Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
Investors,
Oligarchs, Mobsters and Capital Flight: Inside the Shadowy World of Trump’s
Private Russian Connections
By James S. Henry [1] / The
American Interest
March 10, 2017
1
What
Americans know about Donald Trump’s network of Russian/Former Soviet Union
(FSU) connections keeps growing. A recent New Yorker report on Trump's
“worst deal,” in Azerbaijan scratches the surface. A late 2016 investigative
report in The American Interest [2] by James
Henry details an array of Trump's ties to an "extensive network of
unsavory global underground connections that may well be unprecedented in White
House history. In choosing his associates, evidently Donald Trump only pays
cursory attention to questions of background, character, and integrity… Trump
has also literally spent decades cultivating senior relationships of all kinds
with Russia and the FSU."
The
following excerpts, including two of five detailed sections from Henry’s report
show a pattern of Trump stalking the wealth of Russian/FSU oligarchs amid
"vulture capitalism at its worst.” Americans who want to understand what’s
behind Trump’s pro-Russia bias can start by tracing his deals and relationships
with mobsters, oligarchs and politically connected businessmen. —The Editors
Setting
The Stage: Russian Riches and Trump’s Bankruptcies
A few
of Donald Trump’s connections to oligarchs and assorted thugs have already
received sporadic press—for example, former Trump campaign manager Paul
Manafort’s reported relationship with exiled Ukrainian oligarch Dmytro Firtash.
But no one has pulled the connections together, used them to identify still
more relationships, and developed an image of the overall patterns. Nor has
anyone related these cases to one of the most central facts about modern
Russia: its emergence since the 1990s as a world-class kleptocracy, second only
to China as a source of illicit capital and criminal loot, with more than $1.3
trillion of net offshore “flight wealth” as of 2016.
This
tidal wave of illicit capital is hardly just Putin’s doing. It is in fact a
symptom of one of the most epic failures in modern political
economy—one for which the West bears a great deal of responsibility. This is
the failure, in the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse in the late 1980s, to
ensure that Russia acquires the kind of strong, middle-class-centric economic
and political base that is required for democratic capitalism, the rule of law,
and stable, peaceful relationships with its neighbors. Instead, from 1992 to
the Russian debt crisis of August 1998, the West in general—and the U.S.
Treasury, USAID, the State Department, the IMF/World Bank, the EBRD, and many
leading economists in particular—actively promoted and, indeed, helped to
finance one of the most massive transfers of public wealth into private hands
that the world has ever seen.
For
example, Russia’s 1992 “voucher privatization” program permitted a tiny elite
of former state-owned company managers and party apparatchiksto
acquire control over a vast number of public enterprises, often with the help
of outright mobsters. A majority of Gazprom, the state energy company that
controlled a third of the world’s gas reserves, was sold for $230 million;
Russia’s entire national electric grid was privatized for $630 million; ZIL,
Russia’s largest auto company, went for about $4 million; ports, ships, oil,
iron and steel, aluminum, much of the high-tech arms and airlines industries,
the world’s largest diamond mines, and most of Russia’s banking system also
went for a song. The principal beneficiaries of this “privatization” [3]—actually,
cartelization—were initially just 25 or so budding oligarchs with the insider
connections to buy these properties and the muscle to hold them [3].
By the
late 1990s these warped policies had laid the foundations for a strong
counterrevolution, including the rise of ex-KGB officer Putin and a massive
outpouring of oligarchic flight capital that has continued virtually up to the
present. For ordinary Russians, this was disastrous. But for many banks,
private bankers, hedge funds, law firms, and accounting firms, for leading oil
companies like ExxonMobil and BP, as well as for needy borrowers like the Trump
Organization, the opportunity to feed on post-Soviet spoils was a godsend. This
was vulture capitalism at its worst.
The
nine-lived Trump had just suffered a string [4] of six successive
bankruptcies. So the massive illicit outflows from Russia and oil-rich FSU
members like Kazahkstan and Azerbaijan from the mid-1990s provided precisely
the kind of undiscriminating investors that he needed. These outflows arrived
at just the right time to fund several of Trump’s post-2000 high-risk real
estate and casino ventures—most of which failed.
