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by Arcturus
Another comment turned diary, spurred by Booman's Black Male Unemployment: End the Drug War.
I've gotten through the first 4 parts of Catherine Austin Fitts' 6 part series, Dillon, Read & Co. Inc. and the Aristocracy of Prison Profits, which is a wide-ranging insider's look at the inter-relations to the drug war & prison populations between stock market investors, government officials, private prison contractors, black-market drug money laundering, investment & mortgage bankers, HUD contracts, Iran-Contra figures & 'methods,' & corporate leveraged buy-outs. She names names, starting with Part 1's title, "Brady, Bush, Bechtel & 'the Boys' [CIA]." Part 3 talks about how one private prison firm,
Cornell Corrections was created to take advantage of plans to privatize the government’s prison operations. The War on Drugs and its related mandatory sentencing were fueling an explosion in the U.S. prison population. The construction and management of new prison facilities was potentially big business for the construction industry -- firms like Brown & Root [now Halliburton's notorious KBR, who just received a contract to build immigration detention facilities for DHS] who Cornell used to build their first detention center -- and those who financed them -- like Dillon Read. {snip} The article is fine example of whistle-blowing; she's a Republican financial conservative. Her bio reads:
Catherine Austin Fitts is the author of the Narco News series “Narco-Dollars for Beginners: How the Money Works in the Illicit Drug Trade.” She is a former managing director and member of the board of directors of Dillon Read & Co, Inc, a former Assistant Secretary of Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner in the first Bush Administration, and the former president of The Hamilton Securities Group, Inc. She is currenly president of Solari, Inc., an investment advisory firm (in formation) based in Hickory Valley, Tennessee. I won't begin to attempt to summarize it, but here's a small taste from Part 4 that gets into privatization:
The Clinton Administration: Progressives for For-Profit Prisons As the Omnibus Crime Bill was pending, some investors realized that:
[t]he potential impact on the private prison industry was significant. With the bill only through the house, former Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti joined the board of Wackenhut Corrections, which went public in July 1994 with an initial public offering of 2.2 million shares. By the end of 1998, Wackenhut’s stock market value had increased almost ten times. When I visited their website at that time it offered a feature that flashed the number of beds they owned and managed. The number increased as I was watching it -- the prison business was growing that fast. {snip} Her analysis of south central LA makes Tony Soprano's real estate ventures look like that of a small-time amateur:
One of the maps we put up in the spring of 1996 was a map of the properties collateralizing defaulted HUD single-family mortgages in South Central Los Angeles, California. The map showed significant HUD defaults and losses in the same area as the crack cocaine epidemic that was the basis of Gary Webb’s allegations in Dark Alliance. Such heavy default patterns are symptoms of a systemic and very expensive problem -- including systemic fraud. This could occur in situations such as those in which mortgages were being used to finance homes above market prices with inflated appraisals or where defaulted mortgages were being passed back to private parties at below market values, or where these types of mortgage fraud were supporting fraudulently issued mortgage securities that did not have real collateral behind them. This is the type of mortgage fraud that launders profits in a way that can multiply them by many times. Los Angeles was also the area with the largest flow of activities in the Department of Justice’s Asset Forfeiture Fund. Whether drug arrests and incarcerations, legal support for HUD foreclosures and enforcement or asset seizures and forfeitures -- these maps were illuminating areas that were big business for “Sheriff of Nottingham-style” operations. There's much, much more in this rich, eye-opening series.
Drug War, prisons, & profits: Catherine Austin Fitts | 0 comments (0 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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