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Khalid bin Mahfouz, Saudi banker, dies at 60
2009-08-28
Khalid bin Mahfouz, a billionaire Saudi banker who paid $225 million to settle charges of bank fraud in 1993 and later won a string of lawsuits in Britain against writers who had accused him of supporting terrorism, died Sunday at his home in Jidda. He was 60. The cause was a heart attack, according to reports in the Arab news media.

In many ways, Sheik Mahfouz typified Saudi ArabiaÂ’s super-wealthy. He maintained opulent homes around the world and traveled in his own Boeing 767 with gold-plated bathroom fixtures, The New York TimesÂ’s Douglas Martin writes. Last year, the magazine Arabian Business ranked him 24th in its list of the 50 richest Arabs, with a fortune estimated at $3.35 billion.

He rose to prominence through his 30 percent ownership in the Bank of Credit and Commerce International, which was shut down in 1991 after charges of financial chicanery and money laundering. Sheik Mahfouz paid $225 million to settle fraud charges by the Manhattan district attorney’s office and the Federal Reserve. District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau said $37 million of the settlement was a fine. But Sheik Mahfouz denied that any of the settlement was a fine, pointing out that he had not acknowledged any wrongdoing. He said he had agreed to the settlement “purely as a business decision.”

After the September 2001 terrorist attacks, considerable suspicion fell on Saudi financiers and charities as sources of financing for terrorism. Partly because it was probably true so much money passed through his bank and a charity he helped establish, Sheik Mahfouz faced a barrage of accusations in books, newspapers and magazines that he and his family had funneled money to Al Qaeda. He vehemently denied that and repeatedly and often successfully pressed publications for corrections. He also took advantage of Britain’s pro-plaintiff libel laws to sue publishers, almost all of whom settled before trial. One writer who fought back was Rachel Ehrenfeld, author of “Funding Evil: How Terrorism Is Financed — and How to Stop It” (2003). Sheik Mahfouz won a default judgment in 2005 ordering her to apologize, destroy all copies of the book and pay him roughly $230,000 in damages. Ms. Ehrenfeld has called his legal actions “financial jihad.”
Posted by:ryuge

#4  Good Ole BCCI --- Bank of Crooks and Criminals, International
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2009-08-28 21:42  

#3  "picnic in the desert gone bad" was a frequent plotline story
Posted by: Frank G   2009-08-28 16:16  

#2  Moose,
It may have happened - a year or so back there were a couple of otherwise hale and healthy Saudi princes who suddenly died under...shall we say...odd circumstances.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2009-08-28 15:51  

#1  Ironic. A long time ago I suggested that a critical thing to do in the WoT was to take out the financiers, using plausible deniability operations that looked like accidents, including heart attacks, slip and falls, car accidents and the like. Not assassinations, just "bad luck".
Posted by: Anonymoose   2009-08-28 11:01  

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