The untold story of the sources of the loot controlled by Paul "The
Vulture" Singer, Ken Langone and the Kochs - and why they need to buy
the White House.
Hedge fund magnate Paul Singer likes to breakfast on decayed carcasses.
What he chews down is sickening, but just as nausea-inducing are his
new tablemates: billionaires Ken Langone and the Koch Brothers, Charles
and David.
Singer has called together the billionaire boys' club for the purpose
of picking our next president for us. The old-fashioned way of choosing
presidents - democracy and counting ballots and all that - has never
been a favorite of this pack. I can tell you that from my investigations
of each of these gentlemen for The Guardian. When the Statue of Liberty
has nightmares, she dreams that these guys will combine to seize
America via a cash-and-carry coup d'état.
Welcome to the nightmare. Singer, Langone and the Kochs last month
decided to elect Chris Christie for us. The New Jersey governor's
pseudocampaign went belly up before it began. But that's beside the
point. Now that the Supreme Court has effectively ended campaign finance
limits and allowed secretive contributions through "corporations," this
new combine of the ultrawealthy should not be viewed as just a
political threat to the Democrats, but as a threat to democracy.
Let me give you a rundown from my sulphur-scented files on these men who would be king-makers.
Billionaire 1: Ken Langone
Langone likes to be known as the founder of Home Depot, just your local tool guy in a blue apron with a little bag of screws.
But he was also the man, with his right-wing partners, behind Database
Technologies (DBT). It was in my first investigation of Langone in 2000
that I discovered that DBT had created a list of several thousand
"felons" - most of them black, all of them innocent, all of them purged
from Florida's voter rolls by DBT's client, Katherine Harris. And
Langone's company knew exactly what was going on.
What qualifies Langone to pick our president? In his own words: "I'm nuts; I'm rich."
Billionaires 2 and 3: David and Charles Koch
You think you've read all about the billionaire brothers. Well, there's more:
In 1996, an FBI agent, Richard Elroy, told my team that oil had been
pilfered from the Osage Indian reservation in Oklahoma. He and other
G-men filmed the filch-theft, say witnesses, personally ordered by
Charles Koch. A few barrels here, a few barrels there.
It all added up: to about a billion and a half dollars in
looted petroleum, says one expert, a third of the Koch fortune at the
time. David and Charles shared in the booty via their private company,
Koch Industries.
Billionaire 4: Paul Singer
Now we get to the carrion king, Paul Singer, known as Singer The
Vulture. I didn't give him the moniker. The name Vulture was tagged on
him and his speculator colleagues by the prime minister of Britain and
the World Bank. Recently, former United Nations envoy Winston Tubman
suggested I ask Singer or his business associates, "Do you know you're
causing babies to die?"
What does this guy do - put poison in kiddies' milk? Worse: he takes away the milk.
Singer's modus operandi is to find some forgotten tiny debt owed by a
very poor nation (Peru and Congo were on his menu). He waits for the
United States and European taxpayers to forgive the poor nations' debts,
then waits at bit longer for offers of food aid, medicine and
investment loans. Then Singer pounces, legally grabbing at every
resource and all the money going to the desperate country. Trade stops,
funds freeze and an entire economy is effectively held hostage.
Singer then demands aid-giving nations pay monstrous ransoms to let
trade resume. At BBC TV's Newsnight, we learned that Singer demanded
$400 million dollars from the Congo for a debt he picked up for less
than $10 million. If he doesn't get his 4,000 percent profit, he can
effectively starve the nation. I don't mean that figuratively - I mean
starve as in no food. In Congo-Brazzaville last year, one-fourth of all deaths of children under five were caused by malnutrition.
For BBC, I tried to ask Vulture Singer the diplomat's question about
the baby killing, but I couldn't get past George Gershwin. (In the New
York office tower housing the billionaires' roost, a Gershwin lookalike
in top hat and tails plays show tunes on a grand piano for Singer's
grand entrance.)
And it's not just poor African carcasses that tempt Singer. Indeed,
during my investigation for my new book, "Vultures' Picnic," I
discovered that Singer's first big vulture attack was on American
asbestos victims.
Background: The executives of three companies - vermiculate mine
operator WR Grace, wallboard manufacturer USG and building materials
company Owens Corning - knew that asbestos exposure in their respective
operations was killing their workers. When caught and sued, the
companies filed for bankruptcy, agreeing to pay almost all of their
earnings to the people who were dying and injured by their asbestos.
But Singer had a better idea. These companies, as you can imagine, were
worth next to nothing, and Singer bought Owens Corning for a song.
If he could cut the amount paid to the victims, Singer could boost
Corning's value big time. So, a public relations campaign began,
attacking the dying workers, saying they were all faking it.
One attacker was a guy named George W. Bush.
In January 2005, President Dubya held a televised meeting to promote an
"expert" who pronounced that over half a million workers suing Singer's
industry were liars. If workers couldn't breathe, he said to the
grinning president, it wasn't the fault of asbestos.
