Market Snapshot
  • U.S.
  • Europe
  • Asia
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
DJIA 12,454.80 -74.92 -0.60%
S&P 500 1,317.82 -2.86 -0.22%
Nasdaq 2,837.53 -1.85 -0.07%
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
STOXX 50 2,161.87 +5.35 0.25%
FTSE 100 5,351.53 +1.48 0.03%
DAX 6,339.94 +24.05 0.38%
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
Nikkei 8,580.39 +17.01 0.20%
TOPIX 722.11 -0.14 -0.02%
Hang Seng 18,713.40 +47.01 0.25%
Gold 1,571.20 +0.73%
EUR-USD 1.2517 -0.1227%
Nasdaq 2,837.53 -0.07%
DJIA 12,454.80 -0.60%
S&P 500 1,317.82 -0.22%
FTSE 100 5,351.53 +0.03%
STOXX 50 2,161.87 +0.25%
DAX 6,339.94 +0.38%
Oil (WTI) 90.86 +0.22%
U.S. 10-year 1.738% -0.039
BAC:US 7.15 +0.14%
FB:US 31.91 -3.39%

Stanford Fraud Trial Resumes Following Illness Interruption

R. Allen Stanford’s criminal fraud trial resumed today after testimony was halted yesterday afternoon when the defendant became ill.

Stanford, 61, reoccupied his place at the defense table in federal court in Houston, coughing frequently and deeply. The financier’s coughing worsened by midday, when the jury broke for lunch. The trial is in its fifth week.

Stanford is fighting charges he swindled investors of more than $7 billion through what prosecutors claim was a Ponzi scheme built on allegedly bogus certificates of deposit at his Antigua-based Stanford International Bank Ltd. He has been incarcerated as a flight risk since being indicted in June 2009.

This week, jurors are hearing from expert witnesses testifying on Stanford’s behalf.

John Mezzanotte, who has conducted dozens of feasibility studies for Caribbean resorts, told jurors that the billionaires-only resort Stanford was developing on Antigua had been started years earlier by a Chinese multimillionaire. The other developer lost his funding in 2003, and later sold the property to Stanford.

Inflating the Value

Prosecutors accuse Stanford of inflating the value of that island property by more than 5,000 percent to make it appear he was recapitalizing his bank in late 2008. U.S. securities regulators found more than $5 billion missing from the bank’s investment accounts when Stanford’s operations were seized on suspicion of fraud in February 2009.

Mezzanotte described the property Stanford selected for the resort as unique for its beauty, pristine nature and protected harbor.

“There are only a couple of them in the Caribbean,” he testified.

Under questioning by prosecutors, Mezzanotte said Stanford’s island resort had no paved roads, utilities or buildings when he last saw it.

The criminal case is U.S. v. Stanford, 09-cr-342, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas (Houston). The SEC case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Stanford International Bank, 09-cv-298, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Texas (Dallas).

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter Blumberg in San Francisco at pblumberg1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Michael Hytha at mhytha@bloomberg.net

Sponsored Links