The Jeffrey Tesler Connection - Abacha, Babangida,
Adenuga, Halliburton, Atiku Abubakar, Obasanjo
By Mobolaji Aluko
September 12, 2006
Compatriots:
According to the recent statement by Mrs. Remi Oyo
[Senior Special Assistant (Media) to the President Obasanjo] Refuting
Vice-President Atiku Abubakar's Defence, she writes:
QUOTE
Hamisu Abubakar (aka Mairago), former Executive Secretary
of PDTF benefitted from loans in excess of 200 million naira from
PDTF. A three-million dollar contract with Univision of United
Kingdom for the provision of consultancy services for the upgrade of
Petroleum Training Institute, Warri and PDTF scholarships was
inflated by two million dollars and the fund diverted to four
companies owned by Hamisu under the pretext of the companies offering
services. The companies are FDZ Nigeria Limited, 19 Wharf Road,
Apapa with corresponding bank in Bankers Trust Company in New York;
Edginton Limited, 15, Osborne Road, Ikoyi, Lagos with
corresponding bank as Habibsons Bank Limited, London and Biosynthesis
Nigeria Limited 18, Enugu Crescent and corresponding bank as
American Express Bank, New York and Remington Limited, Abuja,
BTC, NYC, Brussels.
Hamisu Abubakar remains a dealer and transporter for Conoil owned
by Otunba Mike Adenuga. It is now known that Jeffrey Tesler
facilitated a loan of 700 million US dollars for Conoil.
Tesler is known as an associate of former President Ibrahim Babangida.
Mohammed Babangida owns 10 per cent shares in Conpetro which
owns 30 per cent shareholding in Conoil. On August 30, 2002, Conoil
paid 180 million dollars to support the Globacom bid .
UNQUOTE
The name "Jeffrey Tesler" ALWAYS rings a bell in
Nigeria.
QUOTE
Tesler is a curious fellow: A veteran operator in Nigeria, he was
the financial adviser to the late dictator Gen. Sani Abacha and
controlled his personal fortune, while at the same time working for
Halliburton. Abacha's former Oil Minister, Dan Etete--who is suspected
of having used some of the alleged bribe money to buy himself fancy
apartments in Paris and a chateau in Normandy--was deposed by Judge
van Ruymbeke in December. According to the Journal du Dimanche
(a large Sunday paper), Etete's testimony seemed to confirm the
judge's suspicions that Tesler laundered the $180 million through
offshore and other accounts, and that part of the money wound up in
dictator Abacha's coffers. Tesler's bank accounts in Monaco,
Switzerland and elsewhere have been subpoenaed in an effort to find
out where the money went.
UNQUOTE
See also:
Two Strikes Against Halliburton in Nigeria
[Mobolaji E. Aluko, June 14, 2004]
Read on...and enjoy Tesler's centrality in Nigerian
"deals".
Nigerian Muse
(Bolaji Aluko)
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Halliburton and Nigeria:
A Chronology of Key Events in the Unfolding Bribery Scandal
1988: Dresser Industries acquires M.W. Kellogg, ten years
before Dresser merges with Halliburton.
September 1994: M.W. Kellogg and three other companies form a
partnership known as TSKJ, incorporated in Medeira, Portugal. Each
partner owns a 25 percent equal share. Kellogg's three other partners
are Technip of France, Italy's Snamprogetti, and Japan Gasoline Corp.
The partnership submits a bid to Nigeria LNG to build a natural gas
plant in Nigeria. Nigeria LNG is owned by the Nigerian government and
Royal Dutch/Shell Group. TSKJ's $2 billion bid is not immediately
accepted even though it was 5 percent lower than a bid submitted by
competitor, Bechtel Group, Inc.
November 1994: As TSKJ awaits Nigeria's decision on the bid,
Wojciech Chodan, an executive at Kellogg and later a consultant for
Kellogg Brown & Root, meets with London lawyer Jefferey Tesler,
who is known for his contacts and friendly relations with the Nigerian
government, including its dictator Gen. Sani Abacha. During the
meeting, they discussed channeling $40 million to Gen. Abacha through
Mr. Tesler's firm Tri-Star, based in Gibralter, Spain.