As
Donald Trump, Jr., executive vice president of development and acquisitions for
the Trump Organization, told the Bridging U.S. and Emerging Markets Real
Estate conference [5] in Manhattan in
September 2008 (on the basis, he said, of his own “half dozen trips to
Russia in 18 months”):"[I]n terms of high-end product influx into the
United States, Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a
lot of our assets; say in Dubai, and certainly with our project in SoHo and
anywhere in New York. We see a lot of money pouring in from Russia."
All
this helps to explain one of the most intriguing puzzles about Donald Trump’s
long, turbulent business career: how he managed to keep financing it, despite a
dismal track record [4] of failed projects.
(Campaign fact checkers count six bankruptcies, but these don’t include
projects where he held minority stakes.)
According
to the “official story,” this was simply due to a combination of brilliant
deal-making, Trump’s gold-plated brand, and raw animal spirits—with $916 million of creative tax dodging [6] as
a kicker. But this official story is hokum. The truth is that, since the late
1990s, Trump was also greatly assisted by these abundant new sources of global
finance, especially from “submerging markets” like Russia.
A
Guided Tour of Trump’s Russian/FSU Connections
The
following roundup of Trump’s Russo-Soviet business connections is based on
published sources, interviews with former law enforcement staff and other
experts in the United States, the United Kingdom and Iceland, searches of
online corporate registries, and a detailed analysis of offshore company data
from the Panama Papers. Given the sheer scope of Trump’s activities, there are
undoubtedly other worthy cases, but our interest is in overall patterns.
Note
that none of the activities and business connections related here necessarily
involved criminal conduct. While several key players do have criminal records,
few of their prolific business dealings have been thoroughly investigated, and
of course they all deserve the presumption of innocence. Furthermore, several
of these players reside in countries where activities like bribery, tax
dodging, and other financial chicanery are either not illegal or are rarely
prosecuted. As former British Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey once
said, the difference between “legal” and “illegal” is often just “the width of
a prison wall.”
So why
spend time collecting and reviewing material that either doesn’t point to
anything illegal or in some cases may even be impossible to verify? Because, we
submit, the mere fact that such assertions are widely made is of legitimate
public interest in its own right. In other words, when it comes to evaluating
the probity of senior public officials, the public has the right to know about
any material allegations—true, false, or, most commonly, unprovable—about their
business partners and associates, so long as this information is clearly
labeled as unverified.
Furthermore,
the individual case-based approach to investigations employed by most
investigative journalists and law enforcement often misses the big picture: the
global networks of influence and finance, licit and illicit, that exist among
business people, investors, kleptocrats, organized criminals, and politicians,
as well as the “enablers”—banks, accounting firms, law firms, and havens. Any
particular component of these networks might easily disappear without making
any difference. But the networks live on. It is these shadowy transnational
networks that really deserve scrutiny.
Bayrock
Group LLC: Kazakhstan and Tevfik Arif
We’ll
begin our tour of Trump’s Russian/FSU connections with several business
relationships that evolved out of the curious case of Bayrock Group LLC, a
spectacularly unsuccessful New York real estate development company that
surfaced in the early 2000s and, by 2014, had all but disappeared except for a
few lawsuits. As of 2007, Bayrock and its partners reportedly had more than $2
billion of Trump-branded deals in the works. But most of these either never
materialized or were miserable failures, for reasons that will soon become
obvious.
Bayrock’s
“white elephants” included the 46-story Trump SoHo condo-hotel on Spring Street
in New York City, for which the principle developer was a partnership formed by
Bayrock and FL Group, an Icelandic investment company. Completed in 2010, the
SoHo soon became the subject of prolonged civil litigation by disgruntled condo
buyers. The building was foreclosed by creditors and resold in 2014 after more
than $3 million of customer down payments had to be refunded. [7] Similarly,
Bayrock’s Trump International Hotel & Tower in Fort Lauderdale was
foreclosed and resold in 2012, while at least three other Trump-branded
properties in the United States, plus many other “project concepts” that
Bayrock had contemplated, from Istanbul and Kiev to Moscow and Warsaw, also never happened [8].
Carelessness
about due diligence with respect to potential partners and associates is one of
Donald Trump’s more [9] predictable [10] qualities[11]. Acting on the seat of the pants,
he had hooked up with Bayrock rather quickly in 2005, becoming an 18 percent
minority equity partner in the Trump SoHo, and agreeing to license his brand and
manage the building.
