CIA GOT IRS TO DELAY AUDIT

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CIA-RDP90-00494R001100700188-2
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
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December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 26, 2010
Sequence Number: 
188
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Publication Date: 
December 27, 1984
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OPEN SOURCE
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Approved For Release 2010/07/26 :CIA-RDP90-004948001100700188-2 t YJASHINGTON POST 27 December 1984 Intelligence Agency ~czs Probing Its Ties to Investment Firm B~? Howard Kurtz K'a~hington Post Staff Writer ' Early last year, Central Intelli- gence Agency officials asked the Internal Revenue Service to delay an audit of a Honolulu investment ; fum so the CIA could investigate its ties to the firm. .After a brief inquiry, the CIA or- dered two of its agents to withdraw their ~;~oney from the firm, which ' was providing a cover for some co- vert agents, but tool: no further action. Sig: mo:;tla later, the firm collapsed, costing in~?estors S22 ni'.lron i:l ~~:~at prosecutors say was a massi~?e f-aud. in~?es:i~a:ca b}? t:~e Securities s-d Exchznge Commission, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the IRS also failed to uncover .-the controversial dealings that led _ ~ to the firm's banlcr?uptcy in the sum- mer of 1953 z.^.d its chairman's re- cent indictment on fraud charges. CIA general counsel Stanley Sporkin said he ordered the two agents to withdraw their money because it was i.?nproper for them to invest in a company that dealt at times azth the "agency. But Sporkin said that the CIA review was lim- ited and that the agency did not learn of the alleged fraudulent ac- . tivities until after the firm's bank- ruptcy. Several other CIA employes in- ' vested in the firm azthout their su- periors' knowledge and lost money when it collapsed, according to in- telligence sources. They said one ' . employe's mother had invested her life savings. . ~ , Ronald R Rewald, :chairman ' of Bishop, Baldwin, Rewald, Dilling- ham & Wong, was indicted in Au- gust on charges of defrauding about 400 investors, including several retired senior military officers. Re- wald also was charged with tax eva- sion and perjury. Rewald, 41, is contesting the charges, saying the CIA helped fi- nance and operate the firm to con- duct intelligence operations in the Far East. Afore than a dozen invest- ~Q~ I~~~ ~~ ~~~~5 ors have joined in ~ damage suits against the CIA, which says that it had only "a slight involvement" with Rewald's firm. Thomas Hayes, court-appointed bankruptcy trustee for Bishop, Baldwin, said in a telephone inter- view that the CIA had. a "deeper involvement" and a "greater close- ness" with the firm than the agency has acknowledged. Hayes said he based -this conclu- sion on classified documents in the case but could not provide specifics because he had agreed not to dis- close the contents. Hayes said he is "suspicious" of the fact that the two CL4 agents ?7thdrew. their money-$135,000 in one case-three to four months before Bishop, Baldwin's collapse. "If [the CIAJ found out Rewald was a scam and they quietly tried to fold their tent and walk away ...then they are guilty of contributory neg- ligence," he said. Hayes said the CIA's failure to uncover Rewald's alleged fraudu- lent activities "allowed him to con= time the scam; otherwise, this thing could have collapsed a year before it did." "It took me about an hour to fig- ure out that .this was a 'Ponzi' scheme," he said, referring to a firm with no actual investments. _ "This -outfit never kept anp books and I records. Anyone with a modicum of intelligence-particularly if they're from the SEC or the IRS-it would be incredible if they wouldn't find ,out something was .seriously _wrong." .. Sporlun, Via, former. chief . of en- forcement at. the SEC, said lie de- termined in early 1983 that it was "a conflict of interest" for the CJ:A , agents to have any financial deal- ~ings with Bishop, Baldwin. This fol- lowed the CIA request that the IRS 5porkin said the CIA's review also convinced him that 'eve didn't want to have anything to do with. someone who was using the agency as an excuse for not taking care' of his problems v~ith the IRS. It was very straightforward. Ithink it was the right de.cision." One of the agents, known by the aitas Richard Cavannaugh, has re- signed. The other agent, jack ltar- din, who headed the CIA's public office in Hawaii, has been trans- ferred and could not be reached for comment. Another intelligence official called Rewald's claims of extensive CIA invoh~ement in the firm "sheer fiction. ?'e never had ary ~hiag to do ?~th the financial operations of the outfit; this idiot provided a cover for some of o?,:r guys. '7f we'd knov:n it ~cas a scam, ~ti?e'd have done a lot of things dif- ferently," the official said. "The only charge that could be leveled against t1?~e CIA is one of stupidity." The CIA was not alone in failing to find out what was going on at Bishop, Baldwin, Rewald, billing- ' ham & ~'Pong. Dozens of sophisti- cated investors were lured to the fum by promises that they would receive at least a 20 percent return on their money, and initial investors made money. VPhat they did not know is that none of the other Warned partners,' except president Sunlin Wong, ex- isted; they were simply the names of old-line Hawaiian families. Wong pleaded gu~7ty to fraud charges last ': June and is serving a two-year pris- on term. - ~ . The SEC was the fast federal agency to examine the company, a . registered securities bioker: When '? SEC officials went to Honoluu and asked to ~ see thc firm's ~ financial books in 1981, Rewald said most of ; his records were ~in California, ac- cording to Hayes: Rewald also told the SEC that he was not selling securities to his cli- ents, but the indictment . later charged that this was his principal business. The SEC issued a routine , report on the firmm in 1982 and sent IIYt L~.i.