What Makes Giancarlo Run?
Giancarlo
Parretti, Cannon and The Wounded Lion
"Flamboyant
and Mysterious"
|
No, not a still from a Breakdance 3
promo, but Mr Parretti (in red) sporting
an MGM outfit just after buying the company and merging it with Cannon/Pathe
Communications Corp. |
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and/or noted. All text/images are copyright t©2008 their respective owners and
no other copyright is implied or claimed.
link to this page: www.cannon.org.uk/parretti.htm
cannon.org.uk comment
|
All I know about Mr
Parretti is what I recall from the late 1980s when he reportedly bought The
Cannon Group, Inc. for $US200,000,000 and quickly changed the name and then
went on to buy MGM. That’s what I think
I know from the press then and the articles below (all dated). I’ve also
included an open letter from Mr Parretti to try and give some balance and if
you have anything else I can add from Mr Parretti’s perspective please contact
me. So, if interested, read the
articles and decide for yourself. You
might want to check out the article (“Who Killed Cannon?”) here
Whatever you decide, there’s
no denying Mr Parretti is certainly an interesting figure and a lucky man.
Why lucky? Had he been accused in today’s USA he may have found himself in
jail for 25 years –guilty or
innocent. These articles cover a
decade roughly of Mr Parretti taking an interest in The Cannon Group, Inc. to
his eventual purchase of MGM. One of the oddest thing I’ve seen about Mr Parretti is
this 1990 promotional VHS tape from the Netherlands (where his bankers were
of course): click for larger image Note the “GIANCARLO PARRETTI PRESENTS” and the combined Cannon copyright notice at
the bottom. Not sure what was happening there but I’m sure there’s a good
story why. Either way, there’s no listing for Mr Parretti at the IMDb Mr Parretti mentioned again on a UK cinema Cannon Group
poster: click for larger image Slightly different on the US poster
All spelling/grammar is as I found it in these articles. |
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December 16, 1988
Group Set to Buy Film Giant Pathe
By DEBORAH
WISE, SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK TIMES
A French investment group with ties
to the American film maker Cannon Group Inc. is ready to take control of the French
film company Pathe-Cinema in a deal valued at about $157 million.
The deal is expected to give Cannon
access to Pathe's large film library.
This is a deal that also involves
the film heritage of France. Indeed, the French Government has expressed its
concern that Pathe might fall into foreign hands. Founded in 1896, Pathe is
renowned for producing films like Luchino Visconti's ''The Leopard'' and the
French classic ''Les Enfants du Paradis,'' directed by Marcel Carne. Offer of
$151 a Share
The investment group M. T.
Investissements is expected to take control shortly after it begins its
$151-a-share tender offer Friday morning. Banque Rivaud, which holds 52 percent
of Pathe, has agreed to sell its stake. Pathe's three minority shareholders, Compagnie
Financiere de Suez, Lyonnaise des Eaux and Societe Generale de Belgique S.A.,
are expected to sell their 42 percent stake.
M.T. Investissements is led by the
75-year-old French businessman Max Theret and includes Giancarlo Parretti,
president and chief executive of Cannon.
Mr. Theret, who founded one of
France's largest record and book discount chains, FNAC, said he planned to use
Cannon's distribution network in the United States and exploit Pathe's film
library. That library includes more than 400 feature films, 3,640 hours of
newsreels dating back to 1905 and 1,200 hours of television series. A Film
Distributor
Pathe does not produce films today,
but it distributes them through a network of 150 theaters in France. For the
last year it has distributed films made by Cannon.
M. T. Investissements received
approval for its bid after assuring the Government that it is 80 percent
French-owned, with Mr. Parretti holding less than 20 percent.
''I am very happy to be out of the
dark,'' said Pierre Vercel, the president of Pathe. The shares of Pathe had
been suspended on the French stock exchange since Sept. 9, when Banque Rivaud
announced it was looking for a buyer. Initially, the high asking price, which
is 300 times 1987 earnings, deterred interest.
''I have known Mr. Theret and find
him a very dynamic man for his age,'' Mr. Vercel said of his new boss. Mr.
Vercel is also familiar with Mr. Parretti, through Pathe's distribution
agreement with Cannon.
Cannon, which recently experienced
financial difficulties, is known among other things for its ''Superman'' films,
its offbeat hit ''Runaway Train,'' and Franco Zeffirelli's ''Otello.'' But
Cannon has not had a recent hit.
©2008 The New York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DEFDB113BF935A25751C1A96E948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print
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March 7, 1989
Italian Financier's
Plan for Cannon
SPECIAL TO
THE NEW YORK TIMES
The Italian financier Giancarlo
Parretti is asking shareholders of Cannon Group Inc. to approve a plan under
which he would gain voting control of the Los Angeles film company. In a proxy
statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Mr. Parretti said
he would raise his stake in Cannon to 62.5 percent, from 39.4 percent, and
change its name to the Pathe Communications Corporation. Mr. Parretti, who is
Cannon's chief executive, also controls Pathe Entertainment Inc.
The plan is supported by Mr.
Parretti and two major Cannon shareholders, Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus, so
it is assured of approval.
©2008 The New York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE1D9153EF934A35750C0A96F948260
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March 8, 1990
Ambitious Financier Behind Pathe
By ROGER
COHEN
Giancarlo Parretti, the Italian
financier, has stepped smartly from country to country and left a trail of
lawsuits as he built a financial empire, rising far from his humble beginnings
as a waiter on the Queen Elizabeth ocean liner.
An exuberant man given to hyperbole
over his ambitions and vagueness about his finances, Mr. Parretti has said he
intends to build the world's biggest movie group. Yesterday, his Pathe
Communications Corporation agreed to buy the MGM/UA Communications Company for
$1.2 billion in a deal that appears to advance his goal significantly and to
quash, at least temporarily, persistent rumors that his appetite for media
companies is not matched by the means to acquire them.
Mr. Parretti, who is 48 years old,
could not be reached for comment. His spokesman, Craig Parsons, said Mr.
Parretti had accumulated his wealth by ''buying companies in real estate and
turning them around and selling them.''
Flamboyant and Mysterious
Certainly, he has spent freely
since 1987, emerging as a flamboyant, if mysterious, force on the Hollywood
scene, where his Beverly Hills mansion boasts paintings by Picasso and Goya.
Proclaiming that communications - along with food and tourism - is an industry
of the future, he bought control of the Cannon Group about two years ago,
renaming it Pathe Communications. Mr. Parretti holds about 63 percent of the
stock in the movie company.
His media acquisitions, which began
with the French film company Pathe Cinema, have been largely coordinated
through a web of closely held financial holding companies based in Panama and
Luxembourg. The value of these assets, and the origin of the cash behind them,
is unclear.
Until three years ago, Mr. Parretti
had shown little interest in the movie business. Born in Orvieto, north of
Rome, he worked as a waiter in London before moving to Sicily, where he said he
used Government aid to buy and sell at least four hotels.
His next venture, a newspaper, was
declared bankrupt in 1981, and Mr. Parretti is now on trial on charges that he
falsified its balance sheet.
More Purchases
Mr. Parretti bought three Italian
insurance companies in 1983 and sold them two years later to a Geneva-based
merchant bank, Sasea Holding. Then he switched his interests to France, where
for a while he said he was a representative of the Italian Socialist party, and
to Spain, where he acquired real estate and tourism interests. The Spanish
authorities have questioned Mr. Parretti over what they said was the illegal
export last year of $459,000 to Andorra. No charges have been brought.
In Paris, meanwhile, Mr. Parretti's
movie interests began with a meeting with the Rev. Cristiano Pagano, an Italian
priest who was making a film about a young girl's vision of the Virgin Mary.
Mr. Parretti invested in the movie and was rewarded with a private screening at
the Vatican last year with Pope John Paul II.
He went on to buy control of Pathe
Cinema, France's oldest movie company. But following French Government
challenges and investigations into his past, Mr. Parretti reduced his holdings
to a minority stake.
©2008 The New York Times Company
Original article: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE1D81430F93BA35750C0A966958260
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April 2, 1990
Pathe's Chief Gets 4-Year Jail Term .
The president and chief executive
of the Los Angeles-based Pathe Communications Corporation, has been sentenced in
absentia in Italy to nearly four years in jail after being convicted on charges
of fraudulent bankruptcy, an Italian news agency, ANSA, reported on Saturday.
The agency said the charges related
to a Naples newspaper chain owned by Giancarlo Parretti. The chain went
bankrupt in 1981 after two years of operation, and two years later, the company
that managed the chain also went bankrupt.
A Naples court found the Italian
financier and six others guilty of having concealed accounts relating to the
business operations of the failed companies, the news report said, and
sentenced Mr. Parretti to three years and 10 months in jail.
Mr. Parretti said the charges
stemmed from the Italian company's failure to file its balance sheet on time
and that the failure occurred after he had left the company. ''I will prove my
innocence as I have done in the two prior cases in which I ultimately prevailed
upon appeal,'' he said.
Last month, Pathe began a
$20-a-share tender offer, for a total of $1.22 billion, for the MGM/UA
Communications Company.
©2008 The New York Times Company
Original article: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE3DA153CF931A35757C0A966958260
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|
Who is Parretti? by Edward Jay Epstein |
|
Giancarlo Parretti, stunned Wall
Street by bidding $1.2 billion in cash for MGM/ UA-- a movie company which both
Rupert Murdoch and Ted Turner had looked at only months before but decided not
to make an offer. Even more surprising, in the documents he filed with the SEC,
he specified no source for where the money was coming from-- other than an
"oral, non-binding agreement" for $200 million with an unnamed
company-- and he did not even have an investment banker. "I do not need
Wall Street's money", he told one New York investment banker, attempting
to offer his services to him, "I can get one billion, two billion,
whatever I need from European banks".
Parretti is Hollywood's latest Hero
From Zero mystery. As later as 1982, he was an employee of a fish processing
factory in Hong Kong. Now his empire, which includes movie studios, theaters,
film laboratories, distributors, and production companies, is worth, according
to Variety, $1.5 billion. In 1988, he bought the oldest film company in France,
Pathe S.A., as well as the Hollywood studio, Cannon Films, which was best known
for Ninja and vengeance fantasies (and which he re-named Pathe Communications).
From that point on, at a breath-taking pace, he made announced a new
multi-million dollar deal almost every month. In December 1988, it was a $160
million film production contract for Menachin Golan, the Israeli entrepreneur,
who with his Israeli cousin, Yorus Globus, built Cannon into a trans-oceanic
film maker. In January 1989, he announced a $80 million plan to bail out Dino
Delaurentus' movie studio from bankruptcy so he could merge it into his own. In
February, he made a $138 million offer for the television producer, the
junk-bond financed TV producer New World Films. In March, he made a $39 million
offer for the arty Kings Road Films. In April, he first floated the idea of
taking over MGM for a cool billion. In May, he had bid $220 for Television
Monte Carlo, which owned an Italian TV network.