Exhibit
A in the panoply of former Trump business partners is Bayrock’s former
Chairman, Tevfik Arif (aka Arifov), an émigré from Kazakhstan who reportedly
took up residence in Brooklyn in the 1990s. Trump also had extensive contacts
with another key Bayrock Russian-American from Brooklyn, Felix Sater (aka
Satter), discussed below. Trump has lately had some difficulty recalling very
much about either Arif or Sater. But this is hardly surprising, given what we now know [8] about them. Trump described [12] his introduction
to Bayrock in a 2013 deposition for a lawsuit that was brought by investors in
the Fort Lauderdale project, one of Trump’s first with Bayrock: “Well, we had a
tenant in … Trump Tower called Bayrock, and Bayrock was interested in getting
us into deals.”
According
to several reports, Tevfik Arif was originally from Kazakhstan, a Soviet
republic until 1992. Born in 1950, Arif worked for 17 years in the Soviet
Ministry of Commerce and Trade, serving as Deputy Director of Hotel Management
by the time of the Soviet Union’s collapse. In the early 1990s he relocated to
Turkey, where he reportedly helped to develop properties for the Rixos Hotel chain. [13] Not long
thereafter he relocated to Brooklyn, founded Bayrock, opened an office in the
Trump Tower, and started to pursue projects with Trump and other investors.
Tevfik
Arif was not Bayrock’s only connection to Kazakhstan. A 2007 Bayrock
investor presentation [14] refers to Alexander
Mashevich’s Eurasia Group as a strategic partner for Bayrock’s equity finance.
Together with two other prominent Kazakh billionaires, Patokh Chodiev (aka
Shodiyev) and Alijan Ibragimov, Mashkevich reportedly ran the Eurasian Natural Resources Cooperation [15].
In Kazakhstan these three are sometimes referred to as “the Trio [16].”
The
Trio has apparently worked together ever since Gorbachev’s late 1980s perestroika in
metals and other natural resources. It was during this period that they first
acquired a significant degree of control over Kazakhstan’s vast mineral
and gas reserves [17]. Naturally they found it
useful to become friends with Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan’s long-time
ruler. Indeed, State Department cables [18] leaked by
Wikileaks in November 2010 describe a close relationship [19] between the
Trio and the seemingly perpetual Nazarbayev kleptocracy. [20]
In any
case, the Trio has recently attracted the attention of many other investigators
and news outlets, including the September 11 Commission Report [21],
the Guardian [22], Forbes [23] and the Wall Street Journal [24]. In addition to
resource grabbing, the litany of the Trio’s alleged activities include money laundering [25], bribery [26] and racketeering [27]. In 2005, according to
U.S. State Department cables released by Wikileaks, Chodiev (referred to in a
State Department cable as Fatokh Shodiyev) was recorded on video [28] attending the
birthday of reputed Uzbek mob boss Salim Abduvaliyeva and presenting him with a
$10,000 “gift” or “tribute.”
According
to the Belgian newspaper Le Soir, Chodiev and Mashkevich also
became close associates of a curious Russian-Canadian businessman, Boris J.
Birshtein. who happens to have been the father-in-law of another key
Russian-Canadian business associate of Donald Trump in Toronto. We will return
to Birshtein below.
The
Trio also turn up in the April 2016 Panama Papers database as the apparent
beneficial owners of a Cook Islands company, International
Financial Limited [29]. The Belgian newspapers Het
Laatste Nieuws, Le Soir, and La Libre Belgique have
reported that Chodiev paid €23 million to obtain a Class B banking license for
this same company, permitting it to make international currency trades. In the
words of a leading Belgian financial regulator, [30] that
would “make all money laundering undetectable.”
The
Panama Papers also indicate that some of Arif’s connections at the Rixos Hotel
Group may have ties to Kazakhstan. For example, one offshore company listed in
the Panama Papers database [31], Group Rixos
Hotel, reportedly acts as an intermediary for four BVI offshore companies.
Rixos Hotel’s CEO, Fettah Tamince, is listed as having been a shareholder for
two of these companies, while a shareholder in another—Hazara Asset
Management—had the same name as the son of a recent Kazakhstan Minister for
Sports and Tourism. As of 2012, this Kazakh official was described as the
third-most influential deputy in the country’s Mazhilis (the lower house of
Parliament), in a Forbes-Kazakhstan
article. [32]
According
to a 2015 lawsuit against Bayrock by Jody Kriss, one of its former employees,
Bayrock started to receive millions of dollars in equity contributions in 2004,
supposedly by way of Arif’s brother in Russia, who allegedly "had access [33] to cash accounts at a
chromium refinery in Kazakhstan.”