The "expert" was not a doctor, but, notably, his "research" was partly
funded by ... Paul Singer. And so was Bush. Since the death of Enron's
Ken Lay, Singer and his vulture flock at Singer's hedge fund, Elliott
International, had become the top contributors to the Republican
National Committee. It's hard to measure his largesse exactly because
some of that help comes in through the side door. For example, Singer
put money behind the Swift Boat smear on Bush's opponent, John Kerry.
The legal, political and public relations attacks on the dying workers
chiseled away the compensation expected to be paid by the asbestos
companies, boosting their net worth. Singer then flipped Corning,
selling it for a neat billion-dollar profit.
It's legal. It's brilliant. It's sick. It's Singer.
One of my favorite Singer scores was his successful scheme to legally
loot the Treasury of Peru. The nation's US lawyer told me, aghast, how
Singer let Peru's rogue President, Alberto Fujimori, flee his nation to
avoid murder charges. Singer had seized Fujimori's getaway plane. The
Vulture named his price: one of Fujimori's last acts as president before
he fled was to order his dirt-poor nation to pay Singer $58 million.
Why the Billionaires Need to Buy the White House
A Koch Industries executive (not knowing he was being taped) said he
had asked Charles Koch, who already had a billion from an inheritance,
why Koch was pocketing a few bucks a week from poor American Indians.
Koch told him, "I want my fair share, and that's all of it."
And "all of it," of course, includes the White House.
Putting Bush in the White House was worth his weight in gold to these
gents - more, in fact. And now, the Kochs, Singer and Langone have
teamed up to pick a candidate they pray can take back their real estate
at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
The Gimme for Langone
Langone's firm DBT's "felon" scrub list included only innocent people,
so you certainly wouldn't find the name "Langone" on it. In 2004, New
York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer charged Langone with conspiracy,
accusing the billionaire with subverting a stock exchange regulator's
investigation into monkey business by Langone's investment bank.
A technicality ended the civil action on the conspiracy charge.
|
DBT's Florida Felon scrub list (Langone's firm) and Willie Steen, a Black veteran who was wrongly purged from the voter rolls. (Image: BBC Television, Bush Family Fortunes.) |
But now, Obama's new banking and securities reforms, albeit weak, give
regulators new enforcement powers and provide an extra independent eye
on stock market shenanigans. For Langone, picking the president means
closing the regulatory eye.
The Gimme for The Kochs
FBI man Elroy told our investigators that the Justice Department was
going to let the FBI cuff Charles Koch on criminal charges for the theft
of the Osage Indian oil. But then, fumes Elroy, Koch's well-funded
buddies, then-senators Bob Dole and Don Nickles, stepped in - and Koch
walked. No charges.
Dennis DeConcini, then an Arizona senator, wanted to know why criminal
or civil charges were never brought against the Kochs. That was not a
wise question to ask. The senator told me that the Kochs threatened his
political destruction if the Congressional committee he chaired
continued with its investigations of the theft of Native oil. He
continued, but his political career did not.
During the Clinton administration, Koch Industries was charged with
criminal violations of the Clean Water Act. Under President Bush, the
charges, but not the water, were cleaned up.
In other words, crime pays - if you get to pick the sheriff.
The Gimme for Paul Singer
Paul Singer had placed a big bet on the asbestos industry, then, set
out to fix the casino, helping install Bush in the White House. That is,
he had a president willing to beat up on asbestos workers and push for
so-called "tort reform" that undermined these victims' claims. What the
victims lost, Singer gained.
But there's trouble on the horizon for Singer. In 2007, Britain
outlawed Singer and all other Vulture speculators in Third World debt
from collecting their pound of flesh in the United Kingdom. Other
European nations are following suit.
Several US Congressmen are pushing a UK-style prohibition on Singer's
activities. (Even Chevron Corporation is complaining about the Vulture
attacks. When Chevron calls bankers unscrupulous, they've got to be really unscrupulous.) Without a veto pen over Congress, Singer stands to lose hundreds of millions of dollars.
Singer plays defense, but is best at offense: to collect on some of his
claims against Argentina, his lobbyists have pushed a bill in Congress
to put an economic chokehold on trade with the South American nation.
Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton blocked this crazy attack
on our ally. As a result, Singer is not a happy gaucho. There will be blood. Obama will have to pay.
The Gimme for Them All
There's one thing that every billionaire wants: another billion. And
that's threatened by Obama's plan to tax the "carried interest" tax
deferment.
Guys like Singer and Langone don't pay taxes like you and I do. While
we pay taxes on income, the profits from vulture speculation and
arbitrage are often recorded as "carried interest," effectively not
taxed. It's a billion-dollar benefit for the billionaires, and every
Republican candidate has sworn to keep this loophole open and make sure
you and I pay Singers' taxes for him.
Unfortunately for Singer, the Kochs and Langone, the GOP candidates
currently kissing the billionaires' behinds don't seem electable.
So the Billionaire Boys Club prodded Gov. Christie, a bully-boy from
Jersey, to muscle his way into the Oval Office. Christie didn't fly, no
surprise. But whether they pick the GOP candidate or retreat to their
old tactics of smear-from-the-rear, the fragile thing called democracy
stands little chance against the tsunamic powers of the quartet's
combined checkbooks.
Source: Truthout