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O, Brother! Where Art Thou?

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May 12, 2003, 10:41:04 PM5/12/03
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O Brother! Where Art Thou
By Louis Dubose

March 16, 2001:

Unless you've been reading the Houston Chronicle society page, it's unlikely
you've seen any current news about Neil Bush. The third Bush sibling has
been almost as invisible as his apolitical brother Marvin, a venture
capitalist living in northern Virginia, and his sister Dorothy "Doro" Koch,
the youngest of the five Bush siblings, who quietly raises funds for
charities in a Maryland suburb near Washington. While Jeb was governor of
Florida and George W. was twice elected governor of Texas, Neil was either
part of the late Maxine Mesinger's "crème de la crème crowd" at a Houston
social event, or a stale S&L footnote: "the director of Silverado Banking,
Savings and Loan when it crashed in 1988 at a cost of $1 billion to
taxpayers."

In 1990, Bush paid a $50,000 fine and was banned from banking activities for
his role in taking down Silverado, which actually cost taxpayers $1.3
billion. A Resolution Trust Corporation Suit against Bush and other officers
of Silverado was settled in 1991 for $26.5 million. And the fine wasn't
exactly paid by Neil Bush. A Republican fundraiser set up a fund to help
defer costs Neil incurred in his S&L dealings. Friends and relatives
contributed -- but not then-President and Barbara Bush, which would have
been unseemly. Since then, the Bush political combine has done such a
remarkable job keeping Neil in the background that what seemed like a
10-year news blackout didn't end until mid-February, when the Austin
Business Journal reported that Bush "quietly is heading a local start-up
that's raising at least $10 million in second-round funding." According to
the business newsweekly, Bush has already raised $7.1 million from 53
investors underwriting Ignite! Inc., an educational software company. After
being banned from banking and all but airbrushed out of the family
portrait -- or at least the family news profile -- Neil Bush is back.

Bush wasn't just an average S&L exec drawing a big salary and recklessly
pushing a federally insured institution beyond its lending limits. As a
director of a failing thrift in Denver, Bush voted to approve $100 million
in what were ultimately bad loans to two of his business partners. And in
voting for the loans, he failed to inform fellow board members at Silverado
Savings & Loan that the loan applicants were his business partners. Federal
banking regulators later followed the trail of defaulted loans to Neil Bush
oil ventures, in particular JNB International, an oil and gas exploration
company awarded drilling concessions in Argentina -- despite its complete
lack of experience in international oil and gas drilling. It probably helped
that the Bush family had cultivated close ties with the fabulously corrupt
Carlos Menem, former president of Argentina.

When JNB's rights and obligations were assumed by other investors, Neil
tried to persuade another American oil and gas exploration company, Plains
Resources, to invest in Argentina. Plains wasn't buying. But it was hiring,
and picked up Neil as a consultant for its Argentine market -- because, as
Plains executive Carlos Garibaldi told The New York Times' Jeff Gerth in
1992, Neil had "traveled [in Argentina] and played tennis with President
Menem." Plains President J. Patrick Collins told Gerth at the time that Neil
Bush "bent over backwards not to trade on his name."

That claim was hard to make in 1993, when Neil, Marvin, James Baker III,
John Sununu, and Thomas Kelly (who had served as director of operations for
the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the Gulf War) joined President Bush on a
trip to Kuwait. Three months out of office, the elder Bush was traveling on
a Kuwait Airlines flight to accept an honorary degree from the country's
university and its highest honor from its leader: Emir Sheikh Jabir al-Ahmad
al-Sabah. The rest of the Bush entourage was following along to exploit the
market in a country that considered the ex-president its savior. Former
Secretary of State Baker was doing deals for Enron (the Houston-based
energy-related company and contributor to Bush the Elder and later a
$525,000 donor to George W. Bush's two gubernatorial races in Texas). Marvin
was representing U.S. defense firms selling electronic fences to the Kuwaiti
Defense Ministry. And Neil was selling anti-pollution equipment to Kuwaiti
oil contractors.

There is "no conflict of interest. ... We're just capitalizing on whatever
good feelings exist," an executive from the company Neil Bush represented
later told Seymour Hersh, who laid out the embarrassing story on the pages
of The New Yorker in September 1993. Neil, according to Hersh, later
returned to Kuwait and set up shop in the International Hotel in Kuwait
City, where he tried to secure a management contract with Kuwait's Ministry
of Electricity and Water. Neil's deal included foreign and Kuwaiti members
of the Enron consortium, and would have had the Kuwaiti government paying a
management fee to a Kuwaiti company that was owned in part by a private
company set up in the Caribbean or some other tax haven. "The offshore firm
would have various owners, in Europe and elsewhere, one of which would be a
company in which Neil Bush had an interest," The New Yorker reported. The
scheme was ingenious, a financial analyst told Hersh."If you looked at one
of the contracts, how in the hell would you know that Bush was in it?" The
whole deal was as unsavory and unpardonable as a round of golf with Hillary
Clinton sibling Huey Rodham.

Jeb missed that junket, but the current governor of Florida isn't above
taking the family name abroad to make a buck. In 1989, Bush and his wife
traveled to Nigeria with a executives of M&W Pump, a Florida-based company
that had been selling agricultural pumps to Nigeria. Jeb and Columba Bush
were received by Nigerian President Ibrahim Babangida and celebrated by tens
of thousands of Nigerians who turned out to see the son of the U.S.
president. President Babangida expressed his interest in visiting the White
House -- a request Jeb promised to pass along to his father -- and by 1992
the Florida pump company had secured $74 million in financing from the
Export-Import Bank of the United States. It was by far the largest Ex-Im
deal M&W had ever done in Nigeria -- a country Ex-Im loan officers
considered a bad risk. "I didn't get paid for the Nigeria business," Bush
told The Palm Beach Post in 1994. "I have not made a dime on business with
Nigeria." Yet the Post found tax records that revealed Bush and earned at
least $300,000 through his association with the owner of the same company
for which he had done a pro-bono sales trip to Nigeria. Bush-El, a 50-50
partnership with the owner of M&W, paid Bush at least $300,000 for his
participation in a separate venture, marketing agricultural hand pumps. Why
would Bush suddenly find himself involved with a company selling
agricultural hand pumps around the world? the Post asked. "I know how to
sell things," responded Bush. "I know international sales. I know how to get
people to put together tenders because I financed a lot of them when I was
working at Texas Commerce Bank."

Here in Austin, it's a safe bet that Neil will raise the additional $10
million in start-up money Ignite! needs to get its software to market. In
six years at Interlink Management, a venture capital firm he ran out of his
father's Houston office from 1994 to 1999, he raised $60 million for high
tech and biotech start-ups. Ignite! is a new company and a new market niche,
but there's nothing new in what Neil Bush is about this year: leveraging the
family name and other people's money into a business that will turn a
profit -- if for no one else, at the very least for him.


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