As it turned out, none of these
announced deals had been actually consummated. He aborted the Golem production
deal a few months after it was announced. Ron Perlman outbid him for New World.
The Kings Road deal fell apart. The Dino de Laurentius rescue mission failed.
MGM accepted a bid from an Australian suitor, Quinex (which then failed to make
the down payment and went bankrupt.) The Television Monte Carlo deal also
evaporated. offer-- never got off the ground. And, adding insult to injury, the
French government blocked his acquisition of Pathe SA because he had not
accurately represented the principals behind the deal. But now, he found
another $1.2 billion to buy MGM. Where did the money come from?
In Hollywood, Parretti lives Great
Gatsby style-- when he is there. He bought a $8 mansion in Beverly Hills, where
he proudly takes visitors there to his walk-in steel vault to see paintings he
identifies as Picassos, Miros and Goyas. He lives there with Maria Ceccone, who
he has been married to for over 20 years,two daughters and son and Fabio
Serena, his 35 year old lawyer. (His wife, his 18 year old daughter, Valentina,
and Serena are also executives of his holding company.) He also leases a
$200,000 Rolls Royce for driving around town, and owns his own Italian
restaurant, Maderos, on the ground floor of the CMA building (which has a
private satellite hook-up to get Italian soccer games) and his own disco,
Tramps`
Like the hero of Gogol's "Dead
Souls", who spawns rumor after rumor about himself as he moves through the
Russian provinces trying to buy up rights to deceased serfs to further a
financial scheme, Parretti, trying to buy up near-dead film companies, has
stirred the collective imagination of Hollywood. "The word is the Mafia is
behind him," a top agent suggests; "Parretti is a creature of Credit
Lyonnaise," a studio executive theorizes, sent to America to salvage the
bank's bad loans to Cannon, De Larentius, New World and other shaky Hollywood
producers. "Parretti is laundering money for the drug cartel," a
Hollywood investment banker states, pointing out that movie theaters are cash
businesses, and what Parretti has bought in Cannon and Pathe is 800 movie
theaters. "He is fronting for Sylvio Berlusconi,"the Milanese media
king, an Italian director argues. "It's Qaddafi's oil money," a film
producer asserts. Parretti indeed seemed to be Hollywood's number one mystery.
The proliferation of Parretti rumors did not sit well with Alan Ladd, Jr., who
since January 1989 has been Pathe's co-chairman. Like his father in Shane, he
wasted no words. "Its all I hear. And its complete garbage", he said,
leaning forward on the couch of his plush new office at Pathe Communications on
San Vicenzo Drive. He had met Parretti at the home of Dino De Laurentius in
late 1988, and immediately accepted his offer to head Pathe. Next to him sat
his long time associate at the Ladd Company, Jay Canter-- Marlon Brando's first
agent-- who is vice president of Pathe. Both men were now in the odd position
of having to defend a stranger who they had met only a few months earlier.
Shaking his head in disbelief, Ladd cited the recent allegation in newspapers
that Parretti was involved with the Qaddafi. He explained "The reporter
mixed up two countries-- Liberia, where Parretti had a shipping businesses and
Libya". Parretti had nothing to do with Libya or Qaddafi, Ladd insisted.
He found the Mafia money whispers equally absurd. Why would the Mob put money
in someone as "high-profile" as Parretti, he asked. "Don't you
think I investigated before I took this job? He explained that in the Spring of
1989 he went to Europe with him in his gulfstream, which, he recalled, was
equipped with a kitchen where Parretti cooked spaghetti for everyone. During
the trip, Parretti handed Ladd a telephone-size book listing the hotels in the
Melia chain, which he claimed he owned. "There were hundreds of hotels,
and each of them represented real money", Ladd recounts. He in fact sat in
at a At a press conference in Cannes where Parretti suggested that these hotels
earned $300 million a year. There is "no mystery" where Parretti
money comes from, Ladd concluded.
As it turns out, however, Parretti
does not own the Melia hotel chain. Nor did he own it when he handed Ladd the
impressive Melia book. What had happened was that he, together with others, had
bought the Melia Group in 1987 but the hotels themselves, which were the mail
asset, were almost immediately resold to the Sol Hotel chain in a complicated
transaction that left Parretti and his associate owning the name
"Melia" and a few Spanish travel agencies and laundries that lost
money and were deeply in debt. According to the 1988 annual report of his
entire holding company, which included the "Melia Group", its net
worth was not anything like the $1.5 billion figure he reported to Variety, but
$3.6 million ( and even this meager total is based on questionable evaluations
of illiquid investment.) Instead of his businesses making an annual profit of
"$300 million", as he claimed at the press conference-- or a
cumulative profit of a billion dollars as he claimed in an interview in the
Italian newspaper, La Republica-- they had, according to this annual report,
actually lost money in both 1986 and 1987. It, moreover, had only $9000 in its
bank accounts and in short-term funds at the end of 1987 (the last time it
filed an annual report). But if the Melia hotels did not supply Parretti with
the $60 million or so of cash he used in his Hollywood buying spree, where did
he get it?
According to his birth certificate,
Giancarlo Parretti was born on October 26, 1940 in the town of Orvieto, Umbria,
about 100 miles north of Rome. His father, whom he introduced to Ladd, had been
a humble wine merchant (and still lived modestly in an apartment in Orvieto).
At the age of 17, without the benefit of any higher education, Parretti went to
work as a waiter. During the sixties, he says, he learned English working as a
ship's steward on the Queen Elizabeth and as a waiter at the Savoy Hotel in
London (though neither the Cunard Lines or the Savoy Hotel could find any
record of his employment). Then Parretti moved to Sicily where he got a job
waiting in a plush hotel in Syracusa owned by Palermo's political boss, Senator
Graziano Verzotto. By 1973, he had worked his way up to being manager of the
hotel and the aide de camp to Senator Verzotto. Senator Verzotto, who owned
Syracusa' football team and supervised Sicily's state owned mineral company,
then got into serious trouble. He was indicted for embezzling $3 million
dollars from the mineral company in Sicily and, to make matters worse, was
nearly gunned down by a team of presumably Mafia hit men. In 1975, he fled to
Lebanon, leaving Parretti in charge of his hotels and the soccer team.
After Verzotto disappeared,
Parretti went into the business of publishing weekly news letters, called
"Diario". Beginning first in Sicily, Parretti then went in partners
with Ceasare de Michealis, a key financier for the Parti Socialist Italia, or
PSI, which in coalition with the larger Christian Democrat Party, had run Italy
since World war II. Even though most of these "Diarios" had a
circulation of under a thousand readers, they carried advertising from
businessmen-- including those who wanted to curry favor with the PSI, which was
a far more entrepreneurial organization than its name might imply. It had
responsibility, within the political coalition that ran Italy, for overseeing a
number of Italian state-owned enterprises including ENI-- the Italian
equivalent Exxon combined with Dupont, which was the country's single largest
generator of wealth and foreign exchange.
Parretti here had a crucially
important connection: his partner's brother, Gianni de Michealis, now Italy's
Foreign Minister, who then, as the PSI's Minister for State Participations, was
in charge of ENI. De Michealis, a long-haired, jowly-faced intellectual, whose
extra-curriculum interest is international discotheques (a subject on which he
wrote a book), was in the late 1970s, because of his responsibility for ENI,
one of the most powerful men in the PSI. By hitching his wagon to this rising
star, Parretti moved into the inner sanctum of the party. He had been
especially active in its finances, serving for a time as the treasurer for its
Youth organization. He also became a member of the PSI's central committee,
where he took credit for helping to bring De Michealis' close friend, Benito
Craxi, to power as head of the party-- and Prime Minister. He also arranged for
ENI to help finance the take over the newspaper Il Globo, so it could support
the PSI-- but the deal never worked out. (It went bankrupt).
His dealings with ENI, and
association with De Michealis, eventually brought him into contact with his
future partner in international finance, Florio Fiorini. When they first met in
the late 1970s, Fiorini was the finance director of ENI-- a position he had
half for a decade. As such, he was responsible for depositing billions of
dollars in ENI funds in off-shore bank accounts. Part of this money, as it
later emerged in a Parliamentary investigation, came from off-the-books
kickbacks and skims from Saudi Arabia and Libya-- ENI's two major sources of
foreign oil-- and the off-shore accounts it went into benefitted PSI and other
politicians. In documents that came to light in the ensuing scandal, for
example, Fiorini, along with two other top ENI executives, had apparently
authorized the transfer of millions of dollars into a numbered account. #63369
in the Union Bank in Switzerland, which in February 1982 was shuttled into the
account of PSI politicians, including Prime Minister Benito Craxi, and then
wired to an anonymous fiduciary account in Hong Kong. Even if such
surreptitious transfers from state-owned enterprises to the coffers of
political parties is tacitly accepted in Italy as part of the
"system," and no wrong doing was involved, they gave Fiorini, and his
associates at ENI, a perspective on Italian politics, which includes the
routing of money between numbered accounts in Switzerland and Hong Kong.
In 1982, Parretti came to see
Fiorini on an urgent matter. He was in serious financial trouble. his
"Diario" newspaper, for which he had pledged Verzotto's former hotels
as collateral, were $3 million in debt-- and facing imminent bankruptcy.
Moreover, the Syracusa Football team which he headed, seemed to be missing
large sums of money. Subsequently, Parretti was arrested on charges of
falsifying the team's books and jailed for a week.
He explained to Fiorini that he had
a three billion lire saving certificate-- the equivalent of about $3 million--
that had been given to him, through the PSI, by an unnamed businessman but,
given his problems, he needed Fiorini's help in cashing it. Fiorini, who had
always thought of Parretti as "De Michealis man", took this as, he
explained, "a bit of PSI business". Using his formidable financial
connections, he sent Parretti to a small Sicilian bank which accepted the
certificate and gave him part of the money.
When the bank checked on the
certificate, it found that it was a crude forgery. "Three zeros had been
added to a certificate", according to Fiorini, changing a $3,000
certificate into a $3 million one. This debacle led to the re-arrest of
Parretti in July 1982; this time on charges with bank fraud. Even after he was
released, he was under tremendous pressure to reveal who gave him the
certificate. He again went to Fiorini, telling him he needed $27,000 to and go
to Hong Kong where De Michealis arranged a job for him at Italy's tuna fish
plant (which came under his authority as Minister for State Participations).
Fiorini provided him with money to get out of the country .
Shortly thereafter, Fiorini had his
own troubles at ENI. The Banco Ambrosiano, a bank in which Fiorini had placed
$160 million in off-shore deposits, announced it was in serious trouble, and
was missing over a billion dollars. As the government moved to place it in
bankruptcy, Fiorini became intent on saving the bank--and ENI's deposits. He
called its chairman, Roberto Calvi, who had become known as "God's
banker" because of his connections with the Vatican, and whom he had dealt
with before, and offered a plan whereby ENI would rescue the Banco Ambrosiano,
which he did not accept. Less than two weeks later, Calvi was found hanging
from a rope under Blackfriar's bridge in London, and, in the ensuing scandal,
ENI found it was missing $160 million, and Fiorini was forced to resign for his
unauthorized offer to Calvi.
