Dominion Financial Services being unable to redeem their investments, OffshoreAlert has discovered that the firm's head is an undischarged bankrupt in the UK.Nicolas Eugene Grant-St. James, 38, who was a clothes salesman prior to going into offshore services, was declared bankrupt at the High Court in London on June 16, 1998.

Nevis-based offshore provider is an undischarged bankrupt in the UK

OffshoreAlert can today confirm that the man who runs Global Dominion Financial Services in Nevis, whose approximately 200 clients are unable to redeem investments of more than US$6 million, is currently an undischarged bankrupt in the United Kingdom.   Former clothes salesman Nicolas Grant-St. James was declared bankrupt in the UK High Court on June 16, 1998 (Case number 2849 of 1998) and is due to be discharged, by expiry of time, in nine days time on 16 June 2001.

Global Dominion clients unable to redeem investments

About 200 people who invested more than $6 million through Nevis-based Global Dominion Financial Services are unable to redeem their investments, OffshoreAlert can reveal. One investor, a 39-year-old disabled woman residing in Washington State, is due to have her house repossessed on June 24, 2001 because she cannot meet her mortgage payments.