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June 22 - July 5, 2003

by Eric Jackson

“Offshore asset protection guru” behind bars

Intro:
 
US-born offshore financial hustler Marc Harris, a naturalized Panamanian who had fled to Nicaragua with a lot of other people in pursuit of him and their money, ran into a surprise en route to Nicaraguan citizenship on June 11. He was headed to the immigration office in Managua for a hearing at which he expected to get an extension on his visa. Instead he was formally expelled from the country and handed over to US law enforcement authorities, who immediately flew him to Miami to face money laundering and conspiracy charges.
 
 
Excerpt: Also at that time, Harris had been disparaged as little more than a pyramid scheme by Offshore Alert, an investors’ newsletter, after its editor and publisher David Marchant had been asked by an American investor to look into the validity of Harris’s claims. In Panama, La Prensa published similar tales. In each case a key source of information was Gilberto Boutin. Harris, through two of his many companies, filed a multi-million-dollar libel suit against Marchant in a Florida federal district court and pressed criminal charges against four La Prensa journalists for criminal defamation and theft of company documents. These cases were pending and substantial sums were being paid to lawyers to defend against Harris’s attacks.

Adding to the ethical questions in play was the fact that Gilberto Boutin was then a member of La Prensa's board of directors.

After some heated arguments at The Panama News, Morland decided that the newspaper would not publish anything at all about Marc Harris. The argument recurred several times as events around Harris repeatedly became newsworthy, most notably over the Wagman affair.

Eventually Harris’s suit against Marchant was dismissed with a scathing opinion by a judge who essentially decided that the evidence showed that Harris was a crook and Marchant’s stories about him were valid. Much later, Harris’s charges against La Prensa's Mónica Palm, Miren Gutiérrez, Rolando Rodríguez and Gustavo Gorriti were also rejected by a Panamanian court...

...But meanwhile over at El Panama America, Marc Harris was still being treated as a hero. He still is.

On January 14 and 15, 2001, the paper ran a long interview with Harris by Mario Castro Arenas, proclaiming in its headline that Harris had started out with $5,000 and built a billion-dollar business. The billion dollars under Harris management was one of the specific claims that David Marchant's stories disputed (he said it was more like $40 million) and over which Harris had sued Marchant for libel and lost. The story called Harris "one of the financiers who's best prepared to analyze the new financial regulations pressed for by the economic powers of the FATF," commented on his youthful appearance, displayed a photo of Harris with a portrait of Che Guevara in the background and delved at length into Harris's philosophy of "individual sovereignty." There were no hard questions about the cloud of scandal surrounding Harris. In the first installment, two entire pages of the business section, there was no hint at all of any controversy.
 

 
 
 

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