Parretti stayed only briefly at his
sinecure in Hong Kong. In 1983, he turned up in Paris. His connections to the
PSI apparently still intact, if not strengthened, he became its Secretary in
France. As the "French Connection", as he explained it, he acted as
liaison with French Socialist businessmen and politicians, on one hand, and
their Italian counterparts, on the other. It was a particularly powerful
position to be in, especially now that Craxi was Prime Minister.
To aid in this liaison, Parretti
set up a shell company, called Interpart in 1984 with the assistance of another
PSI financial backer, Lamberto Mazza. It was strategically located in the 999
square mile kingdom of Luxembourg, which provides such corporations maximum
secrecy for their transactions. While this shell began with only $20,000 in capital
in 1984, at the end of the year, according to corporate statements,, $1 million
in cash had been deposited in its account. Three months later, in April 1985,
another $4 million materialized. And in December 1986, it received as infusion
of $55 million in cash. As this sixty million dollars flowed in, so did Florio
Fiorini, who, after buying his own shell company in Switzerland, became a
partner and officer of Interpart.
The Luxembourg money first was
discreetly channeled into a few select causes sponsored by French Socialist
politicians. For example, Parretti, the liaison for the PSI in France, made
available $7 million through Interpart subsidiary's, Interpart editions, to buy
the French Socialist newspaper, Le Matin; and then turned over 48 per cent of
the stock in this company to Paul Quiles, who had been the Defense Minister in
the Socialist Government. (In 1987, Le Matin, like so many of Parretti's other
publishing enterprises, went bust). Parretti also through Interpart established
a shell company for one of the Socialist's main financial backer, Max Theret,
called MTI, which was then used by Parretti and Fiorini to buy Pathe S.A with
financing supplied by the French state-owned Credit Lyonnaise Bank.
The same $60 million pot was also
used by Parretti in 1988 to buy his Hollywood empire. The a complicated series
of transaction began with Parretti's Interpart and Fiorini's Swiss holding
company buying 90% of the Melia Group in 1987 for $90 million (Parretti's share
was about $60 million). After selling the hotels, and making a small profit,
they used the proceeds to buy a bankrupt Madrid property company called Renta,
which became their holding company, and advanced $90 million to acquire Cannon
Films.
But where did Parretti get the $60
million in 1986? Up until that time, most of his businesses in Italy, including
his newsletters, football team, consulting company, and hotels wound up
bankrupt. He also seemed pressed for cash as late as February 1986 when he was
arrested at the Rome Airport on an extortion charge proceeding from a threat he
made to a bank to get a mere $20,000. Such desperation over what in Italy is
the price of a car suggests that Parretti had no great reserve of cash.
Parretti himself suggested in his
interview with me that the money transferred to Luxembourg came from a Panamian
holding company he controlled, also called Interpart, which, if anything,
raises the question of where the money in Panama came from. Nor are Interpart's
scant corporate records of any use in this regard. His own accountant described
the Luxembourg "headquarters" as an "empty room",
administered on paper by his wife and daughter. And his independent auditing at
the time of the injections, Arthur Anderson, noted its concern that there were
not any documents explaining the origin of money deposited in Interpart.
Florio Fiorini offered to answer
this $60 million question.
He arranged by fax to meet me on a
hot Saturday in July at precisely 4 p.m in Monte Carlo at "his
bank",the Seychelles Island bank. It turned out to be a dog-eared three
room suite on a sub-ground level floor of a large apartment building with a
travel poster of a palm tree on a beach in the Seychelles Islands plastered on
one wall. He was a large, chubby man, with a cherubic face, who, in his safari
jacket, reminded me of the character played by Robert Morley in the film
"Beat The Devil. "It seemed like an appropriate name for this
bank," Fiorini chuckled with disarming honesty, "since it is a shell
company". (One of his associates in this "bank", he later
mention, is Giovanni Mario Ricci, an Italian financier closely involved with
the government of the Seychelles) .
He told me, with a nothing-to-hide
angelic smile that he had recently come back from Tripoli in Libya (not
Liberia). He explained that he went to Libya on a regular basis because he was
a financial adviser to Qaddafi's Libyan-Arab Bank, and had indeed acted as an
intermediary in buying and selling assets for Qaddafi. He explained he was in a
rush because he was leaving the next day for an extensive vacation on a private
island in the Bahamas but he wanted to talk to me about Parretti.
Just two days before, a warrant had
been issued in Spain for the arrest of Parretti on the charge that he had been smuggling
currency to Andorra. Fiorini seemed embarrassed by this development and eager
to distance himself from Parretti. Pointing to a chart of his own holding
company, which had six rows of neat boxes in it, he circled the one that
contained the Melia-Renta-Cannon-Pathe entity, and said "This is only a
small part of our operation.". As he began telling me of his relationship
with Parretti, he took out a pad of graph paper, and neatly outlined the story,
as if he was writing out a confession.
He explained that their original
purpose was to put the money in safe commercial real estate in Spain-- which
was why he had bought Melia and Renta. He said that he had also envisioned
Cannon as primarily a conservative real estate investment based on the value of
theaters it owned in England, Italy, and the United States. But then Parretti
had become "infatuated by the movie media", as he put it. Instead of
quietly disposing of the film business, he had hire Alan Ladd, announced new
productions at a press conference in Cannes, and became part of the Hollywood
scene.
In reply to the sixty million
dollar question, he replied jovially "Where had the Luxembourg money come
from? That's easy. I made it for Parretti. I sold two Insurance companies for
him." But when he sketched out this deal, it was anything but easy.
How had Parretti gotten two
Insurance companies? Fiorini explained he had traded two broken-down hotels he
had owned in Sicily to Guissippi Cabassi, a Milanese businessman and financial
supporter of the Socialist Party, for the controlling blocks of stock in two
large Italian insurance companies, Ausonia Assurance and Intercontinale
Assurance.
How had Fiorini gotten involved? He
explained that in November 1985, he had just acquired a shell company that once
belonged to the Vatican, and, together with a group of partners from the Arab
Bank for International Investments,, he had organized it into an international
"lavanderie", as he put it, or laundry to make "soiled companies
sparkle". Parretti, interested in his services, had come to him with a
deal he could not refuse. In return for selling these insurance companies,
Parretti would pay Fiorini's Swiss holding company 50 per cent of the profits.
And, in addition, give Fiorini personally 20 per cent of his holding company,
Interpart (which would get the rest of the profits). This meant Fiorini would
get 60 per cent of the total profit-- an incredibly high fee for selling
Insurance companies listed on the Milan exchange.
Fiorini claims that he was
immediately able to sell these companies for a windfall profit of over $160
million, which, if true, might explain how Parretti's holding company got $60
million in Luxembourg (assuming there were some deductions for fees and other
expenses from his share of the putative $160 million). But, it turned out on
checking through the financial records of these insurance companies, at least
three flaws in his account.
First, Cabassi never his insurance
companies for Parretti's hotels. He paid what amounted to three million dollars
for the hotels, after provision for their' debts ( a sum coincidentally about
the same as Parretti needed to offset the forged saving certificate from the
unnamed Socialist financier) but he never actually got them. As he explained to
the Wall Street Journal "Parretti apparently wasn't in a position to sell
them to us." and, bearing this out, as late as 1986, the insurance
companies belonged to the Cabassi Group, as, in the case of Intercontinale
Assurance, is acknowledged in the annual report of Fiorini's own holding
company. Moreover, since the value of the stocks was listed on the exchange--
and hitting record highs-- Cabassi was well aware of their market value.
Second, if Fiorini's holding
company made a profit of $80 million on these transactions, it would show up in
financial results in its annual reports. But it didn't, not in 1986, 1987 or
1988. In fact, the whole profit over these three years averaged less than $7
million per year. So there couldn't have been any windfall.
Finally, and most definitive,
Parretti's holding company, Interpart, reported the $60 million in cash
deposits that materialized in 1984, 1985 and 1986, not as any sort of capital
gain or profit, but as a new investment for which shares of stock were issued
in return. While Fiorini and Parretti might have provided Cabassi and other
PSI-backers with a dazzling off-shore daisy-chain of shell companies in
Luxembourg, San Marino, Anguilla and Switzerland through which insurance shares
could be shuttled around, for whatever purpose, it did not produce the $60
million dollars infusion of capital in Luxembourg. So the mystery remained:
Whose anonymous money was it?
If Parretti himself did not have
millions of dollars to put into Interpart, as seems evident from his business
failures and bankruptcy problems, the Luxembourg money must have come from some
one else-- a party that, first of all, had $60 million hidden away in
Luxembourg or other discrete banking centers; and, secondly, who trusted
Parretti enough to let him act as custodian for it while it was transformed
into more conventional commercial real estate investments.
The key to this mystery lies in
Parretti's status in 1984 when cash first began coming into Interpart. At that
time, he was not primarily a usual businessman. He was the representative of a
political party: the PSI, which previously had taken care of him in Hong Kong
(where the PSI had at least one of its anonymous fiduciary accounts). To state
the relationship bluntly: The PSI was the principal, Parretti, its agent
abroad. Moreover, it was a connection that had persisted throughout most of
Parretti's business career. He had collected money for the PSI's Youth
Organization, published "Diario" newsletters that supported the PSI,
worked as a go-between for the PSI and ENI in arranging the take over of the
magazine, Il Globo, ran travel camps for PSI workers, and allied himself for
over a decade with Gianni De Michealis, whose faction prevailed in the PSI. Nor
did he act alone for Interpart: its original administrator was Lamberto Mazza--
who had served as a trusted financier for the PSI in Italy. And Interpart's
early disbursement of funds in France were hardly conventional business
investments; the money went directly to PSI's allies in the Socialist network,
such as Max Theret (who while facilitating Parretti's take over of Pathe was
indicted for inside trading in the take-over of Nelson Pelz Triangle industry
by the French state-owned Pechiney company).
Parretti's partner, Florio Fiorini,
also had an important involvement with the PSI. Fiorini, at ENI, along with ENI
President, Giorgio Mazzante, and his deputy, Leonardo Di Donna, helped run the
off-shore banking labyrinth through which ENI passed funds earmarked for the
PSI. It was along this money trail that the $70 million that ENI received
kickbacks from the Saudi Arabian oil sales agency, Petromin, moved in the late
1970s. Even after it leaked to the press in late 1979, and Mazzante was forced
to resign, another skimming arrangement was established, according to Fiorini,
and approved by the government because it meant "lower oil prices for
Italy". This time the deal was with Qaddafi's Libyan Oil Company. Rather
than direct kickbacks a la the Saudis, the Libyans agreed to defer 40 per cent
of the money ENI owed them for crude oil purchases for two years. If, for
example, ENI sold a barrel of Libyan oil to Italian consumers for $30, it paid
the Libyan oil agency only $18, and kept the balance of $12 in its own bank
account, earning interest. Fiorini estimated that by 1982 ENI was holding $3
billion of this Libyan money and, at the double-digit rates that existed in the
early 1980s, it was earning hundreds of millions of dollars of interest on it.
