Money Changer Says Brazil’s Ruling PT Had International Money Laundering Scheme

Brazilian money changer, Antônio Oliveira Claramunt, aka Toninho da Barcelona (Little Tony from Barcelona, a reference to a neighborhood in the São Paulo suburb of São Caetano do Sul), said that money transferred to the Workers’ Party (PT) by the Rural Bank came from foreign accounts belonging to the advertising executive, Marcos Valério, and was introduced into Brazil through transactions with money changers.

By means of various international financial operations, the money entered Brazil and went into the party’s accounts, “Barcelona” told the Parliamentary Investigating Commission (CPI) on Bingo Parlors. He presumably obtained this information from friends who work in the currency market.


“Two schemes fattened the PT’s account. These schemes involved the Rural Bank and the Bonus-Banval brokerage firm,” he said. One of the schemes, according to the money changer, consisted of the loans received by Valério from the Rural Bank.


According to “Barcelona,” these loans were fake. In fact, it was money drawn from Valério’s accounts abroad. The loan façade was, therefore, just a way to legalize the money.


The company responsible for introducing these funds from abroad, according to “Barcelona,” was the Trade Link, which is connected to the Rural Bank. The funds received by Trade Link from Valério’s accounts were sent to another money changer, Dario Messer, in Uruguay.


From there the money was supposedly received in dollars by the Bonus-Banval brokerage firm. To deliver the money to the PT, Bonus-Banval needed to convert it into reais, which it did with the help of money changers.


“I exchanged US$ 3.05 million (R$ 7 million) for Banval and learned that the money was for the PT,” “Barcelona” said. According to him, friends informed him of where the money he exchanged for the brokerage firm was going.


“Barcelona” said that Messer managed an account in Panama together with Trade Link. When asked by the legislators about the reasons for transactions involving so many countries, the money changer commented that, in the 1990’s, the market was “very open,” because the Council for the Control of Financial Activities (Coaf) did not yet exist. “Nowadays, to withdraw a lot of money, one has to do a good job,” he affirmed.


The Coaf is an organ subordinated to the Ministry of Finance and was created to accompany financial transactions in order to combat money-laundering.


Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Wants to End Leprosy by 2010. Disease Affects 38,000 a Year

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) honorary ambassador for the Elimination of Hansen’s Disease, Yohei ...

Gay Group Launches Campaign Against Lula’s Visit to Iran

A NGO (Non-Government Organization) from Brazil, which defends the rights of homosexuals launched a ...

Google Gives Brazilian Cops Special Tool to Censor Internet Content

Google is giving the Brazilian Federal Police the weapons they always wanted to clean ...

Brazil Consumers Happier with Present and Confident in Future

The confidence of Brazilian consumers in the economic situation of Brazil and Brazilian cities ...

Brazil Slashes 30% from 2016 Olympic Games Expenses

The organizers of Brazil’s Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games are making cutbacks of ...

Brazilian Co-ops Band Together to Get Cheaper Fertilizer

The high cost of fertilizers is the Achilles heel of Brazilian agriculture at the ...

Foot and Mouth Disease Spreads to Another State in Brazil

Forty cattle farms in the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, which borders with Paraguay ...

Brazil Wants All Poor Nations United Against US and EU Subsidies

Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Relations, Ambassador Celso Amorim, called on the different groups of ...

Brazil Tries to Reverse Total Embargo to Its Meat

The Brazilian government wants to reverse the total embargo imposed on Brazilian meat by ...