February 22, 2009 8:34 PM

Texas-Sized Fraud Spreads To 131 Countries

(CBS/AP)  The alleged rip-off by billionaire banker R. Allen Stanford has investors scrambling. No one's sure where he is today, but investors want to know if they'll ever see their money again.

As federal agents pressed their fraud investigation, nervous customers swarmed Stanford-related banks in Venezuela and Antigua demanding their money. The flamboyant 58-year-old Texas billionaire is accused of bilking 50,000 investors spread through 131 countries, reports CBS News correspondent Bob Orr.

Federal law enforcement officials raided Stanford's Houston offices Tuesday, seizing assets and shutting down operations. The action followed civil charges that Stanford had promised clients unrealistic returns on $8 billion in certificates of deposit and committed other financial fraud.

Stanford has not yet been charged with a crime, and while his whereabouts is unknown, he is not technically a fugitive. But his lavish lifestyle - his sprawling financial empire includes six airplanes, offices around the world, and homes in Antigua and the Virgin Islands - has officials worried he may try to hide.

Officials say Stanford's high-profile lifestyle has been part of his appeal. He's hobnobbed with politicians, funneling $1.7 million dollars to various campaigns since 2000.

He's shelled out big money to sponsor sporting events, athletes and charities. Last November Stanford flaunted his wealth (and his brand name) when he posed with the $20 million prize he posted for a Caribbean cricket tournament.

Now, he's in hiding, leaving his customers worried they'll never see their money - and his own father wondering what went wrong.

"It's very saddening and heartbreaking at my age, it hurts," said James Stanford.

Sources tell CBS News that criminal charges are not imminent. But with this case coming on the heels of the Bernard Madoff scandal, there's strong pressure on Justice Department to make Stanford pay.

The Securities and Exchange Commission's investigation of Stanford had been in the works before the New York financier Madoff gave himself up in December, said a U.S. official with knowledge of the probe who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to provide information about it.

But the agency stepped up enforcement efforts after embarrassing revelations that the SEC had cleared Madoff despite specific tips and multiple investigations, current and former SEC employees said. They said regional offices appeared to be fast-tracking the Stanford case and others with the potential to give the agency another black eye.

One former employee said enforcement officials had told him they were trying to recover from the negative publicity surrounding the Madoff case. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity to preserve their relationships with the agency.

SEC officials did not return calls seeking comment.

Stanford's companies also had been under investigation by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a self-regulatory body. FINRA spokeswoman Nancy Condon said the two investigations were operating in parallel "and at some point, both of us became aware of each other."

Equal Parts Glamour And Flattery

Stanford's pitch to potential investors was, it turned out, built on lies.

By serving a select and wealthy clientele, employing top-flight talent and being "a privately held institution free to focus on our No. 1 priority, which is our clients," Stanford was able to earn "premium returns," his bank documents claimed.

But those profits may never have existed. Despite claiming to have made double-digit returns between 1993 and 2005, the company's annual returns hadn't reached 10 percent since 1994, according to court papers.

Stanford also lied about his bank and its history - not just its finances - to gain investors' trust, public records show. Company documents referred to a 70-year tradition of client relationships. Yet there is no record of his bank having existed before the 1980s.

And while he told clients their money was guarded by a team of "20-plus analysts," court papers said he and James Davis, a college roommate, were the only ones familiar with the investment strategy.

The bank had been misrepresenting its performance since at least 2004, according to court papers.

The claims of inflated returns allowed the bank to plow more money into other parts of Whistleblower Saw Warning Signs Years AgoMark Tidwell, a former senior vice president at Stanford Financial, said he saw warning signs three years ago. Appearing on CBS' The Early Show, Tidwell said that as far back as 2005, "There was a pattern developing" of published returns not matching what his clients were receiving. "It began in May of '05, and Summer of '06 there were a couple events that took place that got us concerned," he said.But Tidwell told anchor Harry Smith that when he confronted company officers about SEC inquiries, "They told us everything was fine. They said that this was part of a routine inquiry that we shouldn't be worried about it, that we should reassure our customers that everything was okay."Tidwell said that some fines were levied on Stanford, but for very low sums: $10,000 to $20,000. "That seemed to go along with the things that they were telling us - it was such a small fine that, obviously, it couldn't have been, you know, that big of a deal."Tidwell and another Stanford investor left the company about a year ago, taking many of their clients with them (who are, given the troubles facing Stanford investors, very grateful). They are suing Stanford for wrong termination. Stanford is now countersuing the two.

Kelly DeHay and Rod Danielson are two investors who put their money into Stanford, based on the advice of a conservative financial adviser who had joined Stanford. Detailing their experience with the Stanford Financial Group on The Early Show, DeHay said, "We had a lot of faith, and we had a lot of confidence. And most importantly, we had a lot of trust in him."

Danielson said that his initial investments were in CDs in the middle of 2006, and that the returns promised were not exorbitant. "At that point the rate that they quoted us was 8.25%, which at that time U.S. banks were paying somewhere in the order of 6%."

Danielson also said that while Stanford's banks were not regulated by U.S. authorities, they had higher reserve margins than any U.S. bank. "It was really safe," he said.