March 1995: TSKJ formally hires Mr. Tesler as agent; TSKJ's bid
has still not been accepted by Nigeria LNG. Mr. Tesler's employment
contract is signed by an M.W. Kellogg executive on behalf of the TSKJ
partnership. Mr. Tesler had been working on behalf of TSKJ prior to
March 1995 and the employment contract was given to Mr. Tesler as a
reward for his prodding of Nigerian officials. The employment contract
provided that Mr. Tesler would be paid $60 million if Nigeria awarded
the construction contract to TSKJ. Mr. Tesler's Tri-Star was
contracted to receive at least $160 million in five agreements signed
between 1995 and 2002, and the funds were directed to bank accounts in
Switzerland and Monaco.
March 20, 1995: Dan Etete replaces Nigeria's former oil
minister, who has a falling out with the dicatator, Gen. Abacha.
"In an interrogation of Mr. Tesler, a French magistrate described
the London lawyer's transfer of $2.5 million into Swiss bank accounts
held by Mr. Etete under a false name between 1996 and 1998. Mr. Tesler
confirmed making the payments but told the magistrate that the money
was for an investment in offshore oil exploration leases in Nigeria
and that he wasn't aware the accounts belonged to Mr. Etete, according
to people familiar with the interrogation." (Wall Street Journal,
Sept. 29, 2004.)
June 1995: Albert Jack Stanley is
promoted to president and chief operating officer of M.W. Kellogg
after serving as executive vice president since 1991 and various
positions since 1975.
August 1995: Dick Cheney is hired as CEO of Halliburton, three
years before he directs the merger of Halliburton with Dresser
Industries and M.W. Kellogg. He serves as CEO until August of
2000.
December 1995: TSKJ is finally awarded the $2 billion contract
from Nigeria LNG.
July 1996: M.W. Kellogg promotes Albert Jack Stanley to
chairman, president and chief executive officer; he also becomes vice
president of operations for the parent, Dresser Industries.
February 1998: Halliburton and M.W. Kellogg's parent, Dresser
Industries, agree to a $7.7 billion merger directed by Dick Cheney.
M.W. Kellogg is merged with Halliburton's Brown & Root subsidiary
to form Kellogg, Brown & Root. Albert Jack Stanley is named as
chairman of the new subsidiary. The
Independent (UK)
reported that "Mr Stanley had been appointed to his senior role at
Halliburton by Mr Cheney when he was chief executive between 1995 and
2000." (
The Independent, Oct. 3, 2004.) The
Wall
Street Journal confirmed that Cheney "named Mr. Stanley Š
to a top post at the company in 1998." (
Wall Street
Journal, Sept. 29, 2004.) Cheney told the
Middle East Economic
Digest in 1999 that, "We took Jack Stanley Š to head up the
organization and that has helped tremendously." (
Middle East
Economic Digest, April 9, 1999.)
1999: The TSKJ partners, with Kellogg Brown & Root acting
as the lead partner, agree to reappoint Mr. Tesler as its agent during
a meeting in London. Kellogg wanted Mr. Tesler, with whom it had a
long-term relationship, to attend. But the representative from the
French partner, Technip, wanted a different agent and insisted that
Mr. Tesler be excluded from the meeting. William Chaudan, the Kellogg
representative at TSKJ, said Mr. Tesler had been selected on Kellogg's
recommendation and over Technip's "strong opposition."
(
Financial Times , London, Sept. 16, 2004.) Halliburton
officials in Houston deny that Kellogg Brown & Root demanded Mr.
Tesler's participation. Three new contracts with Mr. Tesler required
TSKJ to pay his firm, Tri-Star, $32.5 million for his services in
Nigeria. Richard Northmore, a sales manager for M.W. Kellogg in
England, signed contracts with Mr. Tesler for TSKJ. Syed Nasser, M.W.
Kellogg's legal director, acted as counsel to the TSKJ consortium,
approving Mr Tesler's role. Bhaskar Patel, a sales and marketing
vice-president who works in Kellogg, Brown & Root's office in
England, also worked with Mr. Tesler.
March 1999: Halliburton announces the Nigerian government
awarded a $1.2 billion
contract to TSKJ to expand the construction of the natural gas
plant from two trains to three trains in order to increase the plant's
capacity by 50 percent. At the time, Stanley declared the contract
award exemplifies Kellogg's "project execution skills."
(Halliburton press release, March 11, 1999.)
October 1999: First shipment of liquefied natural gas is
shipped from Nigeria.
October 2003: French magistrate initiates investigation of
suspicious payments made by TSKJ after a former executive with one of
TSKJ's partners, Technip of France, said Mr. Tesler is "directly
linked to corruption in Nigeria." (
Financial Times,
London, Sept. 16, 2004.) Halliburton admitted that TSKJ paid $132
million in "advisory fees" to Mr. Tesler and that under
Tesler's contract with the company the money was not to be used for
bribery. But the French investigator said the payments to Mr. Tesler
"appear completely unjustified." (
Wall Street
Journal, Sept. 29, 2004.) The money was paid to Mr. Tesler between
1995 and 2002, more than half of which came after 1999. Under French
law, Mr. Cheney could be subject to a charge of "abuse of
corporate assets" even if he knew nothing about the alleged
improper payments during his tenure as Halliburton's chief executive.
The U.S. antibribery law applies only to executives who are aware of
illicit payments to foreign officials. (
Dallas Morning News,
Sept. 8, 2004.) The
Wall Street Journal reported that French
authorities don't have jurisdiction over Halliburton in this case but
are sharing information with U.S. authorities. (
Wall Street
Journal, Sept. 29, 2004.) "A preliminary investigation by the
Police Judiciaire of France found that LNG Servicos, a company
indirectly owned by the four partners in the Nigerian joint venture,
made four payments totaling at least $166 million at times that
roughly coincide with the award of contracts. The payments went to a
Gibraltar company owned by a London attorney to a Swiss bank account
that was later closed at the request of the bank." (
Dallas
Morning News, Jan. 25, 2004.)
December 2003: Albert Jack Stanley retires as chairman of
Kellogg Brown & Root, but retains a position as consultant for
Halliburton.
June 2004: Halliburton fires Albert Jack Stanley after
investigators say he received $5 million in "improper"
payments from Mr. Tesler. It also fires William Chaudan, the Kellogg
representative at TSKJ. Halliburton spokesperson, Wendy Hall, said
that during the years he ran KBR, Mr. Stanley reported to David Lesar,
Halliburton's president and chief operating officer at the time and
CEO today. Mr. Lesar reported to Mr. Cheney when Cheney was chief
executive. (
Dallas Morning News, Sept. 8, 2004.) (Important
Note: Lesar is an accountant and former Arthur Andersen partner,
meaning he may have been in a position to know about the purpose of
payments to Tesler when they occurred.) According to the Dallas
Morning News, "Mr. Cheney ran Halliburton when one of four
suspicious payments occurred." (
Dallas Morning News,
Sept. 8, 2004.)
June 2004: It is reported that Tesler put $1 million into an
account held by William Chaudan, the Kellogg representative at TSKJ.
"The company has since learned that even larger sums may have
gone into the accounts of Mr. Stanley and Mr. Chaudan." (
Dallas Morning News, Sept. 3, 2004.) Chaudan retired from M.W.
Kellogg Co. in 1998, but had continued as a consultant. (
Dallas
Morning News, June 19, 2004.)
August 2004: Nigeria's parliament votes unanimously to
summon
Halliburton CEO, David Lesar, to answer questions over its bribery
investigation. It issues a
report recommending that Halliburton and TSKJ be disqualified
from bidding on future government projects. It
denounces what it calls Halliburton's "hide-and-seek games"
to avoid questions from government investigators.
September 2004: TSKJ severs all ties to Mr. Tesler and his
firm, Tri-Star.
September 2004: The
Wall Street Journal reports on
newly disclosed evidence by Halliburton, including notes written by
M.W. Kellogg employees during the mid-1990s in which they discussed
bribing Nigerian officials. The
Financial Times of London
said the evidence "raises questions over what Mr Cheney knew
- or should have known - about one of the largest contracts awarded to
a Halliburton subsidiary." (
Financial Times, Sept. 16,
2004.) The written notes were discovered by Halliburton's lawyer,
James Doty, a lead partner in the Houston law firm Baker Botts.
