Difference between revisions of "Marc Rich"

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{{person
 
{{person
|wikipedia=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Rich
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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc_Rich
 
|image=Marc_Rich.jpg
 
|image=Marc_Rich.jpg
 
|image_width=300px
 
|image_width=300px
|constitutes=oil dealer, businessman, financier
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|constitutes=billionaire, oil dealer, businessman, financier
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|criminal_charges=tax evasion, fraud
 
|birth_date=18 December 1934
 
|birth_date=18 December 1934
 
|death_date=26 June 2013
 
|death_date=26 June 2013
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|website=http://www.marcrich.ch
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|description=Billionaire commodities trader. He was best known for founding the commodities company Glencore, with deep ties to [[Mossad]]. [[US President]] [[Bill Clinton]] pardoned him in his last day in office.
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|birth_name=Marcell David Reich
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|birth_place=Antwerp, Belgium
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|death_place=Lucerne, Switzerland
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|citizenship=Belgium, Bolivia, United States, Israel, Spain
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|employment=
 
}}
 
}}
'''Marc Rich''' (born '''Marcell David Reich''') was an international commodities trader, hedge fund manager, financier and businessman. He was the founder of the spot market for crude oil and became the most famous commodities trader. He was best known for founding the commodities company [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glencore Glencore] and for being indicted in the [[United States]] on federal charges of tax evasion and illegally making oil deals with Iran during the Iran hostage crisis. He was in Switzerland at the time of the indictment and never returned to the United States.<ref>{{cite book|author=[[Daniel Ammann|Ammann, Daniel]]|title=The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich|publisher=St. Martin‘s Press|location=New York|year=2009|isbn=0-312-57074-0}}</ref>
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'''Marc Rich''' (born '''Marcell David Reich''') was an international commodities trader, hedge fund manager, financier and businessman. He was the founder of the spot market for crude oil and became the most famous commodities trader. He was best known for founding the commodities company [[Glencore]] and for being indicted in the [[United States]] on federal charges of [[tax evasion]] and illegally making oil deals with Iran during the Iran hostage crisis. He was in Switzerland at the time of the indictment and never returned to the United States.<ref>Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.</ref>
  
Marc Rich received a controversial presidential pardon from US President [[Bill Clinton]] on 20 January 2001, Clinton's last day in office.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2001/may/13/features.magazine37 |title=Profile: Marc Rich &#124; From the Observer &#124; The Observer|work=The Guardian|publisher=Guardian Media Group |location=London |issn=0261-3077 |oclc=60623878 |accessdate=30 October 2012 |first=Mark |last=Honigsbaum |date=May 13, 2001}}</ref>
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Marc Rich received a controversial presidential pardon from [[US President]] [[Bill Clinton]] on 20 January 2001, Clinton's last day in office.<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2001/may/13/features.magazine37 </ref>
  
 
==Early life, marriage and career==
 
==Early life, marriage and career==
Marc Rich was born in 1934 to a Jewish family in Antwerp, Belgium.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss_news/King_of_oil_discloses_his_secret_lives.html?cid=7657620 | title=King of oil" discloses his "secret lives" | publisher=Swiss Info | date=Nov 14, 2009 | accessdate=September 13, 2012 | author=Daniel Ammann}}</ref><ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/2001/feb/25/opinion/op-29978 Los Angeles Times: "Pardon Reignites Jewish Stereotypes" by Walter Reich] February 25, 2001</ref> His parents were working-class Jews who emigrated with their son to the United States in 1941<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/business/2012/10/ns-business-profile-marc-rich-glencores-fugitive-founder |title=NS business profile: Marc Rich, Glencore's fugitive founder|work=newstatesman.com|accessdate=21 November 2012}}</ref> to escape the Nazis. His father opened a jewellery store in Kansas City, Missouri. The family moved to Queens, New York City in 1950, where Rich's father started a company that imported Bengali jute to make burlap bags. Rich's father later started a business trading agricultural products and helped found the American Bolivian Bank.
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Marc Rich was born in 1934 to a Jewish family in Antwerp, [[Belgium]].<ref>http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss_news/King_of_oil_discloses_his_secret_lives.html?cid=7657620 </ref><ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/2001/feb/25/opinion/op-29978 Los Angeles Times: "Pardon Reignites Jewish Stereotypes" by Walter Reich] February 25, 2001</ref> His parents were working-class Jews who emigrated with their son to the US in 1941<ref>http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/business/2012/10/ns-business-profile-marc-rich-glencores-fugitive-founder</ref> to escape [[Nazi Germany]]. His father opened a jewellery store in Kansas City, Missouri. The family moved to Queens, [[New York City]] in 1950, where Rich's father started a company that imported Bengali jute to make burlap bags. Rich's father later started a business trading agricultural products and helped found the American Bolivian Bank.
  