"Everything seemed reasonable," said DeHay. "This was just another tool, another vehicle."

Now those vehicles are frozen; DeHay and Danielson have both been told they cannot withdraw their deposits for two months. "It's a little horrifying," said DeHay, "especially after hearing Mark this morning say that there were issues back in 2006; it sounds like it was before we became investors. And I'm just hoping our financial adviser did not do this to us for a fee and a recurring fee each year."

"I mean, ironically, we thought these CDs were the safest thing in our portfolio when we were seeing mutual funds and stocks going south," Danielson told Smith.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 126 Comments
by starleo146 February 28, 2009 3:57 PM EST
madoff,enron,bear sterns,the long weekend breaks,the fat beefsteaks,the alcohol.... & now Stanford....Americans ought to be rubbing their hands in bewilderment ...with meek SEC & other obliging(to the crooks) authorities,its high time & better for public take matters directly to hand
Posted by daviolo at 4:46 PM : Feb 19, 200

Reagonomics and who was Stanfords best friend Hannity of Faux nooz
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti February 20, 2009 6:05 PM EST
From here on out, anytime you hear the word "Democrat", remember just what criminal acts of wasteful spending and a doubling of the National Debt the Democrats are heaping upon America, at a time when our economy is in crisis.
Posted by CBSisPravda1

So all of a sudden you right wing hypocrites are worried about spending. Where were you when the neo con Nazis were lying us into illegal invasions? Or when they were handing trillions of our tax money to the banks and oil corporations? Or WHEN THE REPUBLICAN COMPLETELY RUINED THE AMERICAN ECONOMY and turned us into a 3rd world country. Don't make me laugh with your utter stupidity and propaganda Newspeak.
Reply to this comment
by indptex February 19, 2009 9:44 PM EST
Americans need to work harder now....off with the long weekend breaks & stop relying too much on beefsteaks(the acknowledged biggest contributor to methane accumulation to hothouse enviro..)...not to go anywhere near the tipsy causing spirits ...enough...

Posted by daviolo

Oh boy, the IDIOTS are out today!! BTW daviolo, when it comes to working hard, you probably couldn't hold the jock of 98 percent of the workforce!! About your greenhouse gasses comment, that just reinforces all the more your IDIOCY........so you are a proponent of taxing livestock because they produce methane gas from pharting!? You've been sniffing too may dairy cow arses haven't you!?
Reply to this comment
by celerity1 February 19, 2009 8:51 PM EST
A person can only be conned out of their money by fear or greed; I don't smell any fear.
Reply to this comment
by daviolo February 19, 2009 8:09 PM EST
Americans need to work harder now....off with the long weekend breaks & stop relying too much on beefsteaks(the acknowledged biggest contributor to methane accumulation to hothouse enviro..)...not to go anywhere near the tipsy causing spirits ...enough...
Reply to this comment
by hunterdon6 February 19, 2009 8:00 PM EST
99% of all politicians are corrupt and they give a bad name to the rest of em.
Reply to this comment
by mistigated February 19, 2009 7:50 PM EST
culture of corruption".


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Posted by LoonyLeft at 04:44 PM : Feb 19, 2009

Though tough anti-money-laundering legislation overwhelmingly sailed through the House Banking Committee in 2000, it had difficulty getting to another vote as powerful GOP lawmakers -- then-House Majority Leader *** Armey, then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay and then-Senate Banking Committee chair Phil Gramm stymied its future.

DeLay was among the largest recipients of Stanford's largesse. And "DeLay's committees paid for flights on Stanford's jets at least 16 times since 2003, including on Oct. 20, the day the former House majority leader was booked in a Houston courthouse on money-laundering charges," according to Bloomberg News.

Stanford Financial or its employees also contributed to the legal defense funds of three lawmakers tarnished by ethics allegations -- DeLay, Democratic Senator Robert Torricelli, Republican Bob Ney.
Reply to this comment
by daviolo February 19, 2009 7:46 PM EST
madoff,enron,bear sterns,the long weekend breaks,the fat beefsteaks,the alcohol.... & now Stanford....Americans ought to be rubbing their hands in bewilderment ...with meek SEC & other obliging(to the crooks) authorities,its high time & better for public take matters directly to hand
Reply to this comment
by loonyleft February 19, 2009 7:44 PM EST
I'll bet botox pelosi knows where Stanford is located. In the photos I've seen (not available on the loony-left liberal media, of course) she seems to enjoy dancing and drinking with him at his parties.

It took JUST TWO WEEKS for the pelos-hussein regime to become the most TAX CORRUPT GOVERNMENT IN HISTORY by putting acknowledged TAX CHEATS in high level positions. The loony-left liberal d-crats have brought back the "culture of corruption".
Reply to this comment
by mistigated February 19, 2009 7:39 PM EST
Good point mortal13, spoken like a true democrat. When the dems do something bad, point the finger the other way, but when the Reps do it, there is only one bad party.


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Posted by drputt45 at 03:31 PM : Feb 19, 2009

So all the republicans that took campaign contributions from this crook are now democrats?
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