-~tti . Approved For Release 2010/07/26 :CIA-RDP90-004948001100700188-2 Approved For Release 2010/07/26 :CIA-RDP90-004948001100700188-2 Re??ald a letter urging him to keep t:mel}? records cn the premises, officizls said. "'T'hose kinds of examinations are just rot designed to detect a fraud of that magnitude," one SEC official said. "You take a quick look at the boom ..~-rd records to make sure ever}?t:~ing is in order." In the fall of 1982, Rewald's law- ish life st}?le attracted the attention of the IRS. Agent Joseph Camplone, who lived in the same Honolulu neighborhood, noticed that Rewald vzs sending his children to baseball practice in limousines, according to sources familiar with the IRS probe. ; Rewald also was flaunting his wealth at his posh Hawaii Polo Club,' where he entertained foreign dig- nitaries. Camplone found that Rewald had reported no taxable income for 1979 and 1980 and had filed no re- j turn for 1981. Re~,ald earned i ~1i1,~~0 in 1?79, 5414,160 in I?~t ~-d ~e?1,112 ir. I981, ac- co: ~;~~ to the indictment. Re:~~a;d also told Camplone that ':;is recc:cs v:e:e en the arrest mac,-~t, t:.~ so~~~ces said. But memos ;written by Rewald show that he tried to have the CIA stop the IRS audit en grounds that it would com- promise covert' operations. The subject came up in what Re- wald sz}-s vas a Nov. 29, 1982, con- versation that he taped with the CIA's Rzrdin. According to the transcript:. Rewald: "Jack, has the agency got back to you on my tax problem?" Rardin: "No, not yet, but I .: . should have some information to- day, Ithink." Rewald, later. "I don't want any problems with the IRS." . Rardin: "No, I know. Sure don't.- , We don't, either." Rewald says he also complained ?. to the former head of the CIA's Ho- nolulu office, Jack Kindschi, then serving as a consultant to the firm. . In January 1983, the CIA had 'the ~~ IRS delay the audit for two weeks. Assessing Rewald's purported ~' . evidence of extensive involvement in CIA-backed arms deals and es- pionage is difficult because he is under indictment for perjury. At a minimum, however, the firm pro- vided covers for agents such as "Cavannaugh," who was given busi- ness cards for a Bishop, Baldwin ; subsidiary czlled ClllI Investments. In the spring of 1983, after Spor- kin's order, the two CIA agents withdrew their money from Bishop, Baldwin. According to Hayes, Cavannaugh withdrew his 590,000 investment and $45,000 in earn- ings, and Rardin withdrew his $2,800 investment. In a letter to Rewald, reported b}' The Honolulu Advertiser, Caran- naughwrote: "Thanks for getting ever}?thing closed out for me. Unfortunately from my view, but at least it clears the air with my home office who are now seemingly satisfied that there is no `apparent' conflict of interest, but must be Simon pure." Cavannaugh added: "I also as- sume that your `tax problem' with CIvII has been taken care of." Days before Bishop, Baldwin col- lapsed, Rewald sent Kindschi $175,000 that the former CIA agent and his mother had invested in the firm. Kindschi's attorney said Kindschi did not ask for the mone~?. I{indschi and Rardin have re- turned their money and a;reed to stand in Line with other creditors. Hayes has sued under banyruptcy law to recover the 5145,000 from Cavanr-augh as a premature with- drawal. Still another federal agency, the .FDIC, entered the case in the spring of 1983. Bishop, Baldwin had been claiming in promotional bra chores that investors' deposits "are insured by the FDIC to a limit per account of $150,400." Skeptical investors sent copies to the FDIC, which insures only hank deposits.- FDIC attorney Roger Hood said he wrote the firm in June 1983 and "told them it's a criminal vio}ation to falsely represent deposit insur- ance." While he could have referred the matter to the Justice Depart- ment, Hood said, a Bishop, Baldwin lawyer assured him that the erro- neous claim had been made by "overeager sales people" and that the, practice had been stopped. "At that point,'we were willing to see what .happened," Hood said. "We had no reason: to believe they -they. were .anything other .than a reputable firm." Hood said he "began to be a little suspicious" when he received fur- ther complaints that the firm Ras claiming FDIC insurance. Tbe in- dictment alleges that Rewald had authorized such claims. ?'hen Camplone resIImed his tax audit, sources said, Bishop, Baldwin turned o~?er some records and stopped cooperating. =The indict- ment alleges that Rewald spent mere than S5 million in company funds on cars, women, polo ponies and caner p~rsoaal expenses. L~ April 1983, Camplone sought a court sLmmons for the firm's records, but it was delayed about four noaL`is. The request was made to the U.S. attorney's office in Ho- nolulu, where sources said it was regarded as routine, and was filed in court on Ju}y 25, 1983. Rewald was ordered to produce the records by mid-August. ? By that tune, the SEC had re- ceived new i;nforraatioa and was again examining Bishop, Baldwin. Its suspidoas about the company's cash situation aroused, SEC nffidals had given Rev,-ald until Aug. IO to deposit rncney it a Honolulu haul; to coti?e: all i:.ti?estors' deposits, State.e~;ciGls also asked to see Re~ald's records, and a lo~,.z1 tele- ~:sicn station aired a report oa the f:rn?,'s pro;,lems. On July 29, 1983, Rewald checked into the Sheraton ?'aikili Hotel and slit his wrists. He was dis~vered by a hotel clerk and lat- er recovered. leeks later, as investigators picked up the pieces, the SEC ob- tained aninjunction to bar Rewald from trading securities and made the order final in an agreement ties month Trustee Hayes said the SEC was moving a bit late. "That was just to cover them- selves, to improve their statistics," he said. "It's ridiculous, We're a banl~upt corporation." Special corsesporident Walter Wright contributed to this report: Approved For Release 2010/07/26 :CIA-RDP90-004948001100700188-2