Corruption


Lawrence Lessig“There’s something perverse about a member of Congress having one of the people who is trying to persuade him what the right answer is raise $100,000 for his campaign.”
- Lawrence Lessig

Stanford professor Lawrence Lessig hates corruption. And he’s trying to do something about it:

I don’t want a world where there are no lobbyists — I think lobbyists are essential. I think the message of lobbyists and the training of lobbyists is essential. Just like I think that what lawyers do before the Supreme Court is essential. But just as I think everybody would think it weird if a lawyer before the Supreme Court would send $100,000 to the Justice Roberts Retirement Fund or $100,000 to the Renovate Justice Roberts’s Office Fund, I think we better recognize there’s something perverse about a member of Congress having one of the people who is trying to persuade him what the right answer is raise $100,000 for his campaign. That’s the link we’ve got to break.

- Lawrence Lessig, interview by Mark Hemingway @ National Review Online: March 7, 2008: Link.

Via Slashdot: Link.

Lawrence Lessig blog: Link.

Wikipedia states:

Lawrence Lessig (born June 3, 1961) is an American academic. He is a professor of law at Stanford Law School and founder of its Center for Internet and Society. He is founder and CEO of the Creative Commons and a board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and of the Software Freedom Law Center, launched in February 2005. He is best known as a proponent of reduced legal restrictions on copyright, trademark and radio frequency spectrum, particularly in technology applications.

At the iCommons iSummit 07 Lessig announced that he will stop focusing his attention on copyright and related matters, and will instead work on corruption in the political system.

- Wikipedia: Link.



Rio Body Count:riobodycount.com.br

Rio Body Count

In Rio de Janeiro, 76 people have been killed in the past 7 days. The city is experiencing a spike in violent crime, much of it related to gangs and drug trafficking — 6,000 people were murdered there last year.

Two Rio residents have launched a website to track the ongoing deaths … co-creators of Rio Body Count, 25 year old systems analyst Vinicius Costa, and 32 year old cartoonist André Dahmer, say they want to raise awareness of the “war zone” their city has become. Link, and more here: Link.

[Xeni Jardin: BoingBoing]

Brazil’s slums face a new problem: vigilante militias

RIO DE JANEIRO - Homicides claimed more than 6,000 victims in Rio de Janeiro last year, many of them in gang violence fought by organized crime gangs seeking to control the sale of marijuana and cocaine in the city’s favelas, or shantytowns.

As if inter-gang violence were not enough, there is now a new element in the mix. Militias formed by off-duty and former cops, prison guards, and firefighters are moving in to oust the drug gangs and install their own brand of extortion.

“The militias are unquestionably criminal groups,” says Marcelo Freixo, a former human rights activist who studied the phenomenon before being elected to Congress in October. “They push out the traffickers and they charge residents a security tax they are obliged to pay. They control through force but it is not to provide security, it is to make money. One group makes money by selling drugs, the other through terror.”

[Andrew Downie: Christian Science Monitor - February 08, 2007 edition]

Favela da Rocinha, Rio de Janeiro
Favela da Rocinha, Rio de Janeiro

See Also

Rio de Janeiro @ Wikipedia



Hotel Minibar Keys Open Diebold Voting Machines –

The key that controls access to a standard Diebold voting machine is a common key that can be ordered from the Internet, also used to open hotel minibars.

The access panel door on a Diebold AccuVote-TS voting machine — the door that protects the memory card that stores the votes, and is the main barrier to the injection of a virus — can be opened with a standard key that is widely available on the Internet…

[Ed Felten: Link]

Via Boing Boing.



September 14, 2006:
Russian Central Bank reformer Andrei Kozlov gunned down —

Andrei KozlovAndrei Kozlov, who had spearheaded the campaign against fraudulent banks and money laundering as the No. 2 official at the Central Bank, died of gunshot wounds early Thursday.

Kozlov, 41, the bank’s first deputy head, and his driver, Alexander Semyonov, 54, were shot by two gunmen with automatic pistols Wednesday evening as Kozlov was exiting the Spartak sports complex.

