Mansion 'mistake' piles the pressure on Barack Obama
A British-Iraqi billionaire lent millions of dollars to Barack Obama's fundraiser just weeks before an imprudent land deal that has returned to haunt the presidential contender, an investigation by The Times discloses.
The money transfer raises the question of whether funds from Nadhmi Auchi, one of Britain’s wealthiest men, helped Mr Obama buy his mock Georgian mansion in Chicago. A company related to Mr Auchi, who has a conviction for corruption in France, registered the loan to Mr Obama's bagman Antoin "Tony" Rezko on May 23 2005. Mr Auchi says the loan, through the Panamanian company Fintrade Services SA, was for $3.5 million.
Three weeks later, Mr Obama bought a house on the city's South Side while Mr Rezko's wife bought the garden plot next door from the same seller on the same day, June 15. Mr Obama says he never used Mrs Rezko's still-empty lot, which could only be accessed through his property. But he admits he paid his gardener to mow the lawn.
Mrs Rezko, whose husband was widely known to be under investigation at the time, went on to sell a 10-foot strip of her property to Mr Obama seven months later so he could enjoy a bigger garden.
Mr Obama now admits his involvement in this land deal was a “boneheaded mistake”. Mrs Rezko’s purchase and sale of the land to Mr Obama raises many unanswered questions. It is unclear how Mrs Rezko could have afforded the downpayment of $125,000 and a $500,000 mortgage for the original $625,000 purchase of the garden plot at 5050 South Greenwood Ave.
In a sworn statement a year later, Mrs Rezko said she got by on a salary of
$37,000 and had $35,000 assets. Mr Rezko told a court he had "no income,
negative cash flow, no liquid assets, no unencumbered assets [and] is
significantly in arrears on many of his obligations."
Mrs Rezko, whose husband goes on trial on unrelated corruption charges in
Chicago on March 3, refused to answer questions about the case when she spoke by
telephone to The Times.
Asked if she used money from her husband to buy the land next to Mr Obama's
house, she said: "I can't answer these questions, I'm sorry."
Asked how long she and her husband had known Mr Auchi, she replied: "I will not
be able to answer this question."
Mr Auchi's lawyer, asked whether the Fintrade Services loan was used to buy the
land which became Mr Obama's garden, stated: "No, not as far as my client is
aware."
Mr Auchi's links with Mr Rezko are a new political headache for Mr Obama, the
charismatic Illinois senator vying to become America’s first African-American
president.
Hillary Clinton has sought to make Mr Rezko, who has bankrolled Mr Obama's
political career since his first run for the Illinois state senate in the
mid-1990s, into an election issue by calling him a "slum landlord" in a
televised debate. She has repeatedly suggested that Mr Obama has effectively not
been "vetted" by media scrutiny and will not withstand "the Republican attack
machine".
Bill Burton, a spokesman for Mr Obama, told The Times: “The bottom line is Obama
does not recall ever meeting him [Mr Auchi].”
The house-and-garden deal raised questions about whether Mr Rezko, a property
developer and fast-food restauranteur, made it possible for the Obamas to
purchase a mansion they could otherwise not afford.
Mrs Rezko paid the asking price for the garden but the Obamas bought the house
for $1.65 million, - $300,000 less than the asking price. The sellers deny they
offered the Obamas a discount on the house because the garden had fetched full
price from Mrs Rezko.
Mr Rezko has since been indicted for allegedly scheming to pressure companies
seeking business with the state of Illinois for kickbacks and contributions to
the governor Rod Blagojevich's campaign. He goes on trial on March 3.
A prosecution document filed last month alleged that a "political candidate" -
identified by the Chicago Sun-Times as Mr Obama - received a $10,000 campaign
contribution from what is said to be a $250,000 kickback in the corruption case.
That means Mr Obama's name could figure in Mr Rezko's trial, although he is not
accused of any wrongdoing.
Mr Obama insists he never used his office to do favours for Mr Rezko but admits
that, as an Illinois state senator, he once wrote letters to housing officials
urging them to provide money in support of a proposed apartment building for
elderly people which Mr Rezko wanted to build.
Mr Obama has publicly sought to atone for his closeness to Mr Rezko, paying
$150,000 to charity to distance himself from a man accused of political
corruption.
