26 July 2005

Alfa 30 Reiman 15 (third set of five)

However close your relationship with VVP is I for one would not want to take on Alfa Bank.

This fairly lengthy report from the Moscow Times details the latest back and forth in the ongoing spat between Alfa and Reiman that is being played out in the courts. Having been stymied by Jeff Galmond's bare-faced lies to a court in the British Virgin Islands, Alfa have convinced the German's to investigate the less than open relationship between Commerzbank and Telekominvest/TCI/First National Holdings (an entity that was on Commerzbank's balance sheet in 1999) under money-laundering rules.

I would guess that the fall out will be sufficient to condemn some ex-Commerzbank bankers now "working for" Jeff Galmand. Eventually Jeff himself will also be unable to travel to Europe. It should be fairly clear to anyone with half a brain that a very bad lawyer and a worse businessman did not suddenly end up with a pan-national mobile license for free without some "help."

My assumption is that proving the money-laundering charge will be very difficult, allowing Reiman and his close associates to escape censure in Russia. It is however, increasingly close to home for certain members of the Presidential Administration and I am sure that Alfa will struggle to win this set.

No comments:

26 July 2005

Alfa 30 Reiman 15 (third set of five)

However close your relationship with VVP is I for one would not want to take on Alfa Bank.

This fairly lengthy report from the Moscow Times details the latest back and forth in the ongoing spat between Alfa and Reiman that is being played out in the courts. Having been stymied by Jeff Galmond's bare-faced lies to a court in the British Virgin Islands, Alfa have convinced the German's to investigate the less than open relationship between Commerzbank and Telekominvest/TCI/First National Holdings (an entity that was on Commerzbank's balance sheet in 1999) under money-laundering rules.

I would guess that the fall out will be sufficient to condemn some ex-Commerzbank bankers now "working for" Jeff Galmand. Eventually Jeff himself will also be unable to travel to Europe. It should be fairly clear to anyone with half a brain that a very bad lawyer and a worse businessman did not suddenly end up with a pan-national mobile license for free without some "help."

My assumption is that proving the money-laundering charge will be very difficult, allowing Reiman and his close associates to escape censure in Russia. It is however, increasingly close to home for certain members of the Presidential Administration and I am sure that Alfa will struggle to win this set.

No comments: