[Have to wonder how many offshore accounts the Republicrats have?]


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Europe/2000-09/architect020900.shtml
Kohl's offshore funds architect 'laundered drugs cash'

2 September 2000

A close friend of Helmut Kohl, who helped set up the former German
chancellor's secret offshore accounts, is being investigated over alleged
links to a Latin American drug ring.

The authorities in Liechtenstein have confirmed that Herbert Batliner, one
of the central figures in Germany's slush funds scandal, is suspected of
money laundering. But officials in the principality's capital, Vaduz, did
not comment on a Swiss press report alleging that he laundered £17m for a
suspected Ecuadorian drugs baron, Jorge Hugo Reyes-Torres.

Mr Batliner is already being investigated in Germany for suspected
complicity in tax evasion. The accusation of a possible link to organised
crime has, however, put a far more sinister complexion on hisdealings, and
raises further questions about Mr Kohl's clandestine business activities.

Mr Kohl had met the Liechtenstein lawyer in Salzburg, Bonn, Berlin and
Vaduz. Earlier this year, he told the Bundestag's sleaze-busting committee
that he never discussed business with his friend.

Mr Batliner has been administering Christian Democrat slush funds for 40
years. In 1960, he set up the "Aspe" foundation, a tax-free hoard in
Liechtenstein containing undeclared donations from German business. In the
1970s and 1980s, he was the trustee of two other foundations used to stash
more secret money abroad.

The CDU's two biggest transactions – thus far unexplained – passed through
his hands. Mr Batliner says he dealt not with the CDU, but with its
disgraced financial wizards, Uwe Lüthje, the former CDU treasurer, and Horst
Weyrauch, the party's financial adviser.

The latest allegations come as Liechtenstein tries to clean up its image.
Stunned by German reports, leaked by the German intelligence agency BND,
portraying the principality as a "money-laundering haven", Liechtenstein has
hired the Austrian prosecutor Kurt Spitzer to investigate the charges.

In a report earlier this week, Mr Spitzer rejected most of the allegations,
but his inquiry has led to the arrest of eight people in Liechtenstein,
including two judges, an MP, and the brother of the Deputy Prime Minister.

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