By RACHEL DONADIO and LIZ ALDERMAN
ATHENS — A dynamic entrepreneur, Lavrentis Lavrentiadis seemed to
represent a promising new era for Greece. He dazzled the
country’s traditionally insular business world by spinning together a
multibillion-dollar empire just a few years after inheriting a small family
firm at 18. Seeking acceptance in elite circles, he gave lavishly to charities
and cultivated ties to the leading political parties.
But as Greece’s economy soured in recent
years, his fortunes sagged and he began embezzling money from a bank he
controlled, prosecutors say. With charges looming, it looked as if his rapid
rise would be followed by an equally precipitous fall. Thanks to a law passed
quietly by the Greek Parliament, however, he avoided prosecution, at least for
a time, simply by paying the money back.
Now 40, Mr. Lavrentiadis is back in the
spotlight as one of the names on the so-called Lagarde list of more than 2,000
Greeks said to have accounts in a Geneva branch of the bank HSBC and who are suspected
of tax evasion. Given to Greek officials two years ago by Christine Lagarde,
then the French finance minister and now head of the International Monetary
Fund, the list was expected to cast a damning light on the shady practices of
the rich.
Instead, it was swept under the rug, and
now two former finance ministers and Greece’s top tax officials are under
investigation for having failed to act.
Greece’s economic troubles are often
attributed to a public sector packed full of redundant workers, a lavish
pension system and uncompetitive industries hampered by overpaid workers with
lifetime employment guarantees. Often overlooked, however, is the role played
by a handful of wealthy families, politicians and the news media — often owned
by the magnates — that make up the Greek power structure.
In a country crushed by years of austerity
and 25 percent unemployment, average Greeks are growing increasingly resentful
of an oligarchy that, critics say, presides over an opaque, closed economy that
is at the root of many of the country’s problems and operates with virtual
impunity. Several dozen powerful families control critical sectors, including
banking, shipping and construction, and can usually count on the political
class to look out for their interests, sometimes by passing legislation
tailored to their specific needs.
The result, analysts say, is a lack of
competition that undermines the economy by allowing the magnates to run cartels
and enrich themselves through crony capitalism. “That makes it rational for
them to form a close, incestuous relationship with politicians and the media,
which is then highly vulnerable to corruption,” said Kevin
Featherstone, a professor of European Politics at the London School
of Economics.
This week the anticorruption watchdog
Transparency International ranked Greece as the most corrupt nation in Europe,
behind former Eastern Bloc states like Bulgaria, Romania and Slovakia. Under
the pressure of the financial crisis, Greece is being pressed by Germany and
its international lenders to make fundamental changes to its economic system in
exchange for the money it needs to avoid bankruptcy.
But it remains an open question whether
Greece’s leaders will be able to engineer such a transformation. In the past
year, despite numerous promises to increase transparency, the country actually
dropped 14 places from the previous corruption survey.
Mr. Lavrentiadis is still facing a host of
accusations stemming from hundreds of millions of dollars in loans made by his
Proton bank to dormant companies — sometimes, investigators say, ordering an
employee to withdraw the money in bags of cash. But with Greece scrambling to
complete a critical bank recapitalization and restructuring, his case is
emblematic of a larger battle between Greece’s famously weak institutions and
fledgling regulatory structures against these entrenched interests.
Many say that the system has to change in
order for Greece to emerge from the crisis. “Keeping the status quo will simply
prolong the disaster in Greece,” Mr. Featherstone said. While the case of Mr.
Lavrentiadis suggests that the status quo is at least under scrutiny, he added,
“It’s not under sufficient attack.”
In a nearly two-hour interview, Mr. Lavrentiadis denied accusations of
wrongdoing and said that he held “a few accounts” at HSBC in Geneva that
totaled only about $65,000, all of it legitimate, taxed income. He also
sidestepped questions about his political ties and declined to comment on any
details of the continuing investigation into Proton Bank. Sitting in the office
of his criminal lawyer last month, relaxed, smiling and dressed in a crisp blue
suit and red-and-blue tie, Mr. Lavrentiadis said he found it puzzling that he
had been singled out in reports about the Lagarde list when other powerful
figures appeared to evade scrutiny. “My question is, ‘Why me?’ ” he said. “I’m
the scapegoat for everything.”
In the interview, Mr. Lavrentiadis depicted himself as an outsider and
upstart, an entrepreneur in a small country dominated by old families who frown
on newcomers. “I am not from a third-generation aristocratic family,” he said
repeatedly.
Indeed, by some lights, Mr. Lavrentiadis fell in part because he rose
too quickly and then failed to secure enough of the right friends to protect
him, a perception he did not dispute.