… A longtime Central Bank official, Kozlov oversaw the closure of 44 banks accused of improper activities this year alone. He had also pushed for mandatory deposit insurance for banks, which was particularly important to millions of Russians who lost their savings in financial crises in the 1990s.

Most recently, he had lobbied for a permanent ban on those convicted of tax evasion from working in the banking sector.

Kozlov’s killing has raised concerns among many in the banking sector that these reforms and others could be stalled.

While the investigation has just begun, several senior government officials and banking sector experts said Kozlov died because of his work.

“He was a very brave and honest man, and through his activity he repeatedly encroached on the interests of unprincipled financiers,” Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said in a statement Thursday.

Born in Moscow on Jan. 6, 1965, Kozlov, started his career at the State Bank of the Soviet Union in 1989. He joined the Central Bank after the 1991 Soviet collapse, reaching the bank’s highest echelons by the mid-1990s and becoming first deputy head in 1997.

From 1999 to 2001, Kozlov took a break from government. During that time, he served as board chairman of the Russky Standard bank and also worked for a subsidiary of Aeroflot.

Kozlov is survived by his wife, Yekaterina, and three children.

[Moscow Times: Link]

Andrew Osborn reports from Moscow –

Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned that his country’s battle with organised crime has entered a dangerous new phase after the assassination of a top anti-money-laundering official.

Putin called [Kozlov’s] murder “a manifestation of the intensifying situation in the struggle against crime” and ordered a special task force be established to staunch the rivers of dirty money that flow through Russia every day.

… It is no exaggeration to say that Kozlov’s slaying was the most high- profile murder of a senior official since Putin came to power six years ago; his rank was close to that of a government minister. Senior politicians called the attack an assault on the government itself and said it shattered an unspoken truce between the Kremlin and the Russian mafia, a catch-all phrase for scores of highly organised criminal groupings that have sprung up since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

In the chaotic 1990s, the Mafia routinely “eliminated” awkward politicians and officials, but since the tough- talking Putin took the reins of power it had backed away from such terror tactics and was thought to have opted instead for a veneer of respectability.

That “truce” now appears to have been torn up overnight.

Kozlov … had shut down dozens of “dirty” banks after revealing that they were fronts for money launderers.

Perhaps more significantly, he planned to shut down dozens of others in the months and years ahead and kept a blacklist of financial institutions he suspected were “compromised” which he was working his way through.

… Kozlov had become adept at “following the money” and closing down such banks by withdrawing their licences and publicising their wrongdoing.

His most high-profile case came in 2004 when he took on the aptly named Sodbiznesbank, ironically a large contributor to Putin’s re-election campaign.

Kozlov accused the bank of accepting ransom money to the value of $1m (£532,000) from a well-known criminal group. The money was purportedly extorted from a Russian truck-maker called Kamaz, whose general director Viktor Faber was kidnapped along with the company’s chief economist Natalia Starodubtseva.

The kidnapping went badly wrong: both were abducted in May 2003 and found dead in September but the hostage-takers got their money nonetheless.

Kozlov suggested that the bank was implicated in the crime, said over 80% of its capital was fictitious, and ordered it to hand back its banking licence.

Sodbiznesbank’s defence mechanism was crude. It blocked access to its central Moscow office for two weeks during which time it allegedly spirited away millions of dollars of assets. In the end, Kozlov ordered in the riot police who stormed the offices ending the standoff.

Powerful vested interests were clearly upset though and the affair caught up with Alexander Slesarev, the 37-year-old owner of Sodbiznesbank bank, last October.

He was executed with his wife and daughter in a contract drive-by shooting just outside Moscow.

[Sunday Herald: Link]

Flashback 1997:
Business Week praises Andrei Kozlov for creating “Russia’s most liquid, clean, and efficient securities market” –

In 1992, Russia’s economy was in chaos. Inflation was 2,000%. Industrial output was falling. Trust in Boris N. Yeltsin’s radical reformers was nil.

