Monday

Pamusa’s Case vs. Lucio Tan

http://globalbalita.com/2009/pamusas-case-vs-lucio-tan


This column’s readers know the Philippine Anticorruption Movement USA, Inc. (Pamusa) is authorized by the USDOJ to participate in fighting corruption and kleptocracy in support of the enforcement of UNCAC by U.S. laws which has been reinforced by the recent G20 London Summit ending bank secrecy for tax evasion investigation.


Pamusa’s lawyers have gathered sufficient evidence to charge Filipino big fishes starting with Lucio Tan in the United States for corruption, mail or wire fraud, money laundering and racketeering (violation of RICO). Moreover, Tan’s and family members’ U.S. businesses have put themselves under U.S. jurisdiction for violation of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and Anti-Trust Laws. For instance, a Tan-owned company and Boeing have conspired in the procurement and leasing of planes including spare parts and support services for Philippine Airlines at questionable transfer pricing that make Tan and family members probably guilty for violating the FCPA and detrimental to American stockholders of PAL’s holding company, Baguio Gold Holdings Corporation.


Pamusa has submitted its evidence to the FBI to investigate Tan. Gloria Macapagal Arroyo could add the government evidence in various cases against Tan which he has danced around for too long. GMA may also prove the seriousness of her anti-graft and corruption program, thus save her presidency from infamy and enshrine a legacy of reforms for our people to perhaps pardon her alleged malfeasances.


We’re also hoping the Moral Force Movement (MFM) would use this case as a launching pad for its mission to combat widespread corruption which is the primary cause of poverty and its debilitating effects. MFM may reinforce Pamusa’s evidence against Tan and build on the credibility of targeting one of the country’s biggest fishes. Tan’s case would reverberate across the nation to warn all involved in graft and corruption to cease and desist in their nefarious activities or be subjected to international condemnation.


Tan and other big fishes have gotten used to being untouchable under Philippine laws. They overlook that the USDOJ has laid the basis for criminal action and forfeiture of assets acquired from “a process or series of actions through which income of illegal origin is concealed, disguised, or made to appear legitimate (main objective); and to evade detection, prosecution, seizure, and taxation.”


By inventorying from dates of organization Tan’s group of companies starting with Fortune Tobacco’s annual reports, income tax declarations, and their personal statements of assets, liabilities and net worth would show the growth of each company’s assets vis-à-vis Tan’s personal net worth of $1.4 billion as of 2008 according to Forbes has been statistically improbable unless the companies resorted to massive tax evasion, bureaucratic corruption and be almost free from competition because of government favors from Marcos and succeeding administrations.


Tan’s and his group of companies’ alleged massive tax evasion was brought to light under President Ramos. Sufficient evidence of corruption and other crimes punishable under U.S. laws can be adduced by the FBI and conclude that much of the companies’ income came from illegal origin. Tan, the companies’ boards of directors and executive officers have evidently engaged in corruption by paying, or promising to pay, bribes, or by giving other undue advantages to public officials and their accomplices which they cannot deny when questioned by the FBI or be guilty of perjury.


In fairness to Tan, however, he took advantage of the country’s corrupt environment as others have similarly done. He can’t be punished to the exclusion of those equally guilty such as Danding Cojuangco, Henry Sy, Roberto Ongpin and others. They should emulate the Union Bank of Switzerland and Siemens AG and negotiate with the FBI Los Angeles office and USDOJ before they’re charged in court.


They may return to RP government Marcos’ ill-gotten wealth and accruals kept by them including ill-gotten gains from corruption during succeeding administrations. These can be reasonably accounted for and perhaps converted into preferred shares of their companies so they continue management control while freeing themselves, their heirs and successors from criminal and civil liabilities.


It’s a fact that when amicable settlement is approved by a U.S. court, the records are shielded from the public and can’t be used for any other legal action. It’s impossible to convict someone for graft and corruption or plunder in the Philippines after the evidence is sealed by a U.S. court.


