IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Houston oilman charged in oil-for-food probe |
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by DAVID IVANOVICH Houston Chronicle Entered into the database on Saturday, October 22nd, 2005 @ 11:02:23 MST |
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Legendary Houston oilman Oscar Wyatt and two others have been accused
of paying millions of dollars in illegal kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's regime. Wyatt was arrested at his home in Houston this morning and appeared before
a U.S. Magistrate Judge. He is scheduled to be arraigned next week in New York. In the latest indictments to emerge from the ongoing investigation into the United
Nations' oil-for-food program, a New York grand jury has accused Wyatt and two
Swiss business executives of funneling cash to front companies and bank accounts
controled by the Iraqi government. "The oil-for-food program was designed to provide humanitarian relief
to the Iraqi people; these defendants undermined those relief efforts to line
their own pockets with oil profits," said Michael Garcia, U.S. Attorney
for the Southern District of New York, said in a prepared statement today. Wyatt, the former chairman of what was once Coastal Corp., is also accused
of conspiring with fellow Houston oilman David Chalmers of BayOil (USA), who
was indicted on similar charges earlier this year. Wyatt attorney Tony Canales declined immediate comment, saying his office was
preparing a statement. An attorney for BayOil declined to comment. If convicted Wyatt and the other defendants could each face up to 62 years
in prison. Prosecutors also hope to force the defendants to forfeit at least
$1 billion in assets. Wyatt and the other defendants are accused of cooperating with Saddam's regime
to exploit weaknesses in the oil-for-food program. The U.N. effort was designed
to use Iraqi oil sales for food and medicine during the years of economic sanctions. The United Nations was supposed to retain complete control of those oil sales
to keep the revenue generated out of Saddam's hands. U.N. officials determined
the price to be paid for Iraqi oil, trying to match market conditions as closely
as possible. And proceeds from those sales were deposited into a U.N.-monitored bank account
in Manhattan. Saddam's government was permitted to choose its own customers. And investigators have learned that Baghdad pressured those recipients to pay
secret surcharges for the privilege of buying Iraqi crude.Wyatt had had dealings
with the Iraqis for many years prior to the imposition of sanctions. In December 1996, his Coastal Corp. allegedly received the first allocation
of oil, some 11.35 million barrels, awarded by Saddam's regime under the oil-for-food
program. But in the fall of 2000, Iraqi officials told Coastal representatives Saddam
would require oil recipients to pay secret surcharges for the privilege of purchasing
Iraqi crude. According to the indictment unsealed today, Wyatt, along with Swiss business
executives Catalina del Socorro Miguel Fuentes (known as Cathy Miguel) and Mohammed
Saidji shipped more than $500,000 in cash to the Jordanian bank account in August
2001, and then another 1 million euros between March 27, 2002, and April 1,
2002, to pay surcharges. Wyatt is also accused of lobbying U.N. "overseers" who set the price
of Iraqi crude sold under the oil-for-food program to lower the official selling
price. That enabled recipients of the Iraqi crude to pay Saddam's illegal surcharges
and still earn a profit, prosecutors say. Wyatt's Coastal Corporation was eventually purchased by Houston-based El Paso
Corp. Asked about the Wyatt indictment, El Paso spokesman Richard Wheatley said:
"We continue to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney's office, the SEC, and
various Congressional committees." |