But in the bowels of the Central Bank of Russia, Andrei A. Kozlov, 32, saw a way out. A staffer in the securities department, he heard a group of American bankers, including then New York Federal Reserve Bank President Gerald E. Corrigan, describe how the U.S. government finances its operations by borrowing money on capital markets. Kozlov vowed to develop Russia’s own government securities program. Says Kozlov: ‘’The attitude of the majority of higher-level government officials was, ‘Let these young guys play with their toys.”’

Five years later, Kozlov, is First Deputy Chairman of the Central Bank, and his ‘’toys'’ are bringing billions of dollars to the Russian budget. Using Corrigan’s advice, he created Russia’s most liquid, clean, and efficient securities market. Now, Russian and foreign investors feel confident enough to put over $50 billion in Russian Treasury bonds. Russia qualified for an international rating in September, 1996. Since then, Russians have sold more than $6.5 billion in Eurobonds. Says David Boren, Salomon Brothers’ emerging- markets research president: ‘’Kozlov was there early, he’s going to stay around a long time, and he’s clean.'’

[Link]



Not breaking news, but interesting:

Money for Nothing: Billions of dollars have disappeared, gone to bribe Iraqis and line contractors’ pockets.
by Philip Giraldi - The American Conservative - October 24, 2005

When the final page is written on America’s catastrophic imperial venture, one word will dominate the explanation of U.S. failure—corruption. Large-scale and pervasive corruption meant that available resources could not be used to stabilize and secure Iraq in the early days of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), when it was still possible to do so. Continuing corruption meant that the reconstruction of infrastructure never got underway, giving the Iraqi people little incentive to co-operate with the occupation. Ongoing corruption in arms procurement and defense spending means that Baghdad will never control a viable army while the Shi’ite and Kurdish militias will grow stronger and produce a divided Iraq in which constitutional guarantees will be irrelevant.

Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA)The American-dominated Coalition Provisional Authority could well prove to be the most corrupt administration in history, almost certainly surpassing the widespread fraud of the much-maligned UN Oil for Food Program. At least $20 billion that belonged to the Iraqi people has been wasted, together with hundreds of millions of U.S. taxpayer dollars. Exactly how many billions of additional dollars were squandered, stolen, given away, or simply lost will never be known because the deliberate decision by the CPA not to meter oil exports means that no one will ever know how much revenue was generated during 2003 and 2004.

… The 15-month proconsulship of the CPA disbursed nearly $20 billion, two-thirds of it in cash, most of which came from the Development Fund for Iraq that had replaced the UN Oil for Food Program and from frozen and seized Iraqi assets. Most of the money was flown into Iraq on C-130s in huge plastic shrink-wrapped pallets holding 40 “cashpaks,” each cashpak having $1.6 million in $100 bills. Twelve billion dollars moved that way between May 2003 and June 2004, drawn from accounts administered by the New York Federal Reserve Bank. The $100 bills weighed an estimated 363 tons.

Once in Iraq, there was virtually no accountability over how the money was spent. There was also considerable money “off the books,” including as much as $4 billion from illegal oil exports. The CPA and the Iraqi State Oil Marketing Board, which it controlled, made a deliberate decision not to record or “meter” oil exports, an invitation to wholesale fraud and black marketeering.

… The only certified public-accounting firm used by the CPA to monitor its spending was a company called North Star Consultants, located in San Diego, which was so small that it operated out of a private home. It was subsequently determined that North Star did not, in fact, perform any review of the CPA’s internal spending controls. Today, no one can account for billions of those dollars or even suggest how the money was spent. And as the CPA no longer exists, there is also little interest in re-examining its transparency or accountability.

[Link]

The article further notes: “Halliburton, Vice President Dick Cheney’s former company, has a no-bid monopoly contract with the Army Corps of Engineers that is now estimated to be worth $10 billion.”

Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR), a Halliburton subsidiary, has it fingers in a wide variety of pies:

Detention Camps: The Next Generation

Failing to Rebuild Iraq

Wikipedia: Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA)

The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) was established as a transitional government following the invasion of Iraq by the United States, United Kingdom and the other members of the multinational coalition which was formed to oust the government of Saddam Hussein in 2003. Citing UN Security Council Resolution 1483 (2003), and the laws of war, the CPA vested itself with executive, legislative, and judicial authority over the Iraqi government from the period of the CPA’s inception on April 21, 2003, until its dissolution on June 28, 2004.

[Wikipedia: Link]

SourceWatchSourceWatch casts a critical eye upon CPA:

Following the establishment of limited Iraqi sovereignty: June 30, 2004, the CPA is scheduled to cease existence. In its stead will be the US Mission to Iraq.

None the less, “A comprehensive examination of the U.S.-led agency that oversaw the rebuilding of Iraq has triggered at least 27 criminal investigations and produced evidence of millions of dollars’ worth of fraud, waste and abuse, according to a report by the Coalition Provisional Authority’s inspector general,” Stuart W. Bowen Jr. : Link

[C]ontractors accused of fraud in the fulfillment of CPA contacts have been claiming that the United States Federal Court system does not have juristiction in deciding these cases. (see David Phinney, “Iraq Contractor Claims Immunity From Fraud Laws: Seized Oil Assets Paid For Offshore Overbilling”, CorpWatch, December 23rd, 2004: Link

A study publishd by the Congressional Research Service (CRS), authored by L. Elaine Halchin, Analyst in American National Government Government and Finance Division: “The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA): Origin, Characteristics, and Institutional Authorities”, April 29, 2004 - [FAS Hosted PDF file: Link) discovered that there was a great deal of murkiness surrounding the conception of the CPA, and that documents offered by the Bush Administration have served to increase the cloudiness …

[SourceWatch: Link]



Thoughts from The Bear on black markets and related topics:

Society should never intentionally create a black market. All black markets are a danger to the community due to the lack of controls and the high delivery fees that they force on the delivery system. Likewise there is a huge loss in revenue to the normal flow of commerce through the community. The amounts of money available leads to the inevitable corruption of all who attempt to interfere in the flow of goods in this black market. Black markets made fortunes to the entrepreneurs of the world wars. Tires, fuel and meat made fortunes for those who could divert supplies to their clients. Anything can be a black market. The only thing required is scarcity, or illegality, and a demand for the items.

…. The only real function of … drug prohibition is to create a black market trade, otherwise known as “money for nothing”.

[The Bear: Link]

Via EB — thanks.



Bad air in the Windy City:

CHICAGO, July 19 2006 — Special prosecutors said today that scores of criminal suspects were routinely tortured by police officers on the South Side in the 1970’s and 1980’s, but that extensive legal research convinced them that there was no way to skirt the statute of limitations preventing prosecution.

[NY Times: Link]

“Skirt” the statute of limitations? I dislike this usage — we’re talking about wide-scale police torture, not some punk dodging misdemeanors on technicalities. But then, the New York Times is not suggesting that we experience outrage.

Eric Ruder of Counterpunch takes a stronger position:

The facts of the Chicago police torture scandal are well established. Former Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge and officers working under him used a variety of torture techniques — Russian roulette, electroshock, suffocation and beatings — to extract “confessions” during interrogations at Area 2 and 3 police stations.

For more than a decade, the officers suffered no consequences for their crimes. In fact, they were often promoted for “getting the bad guys” and “closing their cases” with speed and certainty, at a time when politicians nationally were declaring a “war on crime.”
[Eric Ruder, Counterpunch: Link]

Democracy Now has an interview with Flint Taylor, an attorney with the People’s Law Office in Chicago. Taylor represented many of the torture victims and was directly involved in spearheading the special prosecutor’s investigation.

[The report is] kind of a mixed bag in the sense that the evidence was so strong that the special prosecutor found that over half of the 148 people that said they were tortured and abused were, in fact, that they believed they were. But they used the legal out of saying it wasn’t beyond a, quote, “reasonable doubt.”