The "Baker" in Baker Botts is Bush family lawyer James
Baker, the same lawyer credited with winning Florida for Bush Jr. over
Gore. Baker also served as President George H. Bush's Secretary of
State. Doty was general counsel to the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) under the senior President Bush. He was SEC general
counsel when the SEC investigated Bush Jr. for insider trading. Doty
recused himself from the case, which was eventually closed without
action. Bush Jr. was never interviewed. Although Bush's lawyers gave
the "smoking gun" in that case to the SEC the day after it
closed the investigation, Doty refused to reopen the case. (
Washington Post, Nov. 1, 2002.)
September 2004: Nigeria's President Olusegun Obasanjo
officially bans Halliburton from bidding on future government
contracts because it violated safety regulations for nuclear material.
The president accuses the company of negligently causing the
disappearance of two highly sensitive radioactive devices used to take
measurements in oil wells. The ban is apparently not related to the
ongoing bribery investigations.
October 2004: Revelations about Halliburton's central role in
the bribery investigation forces United Kingdom's Export Credit
Guarantee Department (ECGD) to consider withdrawing its support of a
133 million (British pounds) loan made last year to Kellogg. ECGD
said it
originally supported the loan on the basis that Halliburton was merely
a "subcontractor to the [TSKJ] consortium and financial
arrangements were not their responsibility," but it was
maintaining a "watching brief" on the French investigation.
(
The Independent, Oct. 3, 2004).
October 22, 2004: Investigators with Nigeria's parliament
complain that Halliburton is not being cooperative in their
investigation of the alleged bribery. The investigators say Mr. Tesler
paid bribes on behalf of TSKJ to Nigerian government officials. The
bribes were paid in installments: $60 million in 1995, $37.5 million
in 1999, $51 million in 2001 and $23 million in 2002.
June 20, 2005: The French newspaper
LeFigaro reports
that a U.S. Justice Department official held "lengthy"
meetings with French authorities in Paris on the issue of TSKJ bribes.
It
said an unnamed U.S. source asserted that the bribery scandal is
"probably the most significant file of corruption" known in
Washington today.
Sources:
Solomon Hughes and Jason Nisse, "How Cheney's Firm Routed $132m
to Nigeria via Tottenham Lawyer,"
The Independent (UK),
Oct. 3, 2004.
Russell Gold and Charles Fleming, "Out of Africa: In Halliburton
Nigeria Probe, A Search for Bribes to a Dictator,"
Wall Street
Journal, Sept. 29, 2004, p.A1 .
Michael Peel, "Nigeria gas consortium 'evasive', says probe
chief,"
Financial Times (London), Aug. 23 2004.
Michael Peel, "Halliburton angers Nigerian MPs in 'bribes'
hearing,"
Financial Times (London), Oct. 22, 2004.
"Halliburton 'backed' bribes probe agent,"
Financial
Times (London), Sept. 16, 2004.
Middle East Economic Digest, April 9, 1999, p. 7.
Peter Behr, "Bush Sold Stock After Lawyers' Warning; SEC Closed
Probe Before Receiving Letter From Harken's Outside
Attorneys,"
Washington Post, Nov. 1, 2002.
Nigeria House of Representatives Petition Committee,
Interim Report: The Halliburton/TSKJ/LNG Investigation, Summary of
Facts , Sept. 2004.
Richard Whittle and Jim Landers, "Cheney's years at Halliburton
under scrutiny,"
Dallas Morning News, Sept. 8, 2004.
Jim Landers and Richard Whittle, "Details emerge in bribery
probe; Cheney isn't focus of French inquiry of Nigerian gas
project,"
Dallas Morning News, Jan. 25, 2004.
Jim Landers and Richard Whittle, "Bribery case findings detailed;
Halliburton says incidents predate ownership of firm,"
Dallas
Morning News, Sept. 3, 2004.
Richard Whittle and Jim Landers, "Halliburton fires two
consultants; Company says 'improper personal benefits' received in
Nigerian gas deal,"
Dallas Morning News, June 19,
2004.
"Bush family lawyer James Doty hired to conduct internal probe of
Halliburton involvement in Nigeria payments,"
Corporate Crime Reporter, February 16, 2004.
Ahamefula Ogbu, "$180m LNG Scam: Witnesses Stall Investigation,"
ThisDayOnline.com , Oct. 21, 2004.
www.Halliburton.com
___________________________________________
--