This
as-yet-unproven allegation might well just be an attempt by the plaintiff to
extract a more attractive settlement from Bayrock and its original principals.
But it is also consistent with fact that chromium is indeed one of the Kazakh
natural resources that is reportedly[34] controlled by the
Trio.
As for
Arif, his most recent visible brush with the law came in 2010, when he and
other members of Bayrock’s Eurasian Trio were arrested together in Turkey
during a police raid on a suspected prostitution ring, according to the Israeli
daily Yediot Ahronot [35].
At the
time, Turkish investigators reportedly asserted that Arif might be the head of
a criminal organization that was trafficking [13] in Russian and
Ukrainian escorts, allegedly including some as young as 13. According to these
assertions, big-ticket clients were making their selections by way of a
modeling agency website, with Arif allegedly handling the logistics. Especially
galling to Turkish authorities, the preferred venue[35] was reportedly a yacht
that had once belonged to the widely revered Turkish leader Atatürk. It was
also alleged that [35] Arif may have also
provided lodging for young women at Rixos Group hotels.
According
to Russian media, two senior Kazakh officials were also arrested during this
incident, although the Turkish Foreign Ministry quickly dismissed this
allegation as "groundless [36]." In the end, all
the charges against Arif resulting from this incident were dismissed in 2012 by
Turkish courts, and his spokespeople have subsequently denied all involvement.
Finally,
despite Bayrock’s demise and these other legal entanglements, Arif has
apparently remained active. For example, Bloomberg reports that, as of 2013,
he, his son, and Rixos Hotels’ CEO Fettah Tamince had partnered to pursue the
rather controversial business of advancing funds to cash-strapped high-profile
soccer players in exchange for a share of their future marketing revenues and
team transfer fees. In the case of Arif and his partners, this new-wave form of
indentured servitude was reportedly implemented [37] by way of a
UK- and Malta-based hedge fund, Doyen Capital LLP. Because this practice [37] is subject to
innumerable potential abuses, including the possibility of subjecting athletes
or clubs to undue pressure to sign over valuable rights and fees, UEFA,
Europe’s governing soccer body, wants to ban it. But FIFA, the notorious global
football regulator, has been customarily slow to act. To date, Doyen Capital
LLP has reportedly taken financial gambles on several well-known players,
including the Brazilian star Neymar [37].
The
Case of Bayrock LLC: Felix Sater
Our
second exhibit is Felix Sater, the senior Bayrock executive introduced earlier.
This is the fellow who worked at Bayrock from 2002 to 2008 and negotiated
several important deals with the Trump Organization and other investors. When
Trump was asked who at Bayrock had brought him the Fort Lauderdale project in
the 2013 deposition cited above, he replied [12]: “It could have been Felix
Sater, it could have been—I really don’t know who it might have been, but
somebody from Bayrock.”
Although
Sater left Bayrock in 2008, by 2010 he was reportedly back in Trump Tower as a
“senior adviser” to the Trump Organization—at least on his business card—with
his own office in the building. [10]
Sater
has also testified under oath that he had escorted Donald Trump, Jr. and Ivanka
Trump around Moscow in 2006, had met frequently with Donald over several years,
and had once flown with him to Colorado. And although this might easily have
been staged, he is also reported [38] to have visited Trump
Tower in July 2016 and made a personal $5,400 contribution to Trump’s campaign.
Whatever
Felix Sater has been up to recently, the key point is that by 2002, at the
latest, Tevfik Arif decided to hire him as Bayrock’s COO and managing director.
This was despite the fact that by then Sater had already compiled an astonishing track record [39] as a
professional criminal, with multiple felony pleas and convictions, extensive
connections to organized crime, and—the ultimate prize—a virtual
“get-out-of-jail-free card,” based on an informant relationship with the FBI
and the CIA that is vaguely reminiscent [40] of Whitey Bulger [the
Boston-based mobster].
Sater,
a Brooklyn resident like Arif, was born in Russia in 1966.
He reportedly [41] emigrated with his
family to the United States in the mid-1970s and settled in Little Odessa. It
seems that his father, Mikhael Sheferovsky (aka Michael Sater), may have been
engaged in Russian mob activity before he arrived in the United States.