Part of this interest was concealed, or made "black", through simple
book-keeping artifices at the off-shore banks that held the money, and these
"black" funds, like the Saudi kickbacks, were then deposited in
designated numbered accounts for Italian politicians that were the
beneficiaries of the scheme (and Libyan officials that facilitated it).
Enter Roberto "God's
Banker" Calvi, whose Banco Ambrosiano, which was partly owned by the
Vatican, provided ENI with highly-discrete off-shore banking services. Fiorini
negotiated a deal with Calvi ENI deposits were transferred first to ENI
subsidiaries in Nassau, Dutch Antilles and Grand Cayman island and then to
Banco Ambrosiano's off-shore subsidiaries. By the early 1980s, ENI was
supplying these subsidiaries, including the branch in Luxembourg with well over
half of all its medium-term funds. But in 1982, everything suddenly changed
when the Banco Ambrosiano collapsed. Calvi died under a bridge in London,
auditors found $1.3 billion had disappeared from its Luxembourg branch--
including $160 million of ENI's deposits, and Fiorini was fired. The ensuing
financial scandal also left the parties with numbered accounts in off-shore
branches with a problem: they had to reclaim the "black" funds that
had been stashed away for them without arousing public attention. This, in
turn, required a front, one preferably veiled by the secrecy of Luxembourg's
banking laws, in which the money could be deposited and gradually be converted
into legitimate investments.
At our initial meeting at l'Circe,
Parretti had philosophized "life is like a movie. You can look at the
parts you like." The version that he preferred is a heroic saga that
traces a young waiter's miraculous rise, against all odds, to the commanding
heights of the international film business. The alternative version would be a
comedy of errors in which a political hack given the job of rescuing a slush
funds lost in bank crash winds up buying a bankrupt Hollywood company-- and a
disco, for good measure.
©2008 Edward Jay Epstein
Original article www.edwardjayepstein.com/archived/parretti_print.htm
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23 April
1990
What Makes Giancarlo Run?
By John Greenwald
Even by Hollywood standards for intrigue,
Giancarlo Parretti is a mogul wrapped in mystery. A former waiter who has been
accused several times of financial transgressions in his native Italy, Parretti
aroused suspense and ( skepticism last month when he disclosed his agreement to
buy MGM/UA Communications for $1.2 billion from financier Kirk Kerkorian. But
Parretti, 49, befuddled his doubters last week when he persuaded Time Warner to
guarantee a $650 million loan to help his Los Angeles company, Pathe
Communications, carry out the deal. "Who would ever have imagined that
Pathe would buy MGM? Nobody!" exults Parretti. "Everybody laughed
when I first mentioned it."
The loan guarantee came just ten
days after a Naples court had sentenced Parretti to three years and ten months
in prison for fraudulently declaring the bankruptcy of a chain of Italian
newspapers in 1981. The court ruled that the financier had falsified figures on
the newspapers' balance sheets. Parretti remains free while he appeals the
conviction, which could take several years. In an interview last week in his
Beverly Hills office, the brash mogul dismissed the case as "una buffonata
-- a joke!"
A former headwaiter in the Sicilian
city of Syracuse, Parretti ventured into business in the 1970s by acquiring
three hotels in the region. People who wondered where he got the money
speculated that his source was the Mafia, a rumor he denies. Parretti was later
accused of falsifying the balance sheet of a Syracuse soccer team and was
charged with fraud in the failure of a Palermo savings bank. Neither allegation
stood up. During the 1980s, the flamboyant Parretti built a fortune, evidently
by taking over and restructuring troubled European banks and insurance
companies. At the same time, he became partners with Florio Fiorini, chairman
of Sasea Holding, a Swiss investment firm, in ventures ranging from travel to
real estate.
Parretti plunged into show business
in 1988, paying $200 million for the Cannon Group, a faltering ministudio in
Los Angeles. He paid $160 million later that year for French-held Pathe Cinema,
the owner of 1,500 European movie theaters. By adding MGM/UA, Parretti plans to
create a global entertainment empire.
In return for its financial
support, Time Warner will gain access to 3,000 films in the Pathe and MGM/UA
libraries, which the company will distribute worldwide through theaters, TV and
videocassettes. Among the movies: West Side Story, Midnight Cowboy, Annie Hall
and the James Bond, Pink Panther and Rocky series. Time Warner has agreed to
help Parretti arrange to borrow an additional $200 million to produce new Pathe
and MGM/UA films, which Time Warner would help distribute.
Time Warner's involvement drew
mixed reviews. One research firm, Standard & Poor's, noting that the new
financial commitment came on top of $10.6 billion that the company borrowed in
last year's merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications, placed some $7
billion of Time Warner bonds and preferred stock on S&P CreditWatch. That
status means the company will keep a close eye on Time Warner to determine
whether its credit rating should be downgraded, which would increase its cost
of borrowing.
The stock market, however,
applauded the Pathe-MGM/UA deal. The shares of all three participants rose
during the week. Pathe climbed 1/2 point, to 4 3/ 4; MGM/UA gained 1 7/8, to 18
1/2, and Time Warner rose 5 3/8, to 98 3/8. Investors were apparently betting
that the adventurous transaction was not another buffonata, but a boffo financial
hit for everyone involved.
With reporting by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles and Karen Wolman/Rome
©2008 Time Inc.
Original
article http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,969937,00.html
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June 7, 1990
The Unlikely Deal for MGM
By ROGER
COHEN, SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK TIMES
When Giancarlo Parretti, a
garrulous Italian businessman who says he plans to build the world's most
powerful entertainment company, announced a tender offer for the MGM/UA
Communications Company three months ago, there was widespread skepticism about
whether the deal would be completed.
A humble hotelier in Sicily just a
decade ago, Mr. Parretti has had repeated problems with legal and financial
authorities in at least three European countries. Indeed, two months ago, he
was convicted of fraudulent bankruptcy in Naples and sentenced to almost four
years in jail. Where, the skeptics asked, would such a man raise the $1.2
billion price?
But Mr. Parretti has apparently
come up with the money, and people close to the deal said that on Thursday he
would almost certainly complete the acquisition of MGM/UA, the Hollywood movie
production company that owns a library with about 1,000 films from the Chaplin
classic ''Modern Times'' to ''Midnight Cowboy'' and ''Rain Man.''
Help From Time Warner
The purchase was made possible
largely because of help from Time Warner Inc., which has agreed to arrange for
and guarantee a $650 million loan to Mr. Parretti's company, the Pathe
Communications Corporation. A Time Warner executive said the decision to
cooperate with Mr. Parretti was the subject of heated debate within the
company.
Will the money be enough? Analysts
think the problems facing Mr. Parretti are threefold: winning an appeal he has
lodged against his conviction in Italy, resisting parliamentary and financial
investigations into his affairs in France, and paying off his loans while still
finding the several hundred million dollars needed to revive MGM/UA. The
studio, which has been in limbo as the Los Angeles financier Kirk Kerkorian
sought to sell it over the last two years, lost $75 million last year. Pathe,
meanwhile, lost $32 million. But even the fact that the deal will go through,
barring a last-minute snag, is startling to many who have followed the dealings
of the 48-year-old Mr. Parretti in recent years.
''The MGM purchase is quite
astonishing,'' said Michel Maquil, secretary general of the Luxembourg Stock
Exchange, which last year delisted the stock of one of Mr. Parretti's holding
companies for failing to provide financial information.
''He is like a bar of soap in
water,'' Mr. Maquil said. ''Every time you try to get a grip, he slips through
your fingers.''
Mr. Parretti declined requests for
an interview. But he stressed through aides that he considers himself to be
innocent of any wrongdoing and that he is appealing his April conviction. He
was sentenced to three years and 10 months in prison for fraud in the 1981
collapse of a Naples newspaper.
Other Pathe officers also declined
to be interviewed. Explaining why, Ted Cohen, executive vice president and
assistant general counsel, said, ''In terms of public relations, this has
become a mess.''
And a spokesman for Pathe, Craig
Parsons, would only discuss the MGM deal. ''The closing is definitely
Thursday,'' he said, adding that no American commercial or investment bank had
advised Mr. Parretti on the transaction, an unusual situation for so large a
deal.
All the money other than that
arranged by Time Warner has been raised through the European holding companies
of Mr. Parretti and his closest business associate, Florio Fiorini, 48, who is
chairman of Pathe.
Parretti's Farflung Holdings
Mr. Parretti, the son of a wine
merchant from the medieval town of Orvieto who started out as a waiter , built
farflung holdings that now include not only production studios and movie
theaters in the United States and Europe but also real estate and travel
agencies in Europe. He has offered only murky indications as to where the money
has come from to finance his accumulation of assets over the last five years.
The precise state of Mr. Parretti's
financial affairs is unclear because he operates chiefly through a closely held
holding company based in Luxembourg, Comfinance S.A. But he has said in filings
to the Securities and Exchange Commission that he and his wife, Maria Cecconi,
own about 80 percent of Comfinance, which in turn owns 88 percent of Pathe
Communications.
Mr. Parretti and Mr. Fiorini have
used Comfinance and Mr. Fiorini's Geneva-based Sasea holding companies as the
main financial bases for their expansion into Spanish real estate (the Renta S.A.
group), French movies (Pathe-Cinema), and the United States entertainment
business (Pathe Communications).
They have left some confusion in
their wake. According to records of the Luxembourg Stock Exchange, one of Mr.
Parretti's holding companies, originally called Finatourinvest and later
renamed Interpart, was delisted on Feb. 28, 1989. Interpart is sometimes
described in United States filings as the predecessor of the holding company
now called Comfinance S.A., which has been used to raise money for the MGM
purchase.
'A Total Outsider'
Mr. Parretti has said he
voluntarily withdrew the stock from the exchange last year, but Mr. Maquil,
confirming a report last month in the Italian news magazine Europeo, said this
was ''absolutely untrue.''
In his native country, Mr. Parretti
is little known in official banking circles, where one leading financier
described his as ''a total outsider.'' In the Netherlands, a company from his
group, named Bobel, was suspended last year from the Amsterdam Stock Exchange
because of a lack of adequate financial information.
And in France, where Mr. Parretti
has extensive movie interests through Pathe-France Holding, the vice president
of the Finance Committee of the Chamber of Deputies, Francois d'Aubert, called
this week for the establishment of a parliamentary committee of inquiry into
the Italian's activities. Pathe-France Holding has a 48 percent stake in
Pathe-Cinema, a publicly traded company that is the country's third-largest
cinema group.
The recent fraud conviction in
Naples involved the newspaper Diario, which went bankrupt in 1981, Mr. Parretti
was a managing director of the newspaper and he was convicted of failing to
provide timely information in the company's financial disclosures.
