CHEAP SECOND PASSPORTS FOR BANKING PURPOSES: BE VERY CAREFUL!

Years ago, clients used to open offshore accounts in phony names using passports obtained from African countries. That was way before 9/11. Surprisingly, a major offshore services supplier is offering so-called BANKING PASSPORTS from an African country in his latest newsletter. Risky or what?

I don’t understand why on earth ******** would consider this to be a viable proposal.

Reader Vlad says: “Any decent bank these days would be very suspicious of a new client with a passport from Africa putting substantial deposits in his new account. How on earth would he be able to procure a banking reference in a ghost name is beyond my understanding.”

Grandpa says: Couldn’t agree more, Vlad.  Using a fraudulently obtained   ghost or camouflage  passport from anywhere to do anything is a very  dumb idea and guaranteed way to lose your money & possibly your freedom.

In most places providing them to others &  mere possession of  fraudulent identity documents is a felony…Using other secondary phony,  forged or fraudulent documents  “compounds” the felony & opens the client to other charges.

Here’s a possible play-by-play:

Mr. Dumb X opens an account with  $500,000  & his [for instance]  Namibia {African} ghost   assport. A  few months later in a routine review, the bank’s compliance officers &  examiners of questioned documents says in a letter to him:

1) ”Your race & language skills indicate   that this deposit is  probably terrorist  or drug money, and in any event it is illegal,   laundered money & it definitely doesn’t belong to anyone named Mr   Dumb X from Namibia. Where/who is the real Mr Dumb X?

2) Account is frozen; all correspondence, data is turned over to   local police.

3) Client says to bank “I want to take out some of my own money.

4) Bank says,”sorry,  get police clearance & a local court order   first.”

5) If Mr. Dumb goes to see cops, they say his passport was  fraudulently issued & seize it  as “evidence.” . Cops question him, ask for his parent’s birth & marriage certificates; his school  records, his employment records & tax returns, his addresses – all for that last 40 years as supported by leases, medical records, CPA  and lawyer references, etc.

Dumb X obviously can’t produce proof that he is the person named in  the passport. That person is possibly dead or still running around  beating a tom-tom in Namibia.

6) It immediately obvious [as it was to his bankers] &  to local cops  that Mr. Dumb is a fraud, really not whom he claims to be, &  presumably a terrorist or drug dealer. He is jailed & held without  bail for trial.

7) Under local laws his entire account is forfeited for fraud ;  he is  arrested, tried and convicted of identity theft, possibly also  fraudulent entry into the country.

8) At the end of his long  prison  sentence he is deported back to his  “real” country for further prosecution.  This is just one possible outcome. I can think of fifty-five others;  — all bad. Hot product ? Indeed!

Of course, there is no reason why you would need to use a banking passport. There are plenty of other ways to keep your bank account secure. If you don’t know them, write a brief resume of what you are trying to achieve and ask Grandpa’s advice (members only) Write to grandpa@sixflagsmail.com

For Good Things In Life,
Grandpa
http://www.byebyebigbrother.org

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