The spotlight fell on Mr Rezko's ties to Mr Auchi last month when the Chicago
businessman was thrown in jail for violating his bail terms by failing to
declare a different $3.5 million loan from the British billionaire, made in
April 2007. Prosecutors feared Mr Rezko, who travels widely in the Middle East,
might flee to a country without an extradition treaty such as his birthplace of
Syria.
Mr Auchi was convicted of corruption, given a suspended sentence and fined £1.4
million in France in 2003 for his part in the Elf affair, described as the
biggest political and corporate scandal in post-war Europe. He, in a statement
from his media lawyers, claims he is appealing against the sentence.
Mr Auchi founded his Luxembourg-based General Mediterranean Holding (GMH) in
1979, a year before he left Iraq. He says that he did business with his native
country when it was considered a friend of the West but ceased to trade with the
late Saddam Hussein's regime once sanctions were imposed after the invasion of
Kuwait.
Mr Rezko has told a court that Mr Auchi is a "close friend." Mr Auchi's lawyer
told The Times: "It is untrue that my client and Mr Rezko are 'close friends'.
Mr Auchi first met Mr Rezko after the 2003 Iraq war and they have a business
relationship."
Mr Rezko and Mr Auchi have been partners in a pizzeria business in the Mid-West
and a major 62-acre land development in Riverside Park in Chicago.
According to court documents, Mr Rezko's lawyer said his client had
"longstanding indebtedness" to Mr Auchi's GMH. By June 2007 he owed it $27.9
million.
Under a Loan Forgiveness Agreement described in court, Mr Auchi lent Mr Rezko
$3.5 million in April 2005 and $11 million in September 2005, as well as the
$3.5 million transferred in April 2007.
That agreement provided for the outstanding loans to be "forgiven" in return for
a stake in the 62-acre Riverside Park development.
A posting last week on a GMH-owned website, middle-east-online.com, portrayed Mr
Auchi as a Middle Eastern "Donald Trump" with a global business construction
empire.
Mr Auchi visited the United States in 2004. Pictures show him meeting Emil
Jones, the president of the Illinois state senate, an ally of Mr Obama, a former
state senator.
Both Mr Auchi and Mr Obama say they have no memory of meeting each other. But,
according to a source, the two may have had a brief encounter at the Four
Seasons Hotel in Chicago where Mr Auchi’s visit was being honoured with a dinner
attended by the Governor when Mr Obama, coincidentally in the hotel, dropped in.
An aide to Mr Obama said he did attend an event at the Four Seasons at which Mr
Rezko was present but does not remember meeting Mr Auchi. "He shook a lot of
hands and met a lot of people," the aide said. "We do not remember individual
people."
Prosecutors say that, after Mr Auchi was unable to enter the United States in
2005, Mr Rezko approached the US State Department to get him a visa and
apparently asked "certain Illinois government officials to do the same." Mr
Obama denies he was approached. Mr Auchi's lawyer has emphasised to The Times
that it would be entirely false to imply that money had been lent by GMH to Mr
Rezko in return for Mr Rezko seeking to assist Mr Auchi to obtain a visa. The
two men's relationship, the lawyer stressed, was a busines s one.
Mr Auchi's lawyer said the purpose of the Fintrade Services loan was to "assist
the financial position" of a pizzeria company called AR Pizza, in which GMH held
a shareholding. He said the loan had since been repaid in the form of a greater
stake in the Chicago 62-acre land project.
AR Pizza has since become a defendant in a civil lawsuit by the Papa John's
pizzeria chain, which alleges that it continued to operate a string of former
Papa John's franchises under the name "Papa Tony's" without permission.
Mr Auchi's lawyer said: "My client played no part in the management and/or day
to day running of AR Pizza, the GMH Group being an entirely passive investor in
the company. Further, there was no need as a mimimum return on the investment
was guaranteed. As to the court proceedings, my client is not a party to these.
He denies any wrongdoing in relation to his involvement in AR Pizza."
Mr Rezko was also a major fundraiser for Governor Blagojevich. The governor's
chief fundraiser Christopher Kelly, who also served as his gambling adviser, is
fighting tax charges related to betting losses. The Associated Press reported
that last month Mr Auchi's conglomerate also gave a loan to Mr Kelly secured on
a Nevada land deal which the governor’s bagman was involved in.
reprinted from timesonline.co.uk