Misjudgment by Advisers
Mr. Parretti's advisers appear to
have misjudged the outcome of the case. A March 14 Pathe Communications filing
to the S.E.C. stated that Mr. Parretti's Italian counsel had advised ''that, in
his opinion, Mr. Parretti will be acquitted of this charge on the basis of his
non-involvement.'' The conviction came three weeks later. The S.E.C. has made
no objection to the Pathe-MGM deal.
The conviction followed a number of
other brushes with the law, including misdemeanor offenses involving a series
of bounced checks in the late 1970's and charges - later dropped - of
falsifying the balance sheet of the soccer team he had owned on Sicily. Mr.
Parretti has spent several days in Italian jails.
Mr. Parretti, who spent last
weekend at a Warner Brothers party in Burbank before going on to San Francisco
to attend a lunch for Mikhail S. Gorbachev, dismisses much of the furor around
him as the griping of the envious, his aides said.
In Hollywood, where he started in
late 1987 by buying and investing $250 million in the Cannon Group
movie-production company and then renaming it Pathe Communications, he has
gained at least one important ally: Warner Brothers.
Ties to Time Warner
Mr. Parretti has described Steven
J, Ross, the co-chairman of Warner Brothers' parent, Time Warner, as a good
friend. Time Warner, however, denies there is any close friendship between the
two. In any case, without Time Warner Mr. Parretti might have been hard pressed
to raise the money for MGM.
Warner Brothers is guaranteeing a
$650 million loan to Pathe in return for distribution rights to the extensive
MGM/UA film library, which includes such classics as the James Bond series, the
Pink Panther movies and ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.''
As security for the loan, Warner
has the United Artists film library, which it could end up owning if Mr.
Parretti runs into financial trouble. And Warner also has warrants that could
give it 20 percent of Pathe.
Much Discussion
''There was a lot of discussion at
the Time Warner level as to whether we should do this deal,'' said a Warner
official, who spoke on the condition he not be identified. ''There were some
people on the board who really did not want to do business with Parretti. But
it is a very good deal, and that in the end swayed it.''
He added that the accord presented
Warner with little risk and an opportunity to make a great deal of money from
distribution of the MGM/UA library.
''The net we can garner on these
films is enormous,'' he said. ''But I don't think it would have happened if Parretti's
conviction had come before all this started, rather than when we were a long
way down the road on a very, very good deal.''
Should Time Warner be supporting a
convicted man, albeit one who is appealing and protesting his innocence
vigorously?
'A Brilliant Man'
Jack Gilardi, executive vice
president of the International Creative Management talent agency, was
supportive of the Italian entrepreneur. He described Mr. Parretti as ''a
brilliant man, always charged up, always courteous. He is a breath of fresh air
because of his enthusiasm.''
Meanwhile, Mr. Parretti has
impressed people with his seriousness by hiring the respected producer Alan
Ladd Jr. to head movie-making at Pathe.
Still, doubts persist about Mr.
Parretti's past. Any attempts to bring clarity to the question of how Mr.
Parretti moved from the Sicilian hotel business in the late 1970's to
international entrepreneur in the mid-1980's have run up against a web of
contradictory statements from him and Mr. Fiorini, a former finance director of
the Italian ENI oil group.
What is clear is that real estate,
hotels and two Italian insurance companies were bought and sold by the two men
in the mid-1980's at some profit - perhaps as much as $60 million, which was
then invested through Comfinance and Sasea.
Some Skepticism
As for Mr. Parretti's prospects if
the MGM/UA deal does go through, some industry people are skeptical, ''I don't
see how Parretti is going to come up with the money to make movies,'' said
Thomas K. Levine, vice president of the Carolco movie company.
But another movie executive, who
insisted on anonymity, held a different view: ''In this town, if somebody like
Parretti is able to come along and buy a company and become friends with Steve
Ross, so reaching the inner sanctum, then God bless him, he can succeed. That's
Hollywood.''
©2008 The New
York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE5DE123CF934A35755C0A966958260
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April 11, 1991
Pathe Chief Accused in Suit
AP
The president of the Pathe
Communications Corporation reportedly completed a $1.4 billion buyout of MGM/ UA
using MGM/UA shares he did not yet own, a newspaper reported today.
The Italian financier Giancarlo
Parretti, who is Pathe's president, traded 10 million shares of the MGM/ UA
Communications Corporation to obtain an insurance bond three days before Pathe
acquired MGM/UA, the film studio, in November, according to documents in a
lawsuit obtained by The Los Angeles Times.
The documents are part of a lawsuit
filed in January in the Cook Islands by Century Insurance Ltd. The compan
operates from Brisbane, Australia, but is incorporated in the Cook Islands, a
group of islands off New Zealand.
In the lawsuit, Century's chief
executive, Donald A. Davies, said Mr. Parretti had agreed to pay $1.75 million
for a $175 million insurance bond. He said Mr. Parretti had also agreed to use
as collateral 30 million shares of stock, including the 10 million MGM/ UA
shares. The bond was to guarantee sales of future television and movie rights
negotiated with various foreign companies, the newspaper said.
The lawsuit names Credit Lyonnais
Bank Nederland, Mr. Parretti's chief lender in the buyout. The bank has refused
to release the 30 million shares.
MGM-Pathe officials have denied
Century's contention. The movie studio maintains that Century did not provide
satisfactory financial statements, bank references or guarantees from its
parent company to post a valid bond.
A group of creditors in Los Angeles
is trying to force MGM-Pathe into bankruptcy, contending that it is owed more
than $10 million.
©2008 The New
York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFD81030F932A25757C0A967958260
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April 17, 1991
Parretti Out As Chairman Of Pathe
By RICHARD
W. STEVENSON,
The MGM-Pathe Communications
Corporation said today that its main lender had agreed to provide $145 million in
new loans, but only after the Italian investor Giancarlo Parretti said he would
step down as head of the troubled studio and its parent company.
In agreeing to provide the new
loans, the lender, Credit Lyonnais, pushed successfully not only for the removal
of Mr. Parretti, whose Pathe Communications Corporation acquired the MGM-UA
film studio last year for $1.3 billion, but also for more management power to
be given to Alan Ladd Jr., a widely respected Hollywood executive hired by Mr.
Parretti last year.
Mr. Ladd will now be chairman and
chief executive of MGM-Pathe, the operating subsidiary of Pathe Communications.
Mr. Ladd had previously been co-chairman of the studio along with Mr. Parretti,
who had also been chief executive. Cesare De Michelis, an Italian business
executive who is virtually unknown in Hollywood, was named to replace Mr.
Parretti as chairman of Pathe Communications, but executives involved in the
situation said the real authority would lie with Mr. Ladd.
Mr. Parretti, whose brief tenure as
a studio owner raised a host of questions in Hollywood about his ability to
meet his financial commitments, remains the majority shareholder of Pathe and
will retain a seat on its board. Credit Lyonnais, a large French bank, will
also continue to exert considerable influence over the company's operations,
industry executives said.
For months, Mr. Parretti had been
engaged in often-contentious negotiations with Credit Lyonnais, seeking more
funding. Pathe and MGM-Pathe already owe the French bank at least $260 million.
Pathe said the new loan was
contingent on the dismissal of an involuntary bankruptcy petition filed against
MGM-Pathe last month by a group of companies that claimed the studio owed them
money and was refusing to pay. People involved in the bankruptcy proceeding
said the two sides were negotiating a settlement under which MGM-Pathe would
pay all its bills except those where it claims it does not owe any money. In
cases in which a claim is disputed, the two sides would agree to submit the
claim to arbitration.
The studio's relationship with its
creditors has been increasingly strained since Mr. Parretti completed his
acquisition of MGM in November, and it is unclear whether the proposed
settlement can be completed. If it is not, the loan could be delayed, possibly
for months.
But the new loan, should it come
through as planned, would give one of the Hollywood's most fabled studios a new
opportunity to survive. MGM was in decline as a movie-making force in Hollywood
long before Mr. Parretti came on the scene last year. It suffered in particular
from constant management turmoil under its previous owner, Kirk Kerkorian, a
financier who bought, sold and reorganized parts of the studio in a series of
complex transactions over the past decade.
Mr. Parretti took over the studio
promising "to make the MGM lion roar again." MGM's fortunes, however,
have appeared especially bleak in the last several months.
Mr. Parretti, who had extreme
difficulty lining up financing to complete the acquisition of the studio last
year, found himself lacking funds to operate the studio after the deal was
closed, industry executives said. He delayed debt payments, put off paying
suppliers and was forced to delay the release of two movies, including "Delirious,"
starring John Candy, because of a lack of money for advertising and
distribution.
The studio's problems were
compounded by the disappointing box-office performance of its recent films,
including "The Russia House," starring Sean Connery.
Pathe and MGM-Pathe have twice
delayed the release of their financial results for last year, although they
have acknowledged that they expect to post large losses.
In a statement, Mr. Ladd said
MGM-Pathe plans to release its next movie, "Thelma and Louise,"
starring Susan Sarandon, on May 24. He said a release date for
"Delirious" would be set soon.
©2008 The New
York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEEDA143DF934A25757C0A967958260
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June 18, 1991
Parretti Ousted At MGM-Pathe
The MGM-Pathe Communications Company
and its bankers today removed Giancarlo Parretti, the company's former
chairman, and two others from the board.
The company also filed a complaint
in Delaware Chancery Court seeking to bar Mr. Parretti from interfering with
MGM-Pathe's management. It sought similar relief from the two other board
members, Maria Cecconi, whom MGM- Pathe identified as Mr. Parretti's wife, and
Yoram Globus.
MGM-Pathe, the Hollywood film
studio that recently released "Thelma and Louise," and Credit
Lyonnaise Bank Nederland N.V. took the action citing "improper
interference in the corporate governance of MGM-Pathe." The company
claimed that even though Mr. Parretti was no longer MGM- Pathe's chairman, he
continued to issue orders and direct the company in violation of an agreement
with bankers.
In April, MGM-Pathe and Credit
Lyonnais announced that $145 million in loans would be provided but only after
Mr. Parretti agreed to step down as head of the studio.
Mr. Parretti, who remains the
majority shareholder, acquired MGM-Pathe last year for $1.3 billion.
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December 28, 1991
Parretti Arrested on Taxes
Giancarlo Parretti, the Italian
financier who is fighting to retain control of the Pathe Communications Corporation,
the American media group, was arrested by Italian police today on charges of
tax evasion.
Mr. Parretti, who is 50 years old,
was arrested at Rome's Ciampino airport as he was waiting to board a plane for
Tunisia.
The police said he was charged with
tax evasion and criminal association. He was taken to Sicily, where magistrates
are investigating his ties to several local companies.
Earlier this month, a prosecutor
recommended that Mr. Parretti and his wife, Maria Cecconi, stand trial for 121
billion lire ($105 million) in tax evasion in Italy.
The Italian news agency ANSA said
the tax evasion was related to one of Mr. Parretti's Italian companies,
Finpart, based near Rome, and its ties with several Sicilian companies.
Last March, a Naples court
sentenced Mr. Parretti in absentia to four years in jail on fraudulent
bankruptcy charges related to a newspaper chain that collapsed in 1981. Mr.