“Why me, something that is clean, and why not something that has bigger
problems?” he said. Pressed on who might be responsible for his troubles, he
smiled enigmatically. “I could tell you thousands of names,” he said, “but it’s
not my style.”
Mr. Lavrentiadis’s mettle was forged early, when he took the reins of
his family’s chemical supply firm, Neochimiki, in 1990, after the death of his
father. Bright and charming, and stricken with rheumatoid arthritis, he quickly
enlarged the company and stormed into the Greek business world in 2003, when he
listed the company on the Athens Stock Exchange. In 2008, the Carlyle Group,
one of Wall Street’s largest asset management firms, paid more than $970
million for a stake in Neochimiki.
Over the next four years, Mr. Lavrentiadis built an empire that included
holdings in pharmaceuticals, banks, a soccer team and works of art. He also
took stakes in print and electronic news media outlets, following a pattern in
which magnates own virtually every nongovernmental news media outlet in the
country. But the veneer began to crack soon after the financial crisis hit.
Carlyle lost more than $65 million on Neochimiki and accused Mr. Lavrentiadis
of overstating its financial health. Cash was bleeding from a range of other
business holdings.
In December 2009, four months before Greece sought a foreign bailout,
Mr. Lavrentiadis bought a controlling stake in Proton Bank, which had expanded
rapidly after acquiring a small bank called Omega in 2005. Omega’s board
members included Mr. Lavrentiadis; the father-in-law at the time of Evangelos
Venizelos, now the Socialist Party leader; and a brother of George Papandreou,
a former prime minister.
Regulators now charge that from the moment Mr. Lavrentiadis took over
Proton, he began looting it to prop up his failing businesses and those of a
network of what appear to be shell companies. In 2010 alone, a total of $925
million in Proton’s commercial loans — more than 40 percent — were granted with
virtually no credit checks to his firms or to shell companies he had sold to
associates, according to an audit by Greece’s central bank, first reported by
Reuters.
His problems burst into the public realm in mid-2011, when Greek
financial prosecutors charged him with embezzling the $65 million, following
investigations into suspected money laundering.
Several months earlier, however, lawmakers had quietly passed a law that
allowed people suspected of wrongdoing to avoid prosecution if they repaid the
money they were accused of stealing in certain crimes. The idea, legislators
said, was to speed resolution of cases in Greece’s notoriously slow courts. Mr.
Lavrentiadis quickly paid back the $65 million to Proton and claimed immunity.
Then in March, a financial prosecutor charged him and 26 others with
fraud, embezzlement, forming a criminal gang, money laundering and breach of
faith stemming from loans believed to have been issued by Proton Bank. The $65
million repaid by Mr. Lavrentiadis in a bid to secure immunity is regarded by
prosecutors as only a part of the more than $915 million in bad loans that
prosecutors say Proton floated to dormant companies. In the interview, Mr.
Lavrentiadis confirmed that he had returned the $65 million but declined to say
under what circumstances. He dismissed the Bank of Greece report as not
“objective,” and said prosecutors had not yet called him for questioning or
detailed the charges against him personally, beyond those against the 27 as a
group. “I trust Greek justice,” he said. Despite the fraud accusations against
him, Mr. Lavrentiadis was still the beneficiary of questionable government
actions. In July 2011, Mr. Venizelos, then the finance minister, authorized a
$130 million deposit of government money to Proton for a single day, he says to
avoid a calamitous collapse. The action was approved by the Greek central bank
but was in defiance of a ruling by Greece’s General Accounting Office that it
was illegal. The $130 million, plus interest, was returned to the government,
Mr. Venizelos said in written answers to a list of questions.
“It was absolutely necessary to preserve Proton — not Lavrentiadis — in
order to save huge amounts of public money,” added Mr. Venizelos, who resigned
as finance minister in March. A month after the $130 million transfer, Mr.
Venizelos was co-writer of a law that retroactively granted the finance
minister full power to bail out banks with public money, regardless of the
recommendations of other state institutions.
Mr. Venizelos said the law was necessary because “Greece had not had a
clear legislative framework that could allow it to handle public deposits in
crisis situations.” But legal experts said it was part of a broader pattern in
Greece where actions by influential figures are later smoothed over with new
legislation that eliminates any questions of illegality.
Mr. Lavrentiadis declined to comment on his ties with Mr. Venizelos,
beyond saying, “I never asked a favor.”
In October 2011, Proton was nationalized. “I was shocked,” Mr.
Lavrentiadis said, adding that he did not believe the bank’s finances merited
the move. In March, he challenged the decision in the Supreme Court and is
awaiting a ruling.
Asked if the Proton case was evidence of a regulatory system that was
working or one that had failed, Mr. Lavrentiadis smiled. “It’s a regulated
market without rules,” he said of Greece. “You can interpret it however it’s to
your benefit.”
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