 
Rich attended high school at the Rhodes Preparatory School in Manhattan. He later attended New York University, but dropped out after one semester to go work for Philipp Brothers (now known as '''Phibro LLC''') in 1954. He worked as a commodities trader for his father, who sought to build an American manufacturing fortune through burlap-sack production.
 
Rich attended high school at the Rhodes Preparatory School in Manhattan. He later attended New York University, but dropped out after one semester to go work for Philipp Brothers (now known as '''Phibro LLC''') in 1954. He worked as a commodities trader for his father, who sought to build an American manufacturing fortune through burlap-sack production.
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Rich married Denise Eisenberg, a songwriter and heir to a New England shoe manufacturing fortune, in 1966. They had three children, one of whom, Gabrielle Rich Aouad, died at age 27 of leukemia in 1996.<ref>[http://www.newyorksocialdiary.com/list/134.php "Denise Rich"], ''New York Social Diary''</ref> The couple divorced in 1996; she continued to use the name Denise Rich. Six months later he married Gisela Rossi, although that marriage also ended in divorce, in 2005.
 
Rich married Denise Eisenberg, a songwriter and heir to a New England shoe manufacturing fortune, in 1966. They had three children, one of whom, Gabrielle Rich Aouad, died at age 27 of leukemia in 1996.<ref>[http://www.newyorksocialdiary.com/list/134.php "Denise Rich"], ''New York Social Diary''</ref> The couple divorced in 1996; she continued to use the name Denise Rich. Six months later he married Gisela Rossi, although that marriage also ended in divorce, in 2005.
  
He worked with Philipp Brothers, a dealer in metals, learning about the international raw materials markets and commercial trading with poor, third-world nations. He helped run the company's operations in Cuba, Bolivia, and Spain. In 1974 he and co-worker Pincus Green set up their own company in Switzerland, '''Marc Rich & Co. AG''', which would later become '''Glencore Xstrata Plc'''.<ref>{{cite news|last=Henry|first=David|title=Marc Rich, fugitive commodities trader in the 1980s, dies at 78|url=http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-26/marc-rich-fugitive-commodities-trader-in-80s-dies-78.html|newspaper=Bloomberg L.P.|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref> Nicknamed "the King of Oil" by his business partners, Rich has been said to have expanded the spot market for crude oil in the early 1970s, drawing business away from the larger established oil companies that had relied on traditional long-term contracts for future purchases. As Andrew Hill of the ''Financial Times'' put it, "Rich’s key insight was that oil – and other raw materials – could be traded with less capital, and fewer assets, than the big oil producers thought, if backed by bank finance. It was this highly leveraged business model that became the template for modern traders, including Trafigura, Vitol, and Glencore...."<ref>{{cite news|last=Hill|first=Andrew|title='King of Oil' who became a target for US|url=http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7602780e-de5c-11e2-9b47-00144feab7de.html|newspaper=Financial Times|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref>
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He worked with Philipp Brothers, a dealer in metals, learning about the international raw materials markets and commercial trading with poor, third-world nations. He helped run the company's operations in Cuba, Bolivia, and Spain. In 1974 he and co-worker Pincus Green set up their own company in Switzerland, '''Marc Rich & Co. AG''', which would later become '''Glencore Xstrata Plc'''.<ref>http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-26/marc-rich-fugitive-commodities-trader-in-80s-dies-78.html</ref> Nicknamed "the King of Oil" by his business partners, Rich has been said to have expanded the spot market for crude oil in the early 1970s, drawing business away from the larger established oil companies that had relied on traditional long-term contracts for future purchases. As Andrew Hill of the ''Financial Times'' put it, "Rich’s key insight was that oil – and other raw materials – could be traded with less capital, and fewer assets, than the big oil producers thought, if backed by bank finance. It was this highly leveraged business model that became the template for modern traders, including Trafigura, Vitol, and Glencore...."<ref>http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7602780e-de5c-11e2-9b47-00144feab7de.html</ref>
  