Parretti described the charges as "a joke" and appealed.
Mr. Parretti, a one-time waiter and
the son of an olive merchant, bought the Hollywood studio MGM/UA Communications
Company in November 1990 for $1.3 billion. He stepped down as chairman a few
months later amid allegations by his bank, Credit Lyonnais, that he had brought
the company to the brink of bankruptcy.
He was succeeded by the film
producer Alan Ladd Jr., but later moved to reassert control.
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December 31, 1991
MGM-Pathe Ouster Upheld
The Italian financier Giancarlo
Parretti lost control of the MGM-Pathe Communications Company today after a
Delaware judge ruled that he had reneged on an agreement with his leading
creditor.
The ruling by Chancery Court
Chancellor William T. Allen means that control of the Hollywood studio
continues to rest with Credit Lyonnais Bank Nederland N.V.
The bank sued Mr. Parretti on June
17, claiming that he continued to exert day-to-day control over the studio
after agreeing to relinquish it.
Chancellor Allen said he had
weighed conflicting testimony and concluded that Mr. Parretti "did not
give truthful testimony." Because Mr. Parretti willfully breached the
agreement with Credit Lyonnais, the bank was entitled to remove him and his
associates from the board, the chancellor said.
Charles R. Meeker, president of the
studio, said the Pathe name could be dropped from the studio's title as early
as next month. He said the bank had no immediate plans to sell the company.
Mr. Parretti bought MGM-UA
Communications in November 1990 from the financier Kirk Kerkorian for $1.3
billion and renamed the company MGM-Pathe Communications. The studio produced
classic films like "Gone With The Wind" and "The Wizard of
Oz."
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January 4, 1992
Release Denied For Parretti
A judge from the Siracusa court
today rejected a motion to release the imprisoned Italian financier Giancarlo
Parretti, who recently lost control of the MGM-Pathe Communications Company, a
lawyer said.
Mr. Parretti earlier this week lost
his bid to regain control of MGM-Pathe. He was arrested a week ago in Italy and
charged with illegally transferring money out of the country and tax evasion.
Ettore Randazzo, one of Mr.
Parretti's lawyers, said the judge did not announce the reason for his
decision. Mr. Randazzo said in a telephone interview that the lawyers would
appeal the ruling.
Mr. Randazzo also confirmed that
Mr. Parretti had been on a hunger strike in recent days at the Brucoli prison
in Siracusa to protest his detention.
A judge in Wilmington, Del., ruled
Tuesday that Mr. Parretti had reneged on an agreement with his major creditor,
Credit Lyonnais Bank Nederland N.V., in the MGM takeover. The judge awarded
control of the film studio to Credit Lyonnais.
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May 8, 1992
Bank Takes MGM-Pathe
AP
Credit Lyonnais today formally took
possession of the crippled movie studio MGM and its parent company, the Pathe
Communications Corporation.
The French state-owned bank, which
is the company's largest creditor and has controlled its board since last year,
took possession of the company's shares in an auction in which there were no
other bidders.
The purchase price of $483.5
million was equivalent to the secured debt of the Pathe Communications
Corporation and its affiliates, said a spokesman for Credit Lyonnais, who spoke
on condition of anonmyity.
The foreclosure sale was the
culmination of a long legal and financial battle between the bank and
MGM-Pathe's former owner, the Italian financier Giancarlo Parretti.
Mr. Parretti owes Credit Lyonnais
an amount estimated at $1.5 billion from his 1990 purchase of MGM-UA
Communications and subsequent loans to keep operations going.
"It has been the bank's position
that the best way to protect its investment is to work with MGM management
toward the revival of the studio," the bank spokesman said. "As far
as we're concerned, this concludes any involvement Parretti has with MGM."
Mr. Parretti owned 98.5 percent of
the stock in the California studio. Late last year, Credit Lyonnais took voting
control of the stock, accusing him of failing to repay loans and mismanagement.
Last month the bank, backed by the courts, announced that it would buy Mr.
Parretti's stock holdings at auction. His shares in MGM-Pathe served as
collateral for loans to the studio and Pathe Communications and related
entities totaling $1.5 billion.
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July 22, 1992
Italy Financier Charged
The Italian financier Giancarlo Parretti
was indicted today for perjury and tampering with evidence. The indictment,
returned in New Castle County Superior Court, stems from Mr. Parretti's
testimony last year in a Chancery Court trial where he lost control of the MGM
studios. A prosecutor, Eugene Hall, said Mr. Parretti is believed to be in
Rome, and the state will ask the Federal Government to begin extradition
proceedings. If convicted on both counts, Mr. Parretti faces a maximum 10 years
in prison.
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October 22, 1992
COMPANY NEWS; F.B.I. IS INVESTIGATING ITALIAN
FINANCIER
The F.B.I. said yesterday that it
was investigating whether Giancarlo Parretti broke laws as owner of MGM, and
had asked Federal prosecutors to help review an internal inquiry by MGM's
current owners. Mr. Parretti could not be reached for comment. He previously
had denied wrongdoing during his tenure in 1990 and 1991 at MGM, which ended
with the studio in financial shambles.
The Italian financier also is under
scrutiny by the Securities and Exchange Commission for his actions during and
after the buyout of Kirk Kerkorian's MGM-UA Communications by Mr. Parretti's
Pathe Communications. And Delaware authorities want him extradited to face
perjury and evidence-tampering charges stemming from a trial at which he lost
control of MGM to Credit Lyonnais, the French bank that financed his $1.3
billion purchase.
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October 10, 1995
Italian Fugitive Voluntarily Returns to U.S.
Giancarlo Parretti, the fugitive Italian
financier who bought Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1990 but was ousted and indicted as
the takeover deal for the Hollywood studio collapsed, returned to the United
States today.
Mr. Parretti flew back from Rome,
setting foot in this country for the first time in nearly four years,
accompanied by his daughter, Valentina, Mr. Parretti's Los Angeles lawyer, Jay
Coggan, said.
After arriving at New York, Mr.
Parretti went directly to Delaware, where a court issued a warrant for his
arrest on perjury charges in 1991 amid a bitter dispute between him and his
bank, Credit Lyonnais. He is accused of fabricating a document in the deal.
The bank financed Mr. Parretti's
$1.3 billion purchase of MGM from the financier Kirk Kerkorian. Credit Lyonnais
seized the studio soon after Mr. Parretti took control, contending that he was
ruining it and defaulting on loans. Mr. Parretti has said that the bank
conspired all along to take control of MGM.
Mr. Parretti left the United States
after an arrest warrant was issued on perjury charges, but Mr. Coggan said his
client had decided to return voluntarily to defend himself.
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November 28, 1995
Italian Financier Is Released From Jail
By
BLOOMBERG BUSINESS NEWS
The Italian financier Giancarlo Parretti,
the former head of Hollywood's MGM studio, who was arrested in October on a
French extradition request, has been freed by a United States appeals court.
In a two-page opinion issued last
week, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that
keeping Mr. Parretti in jail might violate his constitutional rights. At the
Justice Department's request, the court later issued an order requiring Mr.
Parretti to stay in the country.
Mr. Parretti's lawyer, Jay M.
Coggan, said Mr. Parretti was freed late Wednesday.
The appeals court ruling is the
latest episode in the legal quagmire surrounding Mr. Parretti's $1.3 billion
purchase of MGM from the billionaire Kirk Kerkorian in 1990.
Credit Lyonnais, a bank controlled
by the French Government, helped to finance the purchase and later seized the
studio, charging Mr. Parretti with squandering its resources and defaulting on
loans. On Oct. 10, he pleaded not guilty to perjury charges in a Delaware court
stemming from the dispute.
Mr. Parretti, in turn, has sued the
bank in Los Angeles Superior Court for $3.9 billion, charging racketeering and
fraud.
Mr. Parretti faces extradition to
France on charges of misuse of company assets, forging a private or commercial
deed, embezzlement and knowingly attesting to materially inaccurate facts.
In ordering Mr. Parretti released,
the appeals court said the extradition request did not meet the "probable
cause" standard that was required before someone could be detained in an
extradition action.
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January 4, 1996
Italian Settles Fraud Charges in MGM Deal
AP
Giancarlo Parretti, the Italian
financier and former owner of MGM studios, and two associates settled Federal
securities-fraud charges today related to the 1990 takeover of MGM, without agreeing
to financial penalties.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission filed civil fraud charges in United States District Court here
against Mr. Parretti, former chief executive of the Pathe Communications
Corporation. The charges concerned Pathe's purchase of MGM/ UA Communications
and a deal in 1989 involving several European theaters.
The S.E.C. also filed related
administrative charges against Florio Fiorini, former chairman of Pathe, and
Fernando Cappuccio, the company's former chief financial officer.
The three agreed to settle the
cases without admitting or denying wrongdoing. While no financial penalties
were levied, the men agreed that they would not violate securities laws in the
future.
The charges are the latest headache
for Mr. Parretti, who was held in October on a French arrest warrant charging
him with misuse of company assets, forgery, embezzlement and perjury. France
charged him with defrauding the state-owned bank Credit Lyonnais, which
foreclosed on MGM shortly after Pathe acquired the movie studio.
In 1992, Mr. Parretti was indicted
in Delaware on charges of perjury and evidence tampering related to the Credit
Lyonnais dispute.
The S.E.C. case had charged that during
Pathe's acquisition of MGM/ UA Communications, Mr. Parretti and Mr. Fiorini
failed to record in Pathe's books a $305 million short-term loan and a sale of
licensing rights that raised $113 million in cash. It charged further that the
two took out the loan when they could not raise the financing needed for the
MGM deal, then obligated Pathe to repay the loan after the merger.
The commission brought charges
against all three men concerning Pathe's sale and lease-back of theaters in
Britain and the Netherlands to a company called Cinema 5 N.V., a transaction
that raised $231 million.
It said the deal had been falsely
recorded in Pathe's S.E.C. filings as a sale to an independent company. The
complaint said the transaction "was a sham because Cinema 5 was not
independent of Pathe." It said that Pathe provided the funds to establish
Cinema 5 and that the executives of the company were friends of Mr. Parretti.
The commission also charged that the deal overstated Pathe's financial results
for 1989 and the first quarter of 1990.
In July 1992, Pathe Communications
was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange.
Jay Coggan, Mr. Parretti's lawyer,
said, "Mr. Parretti has not been found responsible for any
wrongdoing."
S.E.C. officials said Mr. Fiorini
and Mr. Cappuccio were not represented by lawyers and were living somewhere in
Switzerland.
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June 1, 1996
Extradition Ordered for Italian Financier
REUTERS
A Federal judge today ordered the
Italian financier Giancarlo Parretti, one-time owner of the MGM studios, to be
extradited to France, where he faces charges of fraud, theft and embezzlement.
United States District
Magistrate-Judge Stephen Hillman gave Mr. Parretti 30 days to appeal the order,
and his attorneys said they would file an appeal in that time.