Tan’s incredible story started with the family-owned Fortune Tobacco. To his credit, Tan was chosen by Marcos to be one of his cronies granted government favors that led to his building a business empire including Asia Brewery (which would not have been possible had Marcos known San Miguel Corp. would one day be under Danding Cojuangco), Allied Banking Corporation, Foremost Farms, Eton Properties, Himmel Industries, Tanduay Distillers and other subsidiaries.


Tan can’t deny he and other cronies were required by Marcos to cede 60% of the equity of each company granted favors such as unlimited dollars for imported needs, PNB and DBP loans, no bureaucratic meddling that allowed Fortune Tobacco to allegedly print multiple same-numbered revenue stamps to minimize tax on cigarettes, etc.


Tan added PAL and Philippine National Bank obviously from the income of the earlier companies. By monopolizing inter-company businesses with Tan-owned firms such as exclusive caterer for PAL passengers, conduit in purchasing and leasing planes including parts and services for PAL, banking transactions confined to PNB, its foreign subsidiaries and Oceanic Bank in which Allied Bank has significant stake, Tan with the board of directors and executive officers of the companies involved have crossed the line of U.S. legal business practices.


Tan’s net worth of $1.4 billion makes him the second richest Filipino with likely investments in China which may have exposed him to the latter’s anticorruption laws which can be pursued by USDOJ that could lead to far worse retribution.

Lucio Tan, Corrupt Practices in the U.S.

For starters, Pamusa can sue Lucio Tan for corrupt practices in the U.S., according to our volunteer counsels. Lucio could be indicted for corporate and accounting scandals which could end the web of corruption he has woven around himself. We have evidence against Lucio to be like several CEOs of U.S. conglomerates such as Enron, Worldcom, Adelphia, TYCO, etc. sentenced to jail for corporate crimes, or pay millions of dollars of fines like foreign companies, e.g. Deutsch Bank, Siemens AG, Union Bank of Switzerland, Daimler AG (maker of Mercedes Benz), etc. to stop U.S. criminal investigation and possible prosecution of top officers.


Pamusa’s volunteer lawyers agree Lucio is now in a ditch. The PCGG can charge him through Pamusa in the U.S. and/or China of corrupt practices emerging out of the application for the proposed Allied Bank-PNB merger in the U.S.. Lucio’s counsel probably overlooked that the application would lead U.S. banking regulators to look deeper into the two banks’ ownership before approval is granted. One condition is for Allied to divest of controlling equity in a small San Francisco bank, Oceanic Bank.


After waiting for several months the buyer John K.C. Ng, father-in-law of Lucio’s son, Michael, withdrew his offer. Although he gave a different reason, Ng presumably withdrew not wanting to be embroiled in Allied using Oceanic to launder money earned by the Marcos’ companies Lucio usurped but claimed by PCGG now pending in the Sandiganbayan.


Lucio as Allied chairman, among his other management positions such as in PAL, could probably be indicted for at least four (4) serious U.S. crimes, namely: money laundering abovementioned; racketeering for investing illegal funds of Marcos-owned or controlled corporations; foreign corrupt practices for investing illegal funds of the same Marcos-owned or controlled corporations and, of course, conspiracy with others to violate U.S. laws.


Pamusa’s volunteer counsels believe that to really nail Lucio the administration shouldn’t spare efforts for the SC to allow Lucio’s brother, Mariano Tanenglian, to testify and confirm Marcos’ ownership of the companies claimed by the PCGG. And when Lucio falls, others would follow such as Imelda Marcos, her children and brother, Kokoy Romualdez whose $101 million personal net worth in 2010 according to Forbes Magazine could’ve come only from Marcos’ ill-gotten wealth allegedly shared with GMA for her protection against PCGG seizure.

Lucio Tan questions OSG, PCGG stand on bank case

http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/business/02/07/11/lucio-tan-questions-osg-pcgg-stand-bank-case

Lucio Tan questions OSG, PCGG stand on bank case

MANILA, Philippines - Businessman Lucio Tan has questioned the failure of the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) and the Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) to pose objections to a motion for intervention filed by a group of people claiming to be stockholders of the former General Bank and Trust Company (Genbank) in relation to Civil Case No. 0005.