His tutelage under Philipp Brothers afforded Rich the opportunity to develop relationships with various dictatorial régimes and embargoed nations. Rich would later tell biographer Daniel Ammann that he had made his "most important and most profitable" business deals by violating international trade embargoes and doing business with the apartheid regime of [[South Africa]].<ref>{{cite news|last=Rankin|first=Jennifer|title=Marc Rich: controversial commodities trader and former fugitive dies aged 78|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2013/jun/26/marc-rich-commodities-trader-fugitive-dies?INTCMP=SRCH|newspaper=The Guardian|date=June 26, 2013|location=London}}</ref> He also counted Fidel Castro's Cuba, Marxist Angola, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas, [[Muammar Gaddafi]]'s Libya, Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania, and Augusto Pinochet's Chile among the clients he serviced.<ref>{{cite news|last=Ammann|first=Daniel|title=How I met the biggest devil|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daniel-ammann/how-i-met-the-biggest-dev_b_368050.html|newspaper=Huffington Post|date=November 23, 2009}}</ref> According to Ammann, "he had no regrets whatsoever.... He used to say 'I deliver a service. People want to sell oil to me and other people wanted to buy oil from me. I am a businessman, not a politician."
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His tutelage under Philipp Brothers afforded Rich the opportunity to develop relationships with various dictatorial régimes and embargoed nations. Rich would later tell biographer Daniel Ammann that he had made his "most important and most profitable" business deals by violating international trade embargoes and doing business with the apartheid regime of [[South Africa]].<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2013/jun/26/marc-rich-commodities-trader-fugitive-dies?INTCMP=SRCH</ref> He also counted Fidel Castro's Cuba, Marxist Angola, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas, [[Muammar Gaddafi]]'s Libya, Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania, and Augusto Pinochet's Chile among the clients he serviced.<ref>http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daniel-ammann/how-i-met-the-biggest-dev_b_368050.html</ref> According to Ammann, "he had no regrets whatsoever.... He used to say 'I deliver a service. People want to sell oil to me and other people wanted to buy oil from me. I am a businessman, not a politician."
  
One of his biggest market coups came during the 1973-1974 Arab oil embargo, when he used his [[Middle East]]ern contacts to circumvent the embargo and buy crude oil from [[Iran]] and [[Iraq]]. After purchasing the crude for roughly US$12 per barrel, Rich doubled the price and sold it to supply-starved US oil companies. Later, following the overthrow of [[Mohammad Reza Pahlavi]], the Shah of Iran, during the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Rich used his special relationship with [[Ayatollah Khomeini]], the leader of the revolution, to buy oil from Iran despite the American embargo. Iran would become Rich's most important supplier of crude oil for more than 15 years.<ref>{{cite book|author=Ammann, Daniel|title=The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich|isbn=0-312-57074-0}}</ref> Due to his good relationship with Iran, Rich helped give [[Mossad]]’s agents contacts in Iran.<ref>http://www.economist.com/news/obituary/21580438-marc-rich-king-commodities-died-june-26th-aged-78-marc-rich Marc Rich: Marc Rich, king of commodities, died on June 26th, aged 78</ref>
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One of his biggest market coups came during the 1973-1974 Arab oil embargo, when he used his [[Middle East]]ern contacts to circumvent the embargo and buy crude oil from [[Iran]] and [[Iraq]]. After purchasing the crude for roughly US$12 per barrel, Rich doubled the price and sold it to supply-starved US oil companies. Later, following the overthrow of [[Mohammad Reza Pahlavi]], the Shah of Iran, during the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Rich used his special relationship with [[Ayatollah Khomeini]], the leader of the revolution, to buy oil from Iran despite the American embargo. Iran would become Rich's most important supplier of crude oil for more than 15 years.<ref>Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.</ref> Due to his good relationship with Iran, Rich helped give [[Mossad]]’s agents contacts in Iran.<ref>http://www.economist.com/news/obituary/21580438-marc-rich-king-commodities-died-june-26th-aged-78-marc-rich Marc Rich: Marc Rich, king of commodities, died on June 26th, aged 78</ref>
  