The French Government filed an
extradition request on Nov. 29 that charged Mr. Parretti, 54 years old, with
eight counts of fraud, theft and embezzlement. The charges were in connection
with Mr. Parretti's ownership of MGM and his dealings with the Credit Lyonnais
bank and a French associate of MGM, Europe Image Distribution.
In his 10-page ruling, Judge
Hillman found that Mr. Parretti's "contention that the French charging
document is insufficient is without merit."
He also found probable cause
existed to support the charges against Mr. Parretti.
"The extradition of Parretti
is proper," the judge wrote.
Judge Hillman also ordered Mr.
Parretti to post a $100,000 bail bond. He had been free on his own
recognizance.
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October 3, 1996
Former MGM Owner Convicted of Perjury
The former owner of
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc., Giancarlo Parretti, was found guilty yesterday of perjury
and evidence tampering by a Delaware Superior Court jury. Mr. Parretti, who
lost control of MGM in 1991 soon after buying it with a loan from the French
bank Credit Lyonnais, faces as many as 10 years in prison. Sentencing is
scheduled for Nov. 18.
The jury found that Mr. Parretti
had perjured himself in a 1991 civil trial when he said a document that he
contended allowed him to retain control of MGM was authentic. A prosecution
witness disputed that.
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January 4, 1997
Former MGM Executive Flees Before Court Date
Giancarlo Parretti, the Italian
financier, has fled the country ahead of sentencing scheduled for Monday for
perjury and evidence tampering in the case that cost him control of MGM
studios, his lawyer said today.
A warrant was issued today for Mr.
Parretti's arrest, Mary Pitcavage, a clerk at Delaware Superior Court in
Wilmington, said.
Jay M. Coggan, a Beverly Hills,
Calif., lawyer, said he had received a fax signed by Mr. Parretti that said the
businessman had left the United States and was in Italy -- a violation of his
bail agreement.
''I have no idea what was in Mr.
Parretti's mind,'' Mr. Coggan said. ''Suffice it to say I was shocked and
surprised, and I never believed he would do such a thing.'' He said he notified
the authorities this morning immediately after receiving Mr. Parretti's fax.
Mr. Parretti recently lost an
important legal battle when a judge denied his request to reopen the 1991 case
that cost him MGM.
Mr. Parretti argued he possessed
new evidence that justified such a move, but Chancellor William Allen of the
Delaware Chancery Court rejected Mr. Parretti's position. Mr. Allen, in a
decision released on Dec. 24, said Mr. Parretti had failed to show how the
outcome might be changed because of the new evidence.
Mr. Parretti lost control of MGM
when Credit Lyonnais of France, the bank that financed his $1.3 billion
purchase of the studio in 1990, seized MGM, after saying that Mr. Parretti had
defaulted on loans and grossly mismanaged it.
Credit Lyonnais sued Mr. Parretti
in 1991, arguing that the financier had continued to exert day-to-day control
over the studio after agreeing to relinquish it to the bank. The court ruled in
the bank's favor.
Recently, Credit Lyonnais sold the studio
to a group including Kirk Kerkorian, the billionaire who had originally sold it
to Mr. Parretti.
In early October, Mr. Parretti was
found guilty of perjury and tampering with evidence in the 1991 case, charges
that could bring sentences of up to 10 years in prison.
He remained free on bail after a
state jury convicted him and was scheduled for sentencing on Monday.
Mr. Parretti still has a lawsuit
pending in Los Angeles against Credit Lyonnais, accusing the bank of conspiring
to seize control of the studio. That trial is scheduled for March.
Mr. Parretti is also wanted by
French authorities, who tried to extradite him from the United States.
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January 16, 1997
Authorities Can Track Fugitive Financiers, but They
Can't Bring Them In
By PETER TRUELL
Giancarlo Parretti, the flamboyant
former Hollywood mogul, could well be visiting his aging parents these days at
the family olive farm just outside Orvieto, a medieval hilltop city some 70
miles north of Rome, his American lawyers say. They are not sure, though, since
they communicate with him solely by fax.
Mr. Parretti, who mounted a $1.3
billion takeover of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. in 1990 only to lose control of
the studio a year later amid allegations of financial mismanagement, is, after
all, a man on the run.
The financier jumped bail and fled
to his native Italy shortly before a Jan. 6 sentencing hearing in Delaware, his
lawyers said early this month. At the hearing, he faced as much as 10 years in
prison on perjury and evidence-tampering convictions growing out of the legal
battle for control of the studio.
Exactly how and when the
55-year-old Mr. Parretti left the United States is a mystery. But by skipping
the country, he has become the latest addition to the band of rogue financiers
who have put off their date with American justice. And in joining the likes of
Marc D. Rich and Robert Vesco, he has entered the shadowy -- and shifting --
world of the high-powered fugitive.
Because of technological advances
in international police work -- chiefly the explosive growth in computer data
bases and the lightning-fast transmission of photos -- those fugitives are
finding that they can hide, but not run, at least not easily after the initial
flight. Those who last the longest find a safe haven and hunker down, law
enforcement officials say, avoiding high profiles and unnecessary movement.
The authorities say that no
fugitive is ever really safe in an age when the next-door neighbor or the kid
down the block can be the kind of vigilant citizen who regularly checks out the
Justice Department's wanted list on the World Wide Web. Tracking down fugitives
''is getting a little bit easier using these sophisticated programs,'' said
James Carney, an inspector with the United States Marshals Service, the agency
that brings them back.
But for all that, the wheels of
justice can still turn awfully slowly. The United States has had little success
in persuading even friendly nations to tighten laws that provide safe harbors
for financial fugitives. And often there are serious questions about how hard
anyone tries to find these international scofflaws.
In Mr. Parretti's case, for
instance, an arrest warrant has been issued by Delaware authorities and a
bail-forfeiture hearing has been set for Jan. 24, according to Paul R. Wallace,
the state prosecutor handling the case. But no American officials have been
dispatched to Orvieto or anywhere else abroad to find Mr. Parretti, Mr. Wallace
said, explaining that such bilateral matters take time to work out.
Even if he is found, it may be some
time before he returns to the United States, if ever. One measure of how hard
it can be to win extradition is that in fleeing the United States, Mr. Parretti
left behind another legal battle in Los Angeles, where he had been fighting an
arrest warrant issued by the French Government for other MGM-related charges.
The United States has been trying
to get its hands on some fugitives for years, even decades. For example, Mr.
Rich, a suave international commodities trader, has lived openly in Zug,
Switzerland, since 1982 after fleeing the United States to avoid prosecution in
a tax case. Mr. Vesco left the country in 1972, when he fled Federal charges
that he defrauded mutual fund investors of $224 million. He is now serving 13
years in a Cuban jail for other matters.
Ghaith R. Pharaon, the former front
man for the Bank of Credit and Commerce International and its illegal purchases
of financial institutions in the United States, was indicted on fraud and
racketeering charges in 1991. He now flits between his native Saudi Arabia and
Pakistan, former associates say.
The number of fugitive financiers
is growing, said an official at the Office of International Affairs in the
Department of Justice's criminal division, though the official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, declined to provide specific figures. It is simply
easier now than it was some years ago to get on a plane and disappear, at least
at first, the official said, particularly since English has been increasingly
adopted as the international language.
Meanwhile, the number of
extraditions, relating to financial crimes and otherwise, has remained
relatively flat. During the 12-month period ended Sept. 30, 160 people were
extradited in all categories of crime, according to the Marshals Service. There
were 191 extraditions for the period ending Sept. 30, 1995, and 177 for the
year before that.
What hurts the ''recovery'' rate,
Federal officials say, is that some countries, like Cuba, have no extradition
treaty with the United States, while others, like Switzerland, make
distinctions among forms of financial skulduggery that provide a safe haven to
some.
''When you talk of financial
crimes, you have to be careful,'' said Erwin Jenni, head of the extradition
service at the Swiss Justice Department in Bern. In Switzerland, he explained,
financial crimes involve fraud or embezzlement. Then there are so-called fiscal
offenses, he said, which cover tax matters. ''We don't extradite for fiscal and
customs offenses,'' Mr. Jenni said, a policy that allows Mr. Rich, who has been
indicted in the United States on charges of evading $48 million in income
taxes, to live in Alpine comfort in Zug.
Another problem, said Mr. Carney of
the Marshals Service, occurs when a fugitive successfully applies for
citizenship in a foreign country. ''Only some countries will extradite their
own citizens,'' he explained.
To improve the Justice Department's
record for capturing big-time fugitives, Attorney General Janet Reno last month
started an interagency fugitive alert service, in conjunction with the United
States Information Agency and the Voice of America. The effort includes a site
on the World Wide Web (http:// www.usdoj.gov/criminal/oiafug/fugitives.htm)
showing pictures of the most wanted fugitives.
In August, the Justice Department
and the Voice of America began a radio broadcast, ''International Crime
Alert,'' that highlights a different fugitive each week. The program is heard
in more than 50 countries.
While the new efforts have yet to
bring in any well-known fugitive financiers, they did lead to the recent arrest
in Guatemala of Leslie I. Rogge, a convicted bank robber who escaped from an
Iowa prison, F.B.I. officials said. An American teen-ager living in Guatemala
recognized Mr. Rogge from a picture on the F.B.I. web site, they said. Mr.
Rogge had been working in the teen-ager's neighborhood as a handyman.
Most big-time fugitives have been a
lot luckier than that. The anecdotal evidence suggests that those fugitives who
have substantial reserves of money, like Mr. Rich, have a good chance of
remaining at large. Mr. Rich even formed a new commodities trading firm in Zug.
The firm, now run by others, has been a huge success -- and a galling symbol of
frustration to American authorities.
A fistful of passports also seems
to help. Most of the long-term financial fugitives on the Justice Department's
list appear to hold at least two. Mr. Rich, for example, has American, Israeli
and Spanish citizenship, sometimes visiting Spain and Israel on secret sojourns
out of Switzerland. Mr. Pharaon, of the B.C.C.I. case, is believed to have both
Saudi and Pakistani passports.
It is not that the American authorities
give up trying to recapture those fleeing overseas. There have, for example,
been occasional negotiations through intermediaries between Mr. Rich's lawyers
and American law enforcement agencies to see if his return could be arranged. A
variety of elaborate ruses to catch Mr. Rich outside Switzerland have also been
considered and sometimes tried. In one such attempt, the American authorities
staged a complicated commodities deal in an unsuccessful effort to lure Mr.
Rich either to Kazakstan or Monte Carlo.
Some famous fugitives find it hard
to stay out of trouble. Mr. Vesco is now languishing in jail following his
conviction in Havana in August on charges of ''fraud and illicit economic
activity.''
Others raise their public profile
too high. David Friedland, a former New Jersey state senator who masterminded a
plot to defraud $20 million from a local teamsters pension fund, found that
out. After faking a fatal diving accident in 1985 in the Bahamas, Mr. Friedland
moved to the Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean. Using an alias, he bought and
ran a number of scuba-diving schools there and even had his picture printed on
a postcard. Such showmanship helped American authorities track him down in
1987. Mr. Friedland, who pleaded guilty to racketeering charges, was extradited
and sentenced to 15 years in jail.
