Valuable as Art, but Priceless as a Tool to Launder Money
By PATRICIA COHEN
Published: May 12, 2013
According to the air bill slapped on the crate that arrived at Kennedy
International Airport from London, an unnamed painting worth $100 was
inside. Only later did federal investigators discover that it was by the
American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and worth $8 million.
via U.S. Attorney's Office/Southern District of New York
Foto de Marcelo Carnaval/Agencia O Globo
Robert Stolarik for The New York Times
This painting, known as “Hannibal” after a word scribbled on its
surface, was brought into the United States in 2007 as part of a
Brazilian embezzler’s elaborate effort to launder money, the authorities
say. It was later seized at a Manhattan warehouse by federal
investigators who are now preparing to return it to Brazil at the behest of law enforcement officials there.
The painting’s seizure was a victory in the economy-rattling, billion-dollar fraud and money laundering case of Edemar Cid Ferreira, a former Brazilian banker who converted some of his loot into a 12,000-piece art collection.
Law enforcement officials in the United States and abroad say “Hannibal”
is just one of thousands of valuable artworks being used by criminals
to hide illicit profits and illegally transfer assets around the globe.
As other traditional money-laundering techniques have come under closer
scrutiny, smugglers, drug traffickers, arms dealers and the like have
increasingly turned to the famously opaque art market, officials say.
It is hard to imagine a business more custom-made for money laundering,
with million-dollar sales conducted in secrecy and with virtually no
oversight. What this means in practical terms is that “you can have a
transaction where the seller is listed as ‘private collection’ and the
buyer is listed as ‘private collection,’ ” said Sharon Cohen Levin,
chief of the asset forfeiture unit of the United States attorney’s
office in Manhattan. “In any other business, no one would be able to get
away with this.”
Though there are no hard statistics on the amount of laundered money
invested in art, law enforcements officials and scholars agree they are
seeing more of it. The Basel Institute on Governance, a nonprofit
research organization in Switzerland — the site of the world’s premier contemporary and Modern art show
— warned last year of the high volume of illegal and suspicious
transactions involving art. But regulation has been scattershot and
difficult to coordinate internationally.
In the United States federal money laundering statutes apply to nearly
every major transaction through which illegal profits are disguised to
look legal. Typically, dirty money is laundered through the purchase of,
say, a penthouse apartment, or mixed in with the earnings of a
legitimate business like a restaurant. When gambling winnings or drug
proceeds come out the other end, they appear as a real estate asset or
business profit. They look clean.
Most of these industries have checks. Real estate titles and deeds at
least require a name. Mortgage brokers, stockbrokers, casinos, banks and
Western Union must report suspicious financial activity to the federal Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
Banks must report all transactions of $10,000 or more. Altogether, the
network logs more than 15 million currency transactions each year that
can be used to track dirty money, said Steve Hudak, a spokesman for the
agency. The art market lacks these safeguards. Roll up a canvas and it
is easy to stash or move between countries; prices can be raised or
lowered by millions of dollars in a heartbeat; and the names of buyers
and sellers tend to be guarded zealously, leaving law enforcement to
guess who was involved, where the money came from and whether the price
was suspicious.
(Although federal prosecutors last month charged the New York art dealer Helly Nahmad with conspiring to launder $100 million in gambling money, the indictment says that bank accounts, not art, were used for laundering.)
Governments around the world have taken steps to bring illegal activity
to light. In February, for instance, the European Commission passed
rules requiring galleries to report anyone who pays for a work with more
than 7,500 euros in cash (about $9,825), and to file
suspicious-transaction reports.
The United States similarly requires all cash transactions of $10,000 or
more to be reported. Still, laundering involving art tends to be
handled case by case. Federal prosecutors, who usually discover
art-related laundering through suspicious banking activity or illegal
transport across borders, have worked closely with other countries and
aggressively used their powers under civil law to confiscate art that
they can establish is linked to a crime, even in the absence of a
criminal conviction.
In a forthcoming book, “Money Laundering Through Art,” the Brazilian
judge who presided over the Ferreira case, Fausto Martin De Sanctis,
argues for more concerted international regulation, saying that if
businesses like casinos and gem dealers must report suspicious financial
activity to regulators, so should art dealers and auction houses.
But to dealers and their clients, secrecy is a crucial element of the
art market’s mystique and practice. The Art Dealers Association of
America dismissed the idea that using money to launder art was even a
problem. “The issue is not an industrywide problem and really does not
pertain to us,” said Lily Mitchem Pearsall, the association’s
spokeswoman.
Law enforcement officials complain that dealers are playing down art’s role in a criminal underworld.
In Newark, federal prosecutors in a civil case recently announced the
seizure of nearly $16 million in fine art photographs as part of a fraud
and money laundering scheme that prosecutors say was engineered by
Philip Rivkin, a Texas businessman.
The 2,200 photographs by masters like Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Weston
and Edward Steichen — more than could fit into an 18-wheeler — were paid
for, court papers say, with some of the $78 million that the
authorities say Mr. Rivkin got from defrauding oil companies like Shell,
Exxon, and Mobil. Mr. Rivkin, who has not been charged with any crimes,
was last thought to be in Spain and had arranged to have the photos
shipped there.
In New York, victims of the fraud and money laundering scams
of the disbarred lawyer Marc Dreier are still in court fighting over
art he bought with some of the $700 million stolen from hedge funds and
investors. At the moment 28 works by artists like Matisse, Warhol,
Rothko and Damien Hirst are being stored by the federal government.
“Hannibal” also sits in storage. That 1982 Basquiat work was part of a
spectacular collection that Mr. Ferreira assembled while he controlled
Banco Santos in Brazil. Some of these works had been exhibited at
museums like the Guggenheim in New York.
Like most laundering cases involving art in the United States, this one
was uncovered when the work was illegally transported into the country.
In 2004 Mr. Ferreira’s financial empire, built partly on embezzled
funds, collapsed, leaving $1 billion in debts. A court in São Paulo
sentenced him in 2006 to 21 years in prison for bank fraud, tax evasion
and money laundering, a conviction he is appealing. Before his arrest,
however, more than $30 million of art owned by Mr. Ferreira and his
wife, Márcia, was smuggled out of Brazil, Judge De Sanctis said.
According to court papers, “Hannibal” was bought for $1 million in 2004
by a Panamanian company called Broadening-Info Enterprises, which later
tried to sell the painting for $5 million. It was sent to New York in
2007, passing through the hands of four shipping agents in two countries
before landing at Kennedy.
Since merchandise valued at less than $200 may enter the United States
without customs documentation, duty or tax, “Hannibal,” labeled worth
$100, was cleared for entry even before the plane landed.
Philip Byler, Broadening’s lawyer in New York, said that the inaccurate
invoices were merely a shortsighted attempt by the art dealer that
Broadening hired to save importation fees. “It was not done with the
intention of smuggling,” he said. He also challenged the Brazilian
authorities’ claim, saying that “Hannibal” was legally purchased from a
company owned by Mr. Ferreira’s wife.
Mr. Byler said that Broadening intends to appeal the forfeiture.
No comments:
Post a Comment