According to a certified U.S. Supreme Court petition, Felix Sater’s FBI handler
stated that he “was well familiar with the crimes of Sater and his (Sater’s)
father, a (Semion) Mogilevich crime syndicate boss.” A 1998 FBI report [42] reportedly said
Mogilevich’s organization had “approximately 250 members,” and was involved in
trafficking nuclear materials, weapons, and more, as well as money laundering.
But
Michael Sater may have been less ambitious than his son. His only reported U.S. criminal conviction [43] came
in 2000, when he pled guilty to two felony counts for extorting Brooklyn
restaurants, grocery stores, and clinics. He was released with three years’
probation. Interestingly, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New
York who handled that case at the time [43] was Loretta Lynch, [7] who succeeded Eric
Holder as U.S. Attorney General in 2014. Back in 2000, she was also overseeing
a budding informant relationship and a plea bargain with Michael’s son Felix,
which may help to explain the father’s sentence.
By
then young Felix Sater was already well on his way to a career as a
prototypical Russian-American mobster. In 1991 he stabbed [44] a commodity trader in the
face with a margarita glass stem in a Manhattan bar, severing a nerve [45]. He was convicted of a
felony and sent to prison [45]. As Trump tells it [46], Sater simply “got into
a barroom fight, which a lot of people do.” The sentence for this felony
conviction could not have been very long, because, by 1993, 27-year-old Felix
was already a trader in a brand new Brooklyn-based commodity firm called White
Rock Partners, an innovative joint venture among four New York crime families
and the Russian mob aimed at bringing state-of-the art financial fraud to Wall
Street.
Five
years later, in 1998 [40], Felix Sater pled guilty to
stock racketeering, as one of 19 U.S.-and Russian mob-connected traders who
participated in a $40 million “pump and dump” securities fraud scheme [7]. Facing 20 years in Federal
prison, Sater and Gennady Klotsman, a fellow Russian-American who’d been with
him on the night of the Manhattan bar fight, turned snitch and helped the
Department of Justice prosecute their co-conspirators. Reportedly, so did Salvatore Lauria [40], another “trader”
involved in the scheme. According to the Jody Kriss lawsuit, Lauria later
joined Bayrock as an off-the-books paid consultant. Initially their
cooperation, which lasted from 1998 until at least late 2001, was kept secret,
until it was inadvertently revealed in a March 2000 press release by U.S.
Attorney Lynch.
Unfortunately
for Sater, about the same time the NYPD also reportedly discovered that he had
been running a money-laundering scheme and illicit gun sales out of a Manhattan
storage locker. He and Klotsman fled to Russia [45]. However, according
to the New York Times, which cited Klotsman and Lauria, soon
after 9/11, the ever-creative Sater succeeded in brokering information about
the black market for Stinger anti-aircraft missiles [45] to
the CIA and the FBI. According to Klotsman, this strategy “bought Felix his
freedom,” allowing him to return to Brooklyn. It is still not clear precisely
what information Sater actually provided, but in 2015 U.S. Attorney General
Loretta Lynch publicly commended him for sharing information that she described
as “crucial to national security [8]."
Meanwhile,
Sater’s sentence for his financial crimes continued to be deferred even after
his official cooperation in that case ceased in late 2001. His files remained
sealed, and he managed to avoid any sentencing for those crimes at all until
October 23, 2009. When he finally appeared before the Eastern District’s Judge
I. Leo Glasser, Felix received a $25,000 fine, no jail time, and no probation
in a quiet proceeding that attracted no press attention. Some compared this
sentence to Judge Glasser’s earlier sentence of Mafia hit man “Sammy the Bull”
Gravano to 4.5 years for 19 murders, in exchange for “cooperating against John Gotti [40]."
In any
case, between 2002 and 2008, when Felix Sater finally left Bayrock LLC, and
well beyond, his ability to avoid jail and conceal his criminal roots enabled
him to enjoy a lucrative new career as Bayrock’s chief operating officer. In
that position, he was in charge of negotiating aggressive property deals all
over the planet, even while—according to lawsuits by former Bayrock
investors—engaging in still more financial fraud. The only apparent difference
was that he changed his name from Sater to Satter.
In the
2013 deposition cited earlier, Trump went on to say “I don’t see Felix as being
a member of the Mafia.” Asked if he had any evidence for this claim, Trump conceded [10], “I have none.”