Eddie Antar, a fugitive from fraud
charges for two years after the collapse of the Crazy Eddie electronics
discount chain he co-founded, also has himself to blame for getting caught. The
authorities got on his trail after he went to the police in Switzerland in 1992
and demanded help in gaining access to a $32 million bank account he kept under
an alias.
Mr. Antar was arrested a short time
later in Israel and extradited to the United States, where he faced charges
that he defrauded shareholders of more than $74 million. After Federal
convictions were overturned, Mr. Antar pleaded guilty last year to one
racketeering count. Mr. Antar, who has already served four years in prison, is
expected to receive three to five years more at a hearing next month.
The failure of Mr. Friedland and
Mr. Antar to stay hidden highlights a key problem for a fleeing financier.
Often, the flamboyance and egotism that helped bring riches in the first place
cannot be repressed. The fugitive finds it hard to keep out of the public eye,
let alone out of trouble.
Mr. Parretti, who began his career
as a hotel waiter, has a history of high living and may find it tough to avoid
the limelight now. When he took over MGM, he bought a Rolls-Royce, a jet and a
$9 million mansion even as the studio bounced checks to stars like Dustin
Hoffman and missed interest payments on bonds.
But for the moment, Mr. Parretti
seems to be lying low. Manlio Morcella, his lawyer in Orvieto, did not reply to
questions sent to his office, though he has given short interviews in Italy to
say that Mr. Parretti had returned to face separate charges there relating to
criminal bankruptcy and tax fraud.
Getting in trouble in a number of jurisdictions
generally bodes ill for a fugitive, making it that much harder to remain at
large.
In addition to his Delaware
convictions and the charges in Italy, Mr. Parretti is accused of fraud in
France relating to the hundreds of millions of dollars he borrowed from Credit
Lyonnais, the large Government-owned bank, to finance the acquisition of MGM.
Credit Lyonnais took over the studio after accusing Mr. Parretti of defaulting
on the loans and of gross mismanagement. It recently sold the studio to a group
that includes Kirk Kerkorian, the investor who originally sold MGM to Mr.
Parretti.
With all the legal swords hanging
over his head, Mr. Parretti may find a much-needed sense of sanctuary in
Orvieto. The city is famed for its soft white wine. It is also known for a
fresco-filled marble cathedral, where many come to pray.
©2008 The New
York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F04E3DA1F38F935A25752C0A961958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print
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October 12, 1999
Fugitive Is Arrested Near Rome
By JOHN
TAGLIABUE
Giancarlo Parretti, a flamboyant former
Hollywood mogul with longstanding international arrest warrants hanging over
him for convictions on perjury and other frauds, was arrested today near
Orvieto, a medieval hilltop town about 70 miles north of Rome.
Mr. Parretti, 58, an Italian financier
who engineered a $1.3 billion takeover of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. in 1990 and
was later accused of nearly driving it into financial ruin, was taken into
custody by Italian police while at a weight-loss farm outside Orvieto, his
Italian lawyer said.
Orvieto police, who arrested Mr.
Parretti on a request for extradition from the United States, said a court in
Orvieto must decide within the next 96 hours whether Mr. Parretti may be
detained until a hearing can be held on the extradition request.
Manlio Morcella, Mr. Parretti's
lawyer, said by telephone that the court could order Mr. Parretti held if it
suspected he might flee, a suspicion he said would be ''excessive.''
The police had first rung the bell
of Mr. Parretti's home in Orvieto, where he had been living apparently
unnoticed in Italy's olive-growing region, before they were alerted to his
exact whereabouts. Their relatively easy apprehension of the fugitive
financier, Mr. Morcella said, made it ''absurd'' to believe he would seek flight.
Mr. Parretti's arrest comes about
one month after German police arrested Martin R. Frankel, a Connecticut money
manager whom the American authorities have accused of embezzling money from
insurance companies. Mr. Frankel is in a Hamburg jail awaiting possible
extradition.
But while Mr. Frankel had been the
target of a four-month trans-Atlantic manhunt, Mr. Parretti had been on the run
for almost three years. He fled the United States for Italy before he could be
sentenced on a conviction of perjury and tampering with evidence in a Delaware
court.
Mr. Parretti is also sought for
extradition by the French, after a court in Paris convicted him in March on
corruption charges and sentenced him in absentia to four years in prison and a
$165,000 fine.
Exactly how Mr. Parretti fled the
United States remains a mystery. It also was still unclear tonight how long
Italian police had been hunting for Mr. Parretti or when the United States had
sought his extradition. But by skipping the country, he joined a band of rogue
financiers like Marc D. Rich and Robert Vesco.
And indeed, the ins and outs of Mr.
Parretti's legal scuffles on both sides of the Atlantic could provide grist for
a John Grisham novel. For one thing is certain: Mr. Parretti left behind legal
battles in several countries.
In November 1990, Mr. Parretti had
acquired MGM, with help from loans raised by the big French bank, Credit
Lyonnais, which was later crushed by billions of dollars of bad debt and had to
be bailed out by the French Government. Within months of Mr. Parretti's
purchase of MGM, its creditors went to court complaining that they were not
getting paid.
Several months later, Credit
Lyonnais removed Mr. Parretti from MGM's board, accusing him of gross
mismanagement, and had its action validated by a state court in Delaware, where
MGM is incorporated. After a litany of lawsuits and countersuits Mr. Parretti
was convicted in 1996 in Delaware of perjury and tampering with evidence in the
court trial in which Credit Lyonnais asserted its control of MGM. But before
Mr. Parretti could be sentenced, he fled the United States.
Earlier, in a case before a Federal
court in California, Mr. Parretti had been seeking to avoid extradition to
France to face criminal charges there that he had looted Credit Lyonnais. In
seeking to avoid extradition to France, Mr. Parretti had posted bail in
California.
One condition of the bail agreement
was that if Mr. Parretti jumped bail, he could be ruled in default in yet a
third lawsuit, a civil case in yet another California court. In that suit, Mr.
Parretti and Credit Lyonnais were suing each other over his dismissal from
MGM's board. In 1997, the judge in that case ruled for Credit Lyonnais, citing
the bail condition and the fact that Mr. Parretti was a fugitive. The court
ordered Mr. Parretti to pay Credit Lyonnais damages totaling $1.4 billion.
Jay M. Coggan, an attorney in
Beverly Hills, Calif., who represented Mr. Parretti in the Delaware case, said
the court in Delaware was ''extremely interested in his return.'' Mr. Coggan
said he received inquiries from the court about every three months regarding
Mr. Parretti's whereabouts. He said that, by court order, he remained Mr.
Parretti's attorney in Delaware.
©2008 The New
York Times Company
Original article http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D02EEDA1730F931A25753C1A96F958260
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Mr
Parretti’s response (written by himself)
September
1 1991
Bank
Secretly Sabotaged Efforts to Restructure and Save MGM-Pathe
Credit Lyonnais, MGM-Pathe Communication
Co.
"I don't like
fighting against Credit Lyonnais, the only bank in the world that believed in
me and gave me the money, but this is the situation: Credit Lyonnais first
financed me and then decided to get rid of this long-ago ex-waiter to take over
MGM.
Credit Lyonnais Bank
Nederland (CLBN), the bank's subsidiary in the Netherlands, and I have worked
together closely for years. Credit Lyonnais, for its own reasons, asked that I
keep their support a matter between the bank and myself.
Whenever legally
possible, I have respected the bank's wishes, despite the injuries I have
suffered as a consequence. When the MGM/UA merger was pending and Credit
Lyonnais pledged its support to me, it insisted on publicly denying its
involvement.
I honored their request
that I remain silent in the face of the ugly rumors about my sources of funds
that circulated in the press. But I cannot remain silent as Credit Lyonnais
tries to steal MGM-Pathe and blame officials in the Rotterdam office for
supporting me.
CLBN operates fairly
autonomously from its Paris headquarters. I have been working with that
particular branch for a long time, and the bank has made a lot of money with
me. It was the bank that introduced me to Cannon, which under my direction
regained a solid financial position and emerged as one of the foremost
international producers and distributors of action and adventure films.
When I presented to
them a plan to buy and reshape MGM, they trusted and financed me. Yet now I
find myself locked in a legal battle with Credit Lyonnais for control of
MGM-Pathe, the finest film-making institution in the world.
I personally believe Credit
Lyonnais is caving in to political pressure from French officials angered by my
earlier acquisition of Pathe Cinema, considered by many to be a strictly French
institution.
I also believe the bank
was embarrassed by an apparent blunder made by them in the MGM/UA acquisition,
where approximately $186 million of its debt was subordinated to MGM's public
debt. Now the bank wants to seize control of MGM-Pathe and force its sale in
order to get its money back.
They began to sabotage
the deal by delaying funding of its credit line, holding up MGM-Pathe checks,
and delaying interest payments on MGM debentures. This led directly to the
inability of MGM-Pathe to pay its December public debt interest and the
subsequent downgrading of MGM-Pathe's credit rating, and ultimately, the
involuntary bankruptcy petition filed against MGM-Pathe in late March.
Bank representatives
pressured me into signing more than 100 agreements, with the threat that if I
didn't sign, they could push MGM-Pathe into bankruptcy. They told me not to
worry, that the agreements were just for bank documentation. They also told me
that I had until November 30 to lower the debt to the bank to $125 Million.
Then they tried to get rid of me.
But, it isn't easy to
get rid of Parretti. I'm fighting back.
It is difficult for me
to sit back and listen to what they are saying about me, the lies and the
misrepresentations. Going through the current trial, listening to the testimony
of those I believed in and trusted but who are now fighting against me, is like
seeing the middle of a movie. There was a beginning, and there will be an end.
There has been some
very colorful testimony. So far, much of it has been filled with color, but
very few facts. Some people say I am colorful. I am looking forward to my
appearance to add facts. Facts are facts. And when the court has heard them
all, when the whole story comes out, I am confident we will win."
This article has been
written by Giancarlo Parretti, especially for Video Age International. ©2008
Title Annotation: Credit Lyonnais, MGM-Pathe Communication Co.
Author: Parretti, Giancarlo
Date: Sep 1, 1991
Words: 642
Publication: Video
Age International
ISSN: 0278-5013
Original article: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/_/print/PrintArticle.aspx?id=11460257
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And that’s about it from Mr Parretti. I’ve not dug up news
after this 10+ year period as I prefer to leave Mr Parretti alone in his pesonal
non-MGM life.
If anyone would like to add an article (or maybe further
response from Mr Parretti ) please let me know. See the Contact Me page
on the main
menu
link to this page: www.cannon.org.uk/parretti.htm
All images and text are copyright ©2008 their respective
owners.
This is a fansite only and has no connection to any of the
companies mentioned anywhere on this site.
Got a better image, information or
something I’m missing or I have wrong?
Like to add something? See the Contact Me page on the main
menu