Ramón Báez Figueroa

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Ramón Báez Figueroa (born in 1956) is the former president of Banco Intercontinental (BANINTER) from the Dominican Republic, accused in 2003 of masterminding the country's most spectacular banking fraud scandal, amounting to more than USD$ 2.2 billion.

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[edit] Background

Ramón Buenaventura Báez Figueroa was born into one of the oldest and most prominent Dominican families — his great-grandfather Buenaventura Báez was five times president of the republic in the nineteenth century, and his father Ramón Báez Romano, is a former entrepreneur.

Báez Figueroa was considered an aggressive deal-maker and helped build BANINTER into the country's number 2 private commercial bank, in the process amassing an empire of varied businesses. Among others, BANINTER controlled the country's largest media group, including Listín Diario, the oldest and leading newspaper; four television stations, a cable television company, and more than 70 radio stations.

His generous gifts to friends, business partners, journalists, commentators, models, beauty queens, judges, and politicians over the years became legendary, as were his patronage for many events.[citation needed] Former president, Hipólito Mejía got a bulletproof sports utility vehicle; so did his successor, current president Leonel Fernández. Col. Pedro Julio Goico Guerrero (a.k.a. Pepe Goico), who served as Mejía's chief of security and who guarded Bill Clinton on visits to the United States, got ten solid-gold Rolex watches worth $15,000 each and use of a credit card that the bank would pay off.[citation needed]

[edit] BANINTER crisis

Báez Figueroa was arrested May 15, 2003 along with BANINTER vice presidents Marcos Báez Cocco and Vivian Lubrano de Castillo, the secretary of the Board of Directors, Jesús M. Troncoso, and financer Luis Alvarez Renta, on charges of bank fraud, money laundering and concealing information from the government as part of a massive fraud scheme of more than RD$ 55 billion (USD $2.2 billion). This sum would be big anywhere, but it was overwhelming for the Dominican economy, equivalent to two-thirds of its national budget.

The resulting central bank bailout spurred 30 percent annual inflation and a large increase in poverty. The government was forced to devalue the peso, triggering the collapse of two other banks, and prompting a US$600 million (euro420 million) loan package from the International Monetary Fund.[1]

The banking crisis ignited harsh fights over the bank group's media outlets, including the prominent newspaper Listin Diario, which was temporarily seized and run by the Mejía administration following the BANINTER collapse.[2]

Moreover, it was prompted, as detailed at length in the trial that opened in April 2006, by a scandal involving debt writeoffs and sweetheart loans or other financial deals suspected of having favored leading politicians and others.[3]

Rumors that Baninter might've been in trouble began circulating during fall of 2002, and depositors started to withdraw their savings. The Dominican Central Bank stepped in to support the bank by providing new lines of credit. Anxious for a more permanent solution, the government announced in early 2003 that Banco del Progreso, run by Pedro Castillo, the brother of Mr. Mejía's son-in-law, would acquire Baninter. But Banco del Progreso abruptly withdrew from the deal. Government officials said that two-thirds of the money that customers had deposited in Baninter was kept off its official books by a custom-designed software system. Banking regulators and the bank's auditor, Pricewaterhouse Coopers, were deceived for years.[citation needed]

In April 2003, the government took control of Baninter. Mr. Báez Figueroa's family owned more than the 80% of the bank, and soon after, a deeper examination supported by the International Monetary Fund and the Inter-American Development Bank, revealed the scale of the meltdown.

With 350 prosecution and defense witnesses slated to testify, ex- president Hipólito Mejía among them, the criminal proceedings against Mr. Báez Figueroa began on April 2, 2006. However, the Collegiate Court decided to postpone the first hearing for May 19, 2006, accepting a motion by the defense lawyers.[4]


[edit] Sentence

On October 21, 2007, after the long trial that concluded on September, Báez Figueroa was sentenced by a three-judge panel to 10 years in prison. Additionally, he was ordered to pay restitution and damages totalling more than $31 million. The laundering charges were excluded, but another suspected mastermind of the fraud, financier Luis Alvarez Renta, was convicted and sentenced for money laundering to 10 years in prison.[5] Marcos Báez Cocco, ex-vicepresident of the Bank, was also found guilty, but his sentence will be read on November 16.

Their defence attorneys said they would appeal.

The accusations against two other defendants, Báez's personal assistant and former Baninter vicepresident Vivian Lubrano, as well as the secretary of the Baninter Board of Directors Jesús M. Troncoso, were dismissed for lack of evidence.


[edit] Supporters

Friends of Báez Figueroa, groping to explain the shortcuts he took in running BANINTER, pointed to his political connections and a lack of competent managers at the bank. Báez Figueroa's lawyer, Marino Vinicio Castillo, said in an interview that the whole affair had been trumped up for political reasons, and that the claim that RD$55 billion had been embezzled was "a fable." Castillo went on to say that "very dark interests within the government that are blinded by ambition" were behind his client's imprisonment. He accused the government of wanting to dismember BANINTER and divide the spoils. Pricewaterhouse Coopers had audited Baninter's books for years and approved them "without any reservations," Mr. Castillo said.[citation needed]

His defenders also say former President Mejía saw Báez Figueroa as a threat to his personal wealth and political influence and to Mejía's ambition to win another term in office. Taking control of BANINTER's media properties and using them to win over public opinion, not cleaning up a scandal, was what the government was after.[citation needed]

Even after his arrest Báez Figueroa remained a central figure in the country's elite, readily accessible even in jail. Within days of his arrest, he received visits from president Leonel Fernández, Cardinal Nicolás López, and Hatuey de Camps, then president of the Dominican Revolutionary Party.[6]


[edit] Notes and references

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