As for
Sater’s pal Klotsman, the past few years have not been kind. As of December
2016 he is in a Russian penal colony, working off a 10-year sentence for a
failed $2.8 million Moscow diamond heist in August 2010. In 2016 Klotsman was
reportedly placed on a “top-ten list” of Americans that the Russians were
willing to exchange for high-value Russian prisoners in U.S. custody, like
the infamous arms dealer Viktor Bout [41]. So
far there have been no takers. But with Donald Trump as president, who knows?
The
Case of 'Well-Connected' Russia/FSU Mobsters
Other
interesting Russian/FSU connections have a more residential flavor, but they
are a source of very important leads about the Trump network.
Indeed,
partly because it has no prying co-op board, Trump Tower in New York has received press attention [47] for
including among its many honest residents tax-dodgers, bribers, arms dealers,
convicted cocaine traffickers, and corrupt former FIFA officials.
One
typical example involves the alleged Russian mobster Anatoly Golubchik, who
went to prison in 2014 for running an illegal gambling ring[48] out of Trump
Tower—not only the headquarters of the Trump Organization but also the former
headquarters of Bayrock Group LLC. This operation reportedly took up the entire 51st floor. [49] Also reportedly
involved in it was the alleged mobster Alimzhan Tokhtakhounov [50], who has the
distinction of making the Forbes 2008 list of the World’s Ten
Most Wanted Criminals, and whose organization the FBI believes to be tied to Mogilevich’s [42] [another
notorious Russian mobster]. Even as this gambling ring was still operating in
Trump Tower, Tokhtakhounov reportedly traveled to Moscow [51] to attend Donald Trump’s
2013 Miss Universe contest as a special VIP.
Read
James Henry's full report [2] on TheAmericanInterest.com.
James S. Henry [52] is a former
corporate lawyer and economist who is among the nation's top investigative
reporters on economic issues.
[54]
Links:
[1] http://www.alternet.org/authors/james-s-henry-0
[2] http://www.the-american-interest.com/2016/12/19/the-curious-world-of-donald-trumps-private-russian-connections/
[3] http://prutland.faculty.wesleyan.edu/files/2015/08/The-role-of-the-IMF-in-Russia.pdf
[4] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2016/live-updates/general-election/real-time-fact-checking-and-analysis-of-the-first-presidential-debate/fact-check-has-trump-declared-bankruptcy-four-or-six-times/?utm_term=.95c966b9ad60
[5] http://www.eturbonews.com/5008/executive-talk-donald-trump-jr-bullish-russia-and-few-emerging-ma
[6] http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/10/03/art-of-the-steal-this-is-how-trump-lost-916m-and-avoided-tax.html
[7] http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/11/06/trump-s-russia-towers-he-just-can-t-get-them-up.html
[8] https://www.ft.com/content/549ddfaa-5fa5-11e6-b38c-7b39cbb1138a
[9] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-hotel-criminal-brazil_us_58193dc2e4b0f96eba96cfe5
[10] http://bigstory.ap.org/article/c703edc11f884addb1d5c9df6dbf6d0e/trump-okd-partner-alleged-iran-laundering-family-ties
[11] http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2016-02-24/a-look-inside-trump-s-global-deals-exposes-trouble-in-many-spots
[12] https://archive.org/stream/DonaldTrumpArchive/Branding%20%20DJT%20Fort%20Lauderdale%20Depo%2011-5-2013#page/n19/mode/2up
[13] https://www.ft.com/content/2448b03a-cd77-11df-9c82-00144feab49a
[14] https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3117892/Bayrock-Presentation.pdf
[15] https://www.ft.com/content/71a13774-b3e0-11e2-ace9-00144feabdc0
[16] http://www.forbes.com/sites/richardbehar/2016/10/03/trump-and-the-oligarch-trio/#36550e4d1b72
[17] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2013/nov/22/mining-enrc-leaves-london-stock-exchange
[18] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2008/04/17/08astana760-lifestyles-of-the-kazazhstani-leadership/
[19] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2009/03/13/09astana447-kazakhstan-ak-zhol-leader-baimenov-says-party/
[20] http://www.reubenbrothers.com/billionaire-brothers-give-up-their-secrets/
[21] http://usa-the-republic.com/items%20of%20interest/September-11-Commission-Report-Revised-December-2008.pdf
[22] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2013/apr/28/enrc-bribery-africa-kazakhstan
[23] http://www.forbes.com/free_forbes/2006/0327/164.html
[24] http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB994368645270421268