[T]he other thing that’s outrageous about the whole thing, is we see now that there is a blueprint that’s been developed in various cases for prosecuting people for perjury, for obstruction of justice, when in fact they’re able to cover things up for so long and avoid prosecution until the, quote, “statute of limitations” has run on the acts themselves, that being the torture, etc. If you accept the fact that there’s not a continuing conspiracy, which we say there was, that starts with the torture and continues to this day in covering it up, if you just look at it in terms of obstruction of justice and perjury and racketeering violations under the RI

[Democracy Now: Link]

WBBM Radio Chicago on “Top Cops React to Torture Report”:

Chicago Police Superintendent Phil Cline on Wednesday described the city’s current police force as “very different” from the Chicago Police Department of 20 years ago during the Jon Burge-era.

Despite uncovering evidence of past police torture, special prosecutors praised the Chicago Police Department for adopting new procedures for handling suspects, including a requirement that interrogations be tape recorded.

“We accept the special prosecutor’s report,” said Cline. “What they’re citing happened but the fact that they said that this couldn’t happen today speaks volumes about the Chicago Police Department.” Cline added, “We take this very seriously because past perceptions can erode all of the good work and progress that been accomplished.”

[WBBM: Link]

Google News: Chicago Police Torture

Google Web: Jon Burge



In a Rolling Stone article, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. asserts that the Republicans stole the 2004 election:

After carefully examining the evidence, I’ve become convinced that the president’s party mounted a massive, coordinated campaign to subvert the will of the people in 2004. Across the country, Republican election officials and party stalwarts employed a wide range of illegal and unethical tactics to fix the election. A review of the available data reveals that in Ohio alone, at least 357,000 voters, the overwhelming majority of them Democratic, were prevented from casting ballots or did not have their votes counted in 2004 — more than enough to shift the results of an election decided by 118,601 votes. In what may be the single most astounding fact from the election, one in every four Ohio citizens who registered to vote in 2004 showed up at the polls only to discover that they were not listed on the rolls, thanks to GOP efforts to stem the unprecedented flood of Democrats eager to cast ballots. And that doesn?t even take into account the troubling evidence of outright fraud, which indicates that upwards of 80,000 votes for Kerry were counted instead for Bush. That alone is a swing of more than 160,000 votes — enough to have put John Kerry in the White House.
[Link]

Via boingboing



Posted by Geov Parrish, This Day in Radical History:
Victor Riesel

April 5 1956:

Columnist Victor Riesel, a crusader against labor racketeers, blinded in New York City when a hired assailant threw sulfuric acid in his face.

(more…)



Jail time for high-flying fixers. CNN reports:

U.S. District Judge Paul C. Huck sentenced [Jack] Abramoff and a former business partner to five years and 10 months in prison and ordered them to pay restitution of more than $21 million. Abramoff, 47, and Adam Kidan, 41, both pleaded guilty to conspiracy and wire fraud.

They won’t start their sentences for at least 90 days so they can continue cooperating in a Washington corruption investigation and a Florida probe into the murder of Konstantinos “Gus” Boulis, owner of the SunCruz Casinos fleet they bought.

The two admitted concocting a fake $23 million wire transfer to make it appear they had made a large cash contribution to the $147.5 million SunCruz purchase. Based on that fake transfer, lenders provided the pair with $60 million in financing.

Abramoff and Kidan are expected to give statements in the investigation into the February 6, 2001, slaying of Boulis, who was gunned down at the wheel of his car amid a power struggle over the gambling fleet.

Meanwhile, three men face murder charges, including one who worked for Kidan as a consultant at SunCruz and who allegedly has ties to New York’s Gambino crime family.

Both Abramoff and Kidan have repeatedly denied any role in or knowledge of the Boulis murder.

But prosecutors say Kidan has not been ruled out as a suspect and defense attorneys say Abramoff could provide critical inside information about the dispute with Boulis, who also founded the Miami Subs restaurant chain.

See also:
SunCruz @ Wikipedia