His company, '''Marc Rich Real Estate GmbH''', is involved in large developer projects (e.g., in Prague, Czech Republic).<ref>[http://www.praguepost.cz/busi022801c.html "Former U.S. fugitive has local ties"], Michael Mainville, ''The Prague Post'', 28 February 2001</ref> Rich was accused of being involved with the [[Bank of Credit and Commerce International]]. Rich and Marvin Davis bought 20th Century Fox in 1981. With Rich a fugitive, Davis sold Rich's interest to Rupert Murdoch for $250 million in March 1984.<ref>{{cite book|author=Michael Wolff|title=The Man Who Owns the News: Inside the Secret World of Rupert Murdoch|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ZWleLGIrwBcC&pg=PT167|accessdate=19 February 2012|date=5 May 2010|publisher=Random House|isbn=978-1-4090-8679-6|page=167}}</ref>
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His company, '''Marc Rich Real Estate GmbH''', is involved in large developer projects (e.g., in Prague, Czech Republic).<ref>[http://www.praguepost.cz/busi022801c.html "Former U.S. fugitive has local ties"], Michael Mainville, ''The Prague Post'', 28 February 2001</ref> Rich was accused of being involved with the [[Bank of Credit and Commerce International]]. Rich and Marvin Davis bought 20th Century Fox in 1981. With Rich a fugitive, Davis sold Rich's interest to Rupert Murdoch for $250 million in March 1984.<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=ZWleLGIrwBcC&pg=PT167|accessdate=19 February 2012</ref>
  
 
==Net worth==
 
==Net worth==
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==US indictment and controversial pardon==
 
==US indictment and controversial pardon==
n 1983 Rich and partner Pincus Green were indicted on 65 criminal counts, including income tax evasion, wire fraud, racketeering, and trading with Iran during the oil embargo (at a time when Iranian revolutionaries were still holding American citizens hostage). The charges would have led to a sentence of more than 300 years in prison had Rich been convicted on all counts. The indictment was filed by then-US Federal Prosecutor (and future mayor of New York City) [[Rudolph Giuliani]]. At the time it was the biggest tax evasion case in US history.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3071886/ns/news-special_coverage/t/double-life-marc-rich/#.UJE5d2dbxBl |title=The double life of Marc Rich - News - Special Coverage &#124; NBC News|work=msnbc.msn.com|accessdate=31 October 2012}}</ref>
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n 1983 Rich and partner Pincus Green were indicted on 65 criminal counts, including income tax evasion, wire fraud, racketeering, and trading with Iran during the oil embargo (at a time when Iranian revolutionaries were still holding American citizens hostage). The charges would have led to a sentence of more than 300 years in prison had Rich been convicted on all counts. The indictment was filed by then-US Federal Prosecutor (and future mayor of New York City) [[Rudolph Giuliani]]. At the time it was the biggest tax evasion case in US history.<ref>http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3071886/ns/news-special_coverage/t/double-life-marc-rich/#.UJE5d2dbxBl</ref>
  