[25] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2007/06/15/07astana1642-kazakhstan-money-laundering-accusations-complicate-efforts/
[26] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2007/07/08/07astana1848-kazakhstan-government-and-opposition-views-on/
[27] http://harpers.org/blog/2010/08/kazakhgate-ends-with-a-whimper/
[28] https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/06TASHKENT465_a.html
[29] https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/167402
[30] http://www.lalibre.be/economie/libre-entreprise/offshore-leaks-le-belgo-kazakh-patokh-chodiev-banquier-offshore-51b8fb36e4b0de6db9ca2805
[31] https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/11003251
[32] http://forbes.kz/process/expertise/ierarhiya_majilisa
[33] https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/2638421/Kriss-v-Bayrock-Complaint.pdf
[34] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Mashkevitch
[35] http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4048812,00.html
[36] http://web.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-ministry-denounces-russian-press-claims-on-savarona.aspx?pageID=438&n=turkish-ministry-denies-savarona-allegations-2010-10-13
[37] http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-07-02/neymar-investing-hedge-fund-doyen-said-backed-by-kazakh-family
[38] http://www.politico.com/story/2016/08/donald-trump-russia-felix-sater-227434
[39] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/06/us/politics/donald-trump-soho-settlement.html
[40] http://c10.nrostatic.com/sites/default/files/Palmer-Petition-for-a-writ-of-certiorari-14-676.pdf
[41] https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/a-diamond-heist-russian-gun-smuggling-and-donald-trump-55005
[42] http://www.larryjkolb.com/file/docs/fbimogilevich.pdf
[43] https://www.deepcapture.com/wp-content/uploads/MikhaiSaterDktRpt1.pdf
[44] http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/memory-lapse-trump-seeks-distance-advisor-past-ties/story?id=34600826
[45] http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/17/nyregion/17trump.html
[46] https://archive.org/stream/DonaldTrumpArchive/Branding%20%20DJT%20Fort%20Lauderdale%20Depo%2011-5-2013#page/n153/mode/2up,%20p.154
[47] http://www.irishexaminer.com/viewpoints/analysis/trump-tower-a-rogues-gallery-of-criminal-tenants-428902.html
[48] https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/newyork/press-releases/2013/two-more-defendants-plead-guilty-in-manhattan-federal-court-in-connection-with-russian-american-organized-crime-gambling-enterprise
[49] http://www.nbclosangeles.com/blogs/open-house/Slowly-Hillel-Nahmad-Has-Bought-The-Entire-51st-Floor-Of-The-Trump-Tower-188132651.html
[50] https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/us-seeks-arrest-of-reputed-russian-mobster-23337
[51] http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/09/trump-russian-mobster-tokhtakhounov-miss-universe-moscow
[52] http://www.the-american-interest.com/byline/james-s-henry/
[53] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on Investors, Oligarchs, Mobsters and Capital Flight: Inside the Shadowy World of Trump’s Private Russian Connections
[54] http://www.alternet.org/
[55] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
[2] http://www.the-american-interest.com/2016/12/19/the-curious-world-of-donald-trumps-private-russian-connections/
[3] http://prutland.faculty.wesleyan.edu/files/2015/08/The-role-of-the-IMF-in-Russia.pdf
[4] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2016/live-updates/general-election/real-time-fact-checking-and-analysis-of-the-first-presidential-debate/fact-check-has-trump-declared-bankruptcy-four-or-six-times/?utm_term=.95c966b9ad60
[5] http://www.eturbonews.com/5008/executive-talk-donald-trump-jr-bullish-russia-and-few-emerging-ma
[6] http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/10/03/art-of-the-steal-this-is-how-trump-lost-916m-and-avoided-tax.html
[7] http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/11/06/trump-s-russia-towers-he-just-can-t-get-them-up.html
[8] https://www.ft.com/content/549ddfaa-5fa5-11e6-b38c-7b39cbb1138a
[9] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-hotel-criminal-brazil_us_58193dc2e4b0f96eba96cfe5
[10] http://bigstory.ap.org/article/c703edc11f884addb1d5c9df6dbf6d0e/trump-okd-partner-alleged-iran-laundering-family-ties
[11] http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2016-02-24/a-look-inside-trump-s-global-deals-exposes-trouble-in-many-spots