In a 10-page manifestation filed through lawyers Estelito Mendoza and Orlando Santiago, Tan said Aderito Yujuico, Martina Gutierrez, Augusto Carpio, Ma. Trinidad Kalaw, Zenaida Santiago, Lourdes Yujuico, and Rosa Caram are claiming ownership of "shares of stocks and/or beneficial interests over Allied Banking Corp."

The Genbank group’s motion seeks return of these shares of stocks that the government is also claiming for itself in the case.

Catalino Generillo, a former special counsel for the PCGG who now representing Aderito Yujuico et al., said the disputed Allied Bank shares were already worth P688,201,301.00 back in March 29, 1977.

"They [OSG and PCGG] ... have apparently overlooked that the plaintiff in the instant case is the Republic of the Philippines which they are representing. The properties sought to be reconveyed to the Republic... include shares of stock in Allied Bank of defendants Lucio Tan et al," Tan said.

He added that the OSG and PCGG move is tantamount to abandonment of their mandates under the law.

"In implicitly agreeing that the shares of stock in Allied Bank alleged to be ‘ill-gotten wealth’ should be conveyed to Aderito Yujuico et al., and not to the Republic of the Philippines, the PCGG violates its mandate under Executive Order No. 1, while the Office of the Solicitor General, in so agreeing violates its basic responsibility as the lawyer of the Government," he added.

Mendoza and Santiago argued that in 2006, the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court had already rejected a lawsuit filed by stockholders of Genbank against the Central Bank involving the same Allied Bank assets.

Tan claimed that it was not the first time that PCGG and OSG "strayed from their responsibility."

He said that in 2008, Generillo then representing PCGG, even went to the United States on government funds to obtain documents in support of the claim of the Marcos family that they own 60% of Tan’s assets.

"In doing so, the PCGG and the OSG were clearly no longer asking that the shares of stock of Lucio C. Tan be reconveyed to the Republic of the Philippines but that 60 percent thereof belongs to the estate of former President Ferdinand Marcos," he said.

Lucio Tan’s brother loses P51-B ill-gotten wealth case

http://www.gmanews.tv/story/212192/lucio-tans-brother-waives-right-to-present-evidence-in-wealth-case

Lucio Tan’s brother loses P51-B ill-gotten wealth case

The Sandiganbayan on Thursday rendered a "judgment in default" against businessman Lucio Tan's brother - Mariano Tanenglian - for failing to present evidence in his defense in a forfeiture case that had dragged for 23 years.

Sandiganbayan Fifth Division said Thursday Tanenglian is "deemed to have waived his right" to present any evidence in his own defense in the P51-billion ill-gotten wealth case.

The division chair, Associate Justice Roland Jurado, refused to allow Tanenglian's request for another extension to submit his defense evidence.

Jurado explained that the defendant had been repeatedly reminded that he cannot stall the proceedings since other defendants in the case were already done presenting their evidence.

Tanenglian had asked the court to defer his presentation of evidence while waiting for the Presidential Commission on Good Government's decision on his petition for immunity in exchange for testifying against Tan.

The government is seeking to prove that Tan's assets form part of the ill-gotten wealth of the Marcos family, the heirs of the late President Ferdinand Marcos.

Marcos and Tan were supposedly partners in business ventures that Tan successfully grew into multibillion-peso enterprises today.

Tan continues to deny the allegation, while the Marcoses are trying to get what they claim is their share of the enterprises. The government, on the other hand, wants to seize all the assets.

Tanenglian is also a defendant in the case against his brother but after they had a falling-out he offered to turn state's evidence in exchange for immunity.

Estelito Mendoza, Tan's counsel, said that it would be unfair for Tan and the rest of the defendants if more delays are allowed in the proceedings.

Apart from Tan and Tanenglian, also named defendants were the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos and former First Lady Imelda Marcos. - JE/MRT/VS, GMANews.TV