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forest444

(5,902 posts)
Wed Jun 8, 2016, 01:51 PM Jun 2016

Prosecutor asks University of Buenos Aires experts to audit Macri's financial disclosure filings.

Argentine federal prosecutor Federico Delgado has requested an investigation into President Mauricio Macri’s sworn financial disclosure filings issued before the Anti-Corruption Office and the Buenos Aires municipal government between 2013 and 2015. Macri, who was mayor of Buenos Aires at the time, was gearing up for a presidential campaign which he narrowly won last November.

It is a felony in Argentina for a public servant to file a false financial disclosure statement.

Delgado's motion, filed before Judge Sebastián Casanello, would have experts at the School of Social Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) conduct the audit. The prosecutor’s request follows the Panama Papers and Open Corporates leaks in April that revealed Macri’s name in at least two offshore companies and his connection, through immediate family members, with up to ten others.

Gianfranco, one of Mauricio Macri’s brothers, owns eight shell companies in Panama. According to economist Ezequiel Orlando, who has done research on the Macris’ links to offshore companies, five out of the other seven companies in which Gianfranco Macri is a board member were established in December 12, 2007, only two days after Mauricio Macri became the mayor of Buenos Aires.

When the Panama Papers scandal broke out on April 3, Macri said he was not "legally obliged" to declare his connection with the offshore companies listed as clients of the disgraced Panamanian corporate law firm Mossack Fonseca as he "never had a stake in them."

The revelations forced the president, however, to admit he was a director of a shell company based in the Bahamas (Fleg Trading Ltd.) and another based in Panama (Kagemusha SA) - both created by his father, a major government contractor, to control still-active investments in Brazil and elsewhere without the knowledge of Argentine revenue authorities.

Macri has come under fire for failing to disclose, and after the Panama Papers scandal failing to explain, his connection with these offshore companies, given that such firms are often used to launder money and evade taxes.

At: http://buenosairesherald.com/article/215784/prosecutor-requests-uba-experts-investigate-macris-sworn-declarations

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Prosecutor asks University of Buenos Aires experts to audit Macri's financial disclosure filings. (Original Post) forest444 Jun 2016 OP
Heh heh heh heh ... bemildred Jun 2016 #1
And they have no one to blame but themselves. forest444 Jun 2016 #2
+1. "To live outside the law, you must be honest" -- B. Dylan bemildred Jun 2016 #3
A real hero, Macri. What a role model for children. Judi Lynn Jun 2016 #4
As a group, Argentine right-wingers tend to believe such children should be shot. forest444 Jun 2016 #5

forest444

(5,902 posts)
2. And they have no one to blame but themselves.
Wed Jun 8, 2016, 03:11 PM
Jun 2016

Macri's and his neocon surrogates made a career out of using corporate media to smear their opponents - in almost every case with no proof at all.

But every time these money laundering leaks emerge (SwissLeaks, LuxLeaks, HSBC, the Arbizu/JP Morgan case, Open Corporates, and of course Panama Papers), it's Macri and his entourage that show up crawling out of the woodwork.

Amateurs. They should do what the Bushes do, and keep everything in paper-only Cook Islands accounts.

Judi Lynn

(160,526 posts)
4. A real hero, Macri. What a role model for children.
Wed Jun 8, 2016, 10:30 PM
Jun 2016

He probably really looks down on people who steal food because their children are hungry.

forest444

(5,902 posts)
5. As a group, Argentine right-wingers tend to believe such children should be shot.
Wed Jun 8, 2016, 10:47 PM
Jun 2016

Last edited Wed Jun 8, 2016, 11:40 PM - Edit history (1)

While I wouldn't go that far to describe Macri's views on the subject of street urchins, I can tell you that as mayor he was given to taking 70% or more of the poverty alleviation budgets that the City Legislature themselves approved and then directing the money elsewhere (typically to privatized services and padded contracts).

He was even against funding temporary shelters - which angered even some of his fellow conservatives. A least two of these shelters burned down will he was mayor due to lack of maintenance.

Some of those who benefited from said padded contracts, were later named in the Panama Papers scandal.

Instant karma, if you will.

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