[12] https://archive.org/stream/DonaldTrumpArchive/Branding%20%20DJT%20Fort%20Lauderdale%20Depo%2011-5-2013#page/n19/mode/2up
[13] https://www.ft.com/content/2448b03a-cd77-11df-9c82-00144feab49a
[14] https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/3117892/Bayrock-Presentation.pdf
[15] https://www.ft.com/content/71a13774-b3e0-11e2-ace9-00144feabdc0
[16] http://www.forbes.com/sites/richardbehar/2016/10/03/trump-and-the-oligarch-trio/#36550e4d1b72
[17] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2013/nov/22/mining-enrc-leaves-london-stock-exchange
[18] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2008/04/17/08astana760-lifestyles-of-the-kazazhstani-leadership/
[19] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2009/03/13/09astana447-kazakhstan-ak-zhol-leader-baimenov-says-party/
[20] http://www.reubenbrothers.com/billionaire-brothers-give-up-their-secrets/
[21] http://usa-the-republic.com/items%20of%20interest/September-11-Commission-Report-Revised-December-2008.pdf
[22] https://www.theguardian.com/business/2013/apr/28/enrc-bribery-africa-kazakhstan
[23] http://www.forbes.com/free_forbes/2006/0327/164.html
[24] http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB994368645270421268
[25] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2007/06/15/07astana1642-kazakhstan-money-laundering-accusations-complicate-efforts/
[26] https://wikileakskz.wordpress.com/2007/07/08/07astana1848-kazakhstan-government-and-opposition-views-on/
[27] http://harpers.org/blog/2010/08/kazakhgate-ends-with-a-whimper/
[28] https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/06TASHKENT465_a.html
[29] https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/167402
[30] http://www.lalibre.be/economie/libre-entreprise/offshore-leaks-le-belgo-kazakh-patokh-chodiev-banquier-offshore-51b8fb36e4b0de6db9ca2805
[31] https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/11003251
[32] http://forbes.kz/process/expertise/ierarhiya_majilisa
[33] https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/2638421/Kriss-v-Bayrock-Complaint.pdf
[34] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Mashkevitch
[35] http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4048812,00.html
[36] http://web.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-ministry-denounces-russian-press-claims-on-savarona.aspx?pageID=438&n=turkish-ministry-denies-savarona-allegations-2010-10-13
[37] http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-07-02/neymar-investing-hedge-fund-doyen-said-backed-by-kazakh-family
[38] http://www.politico.com/story/2016/08/donald-trump-russia-felix-sater-227434
[39] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/06/us/politics/donald-trump-soho-settlement.html
[40] http://c10.nrostatic.com/sites/default/files/Palmer-Petition-for-a-writ-of-certiorari-14-676.pdf
[41] https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/a-diamond-heist-russian-gun-smuggling-and-donald-trump-55005
[42] http://www.larryjkolb.com/file/docs/fbimogilevich.pdf
[43] https://www.deepcapture.com/wp-content/uploads/MikhaiSaterDktRpt1.pdf
[44] http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/memory-lapse-trump-seeks-distance-advisor-past-ties/story?id=34600826
[45] http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/17/nyregion/17trump.html
[46] https://archive.org/stream/DonaldTrumpArchive/Branding%20%20DJT%20Fort%20Lauderdale%20Depo%2011-5-2013#page/n153/mode/2up,%20p.154
[47] http://www.irishexaminer.com/viewpoints/analysis/trump-tower-a-rogues-gallery-of-criminal-tenants-428902.html
[48] https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/newyork/press-releases/2013/two-more-defendants-plead-guilty-in-manhattan-federal-court-in-connection-with-russian-american-organized-crime-gambling-enterprise
[49] http://www.nbclosangeles.com/blogs/open-house/Slowly-Hillel-Nahmad-Has-Bought-The-Entire-51st-Floor-Of-The-Trump-Tower-188132651.html
[50] https://themoscowtimes.com/articles/us-seeks-arrest-of-reputed-russian-mobster-23337
[51] http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/09/trump-russian-mobster-tokhtakhounov-miss-universe-moscow
[52] http://www.the-american-interest.com/byline/james-s-henry/
[53] mailto:corrections@alternet.org?Subject=Typo on Investors, Oligarchs, Mobsters and Capital Flight: Inside the Shadowy World of Trump’s Private Russian Connections
[54] http://www.alternet.org/
[55] http://www.alternet.org/%2Bnew_src%2B
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
No comments:
Post a Comment