Hearing of the plans for the indictment, Rich fled to [[Switzerland]] and, always insisting that he was not guilty, never returned to America to answer the charges. In 1989 the [[United States Justice Department]] ceased using statutes of the [[Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act]] (otherwise known as the RICO Act) in tax cases such as the one in which Rich and Green were indicted, and began relying instead on civil lawsuits.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/18/opinion/18CLIN.html?ex=1180238400&en=ddafe39be7a1b417&ei=5070 "My Reasons for the Pardons"], W. J. Clinton, ''The New York Times'', 18 February 2001</ref> Rich's companies eventually pled guilty to 35 counts of tax evasion and paid $90 million in fines, although Rich himself remained on the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]'s Ten Most-Wanted Fugitives List for many years,<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june01/pardonprobe_02-08.html BPS.org]</ref> narrowly evading capture in Britain, Germany, Finland, and Jamaica. Fearing arrest, he did not even return to the United States to attend his daughter's funeral in 1996.<ref>{{cite news|last=Cowan|first=Alison Leigh|title=Plotting a pardon; Rich cashed in a world of chits to win pardon|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/11/us/plotting-a-pardon-rich-cashed-in-a-world-of-chits-to-win-pardon.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm|newspaper=New York Times|date=April 11, 2001}}</ref>
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Hearing of the plans for the indictment, Rich fled to [[Switzerland]] and, always insisting that he was not guilty, never returned to America to answer the charges. In 1989 the [[United States Justice Department]] ceased using statutes of the [[Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act]] (otherwise known as the RICO Act) in tax cases such as the one in which Rich and Green were indicted, and began relying instead on civil lawsuits.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/18/opinion/18CLIN.html?ex=1180238400&en=ddafe39be7a1b417&ei=5070 "My Reasons for the Pardons"], W. J. Clinton, ''The New York Times'', 18 February 2001</ref> Rich's companies eventually pled guilty to 35 counts of tax evasion and paid $90 million in fines, although Rich himself remained on the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]'s Ten Most-Wanted Fugitives List for many years,<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june01/pardonprobe_02-08.html BPS.org]</ref> narrowly evading capture in Britain, Germany, Finland, and Jamaica. Fearing arrest, he did not even return to the United States to attend his daughter's funeral in 1996.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/11/us/plotting-a-pardon-rich-cashed-in-a-world-of-chits-to-win-pardon.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm</ref>
  
On January 20, 2001, hours before leaving office, US President [[Bill Clinton]] granted Rich a highly controversial presidential pardon. Several of Clinton's strongest supporters distanced themselves from the decision.<ref>{{cite news|last=Berke|first=Richard L.|title=The Clinton pardons: the Democrats; This time, Clintons find their support buckling from weight of new woes|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/23/us/clinton-pardons-democrats-this-time-clintons-find-their-support-buckling-weight.html?src=pm|newspaper=New York Times|date=February 23, 2001}}</ref> Former President [[Jimmy Carter]], a fellow Democrat, said, "I don't think there is any doubt that some of the factors in his pardon were attributable to his large gifts. In my opinion, that was disgraceful."<ref>{{cite news|title=Carter calls pardon of Rich 'disgraceful'|url=http://articles.latimes.com/2001/feb/21/news/mn-28265|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=February 21, 2001}}</ref> Clinton himself later expressed regret for issuing the pardon, saying that "it wasn't worth the damage to my reputation."
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On January 20, 2001, hours before leaving office, US President [[Bill Clinton]] granted Rich a highly controversial presidential pardon. Several of Clinton's strongest supporters distanced themselves from the decision.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/23/us/clinton-pardons-democrats-this-time-clintons-find-their-support-buckling-weight.html?src=pm</ref> Former President [[Jimmy Carter]], a fellow Democrat, said, "I don't think there is any doubt that some of the factors in his pardon were attributable to his large gifts. In my opinion, that was disgraceful."<ref>http://articles.latimes.com/2001/feb/21/news/mn-28265</ref> Clinton himself later expressed regret for issuing the pardon, saying that "it wasn't worth the damage to my reputation."
  
Clinton's critics alleged that Rich's pardon had been bought, as Denise Rich had given more than $1 million<ref>{{cite news|title=Clinton's pardon of Marc Rich|url=http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june01/richpardon_01-26.html|publisher=PBS Newshour|date=January 26, 2001}}</ref> to Clinton's political party (the Democratic Party), including more than $100,000 to the Senate campaign of the president's wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and $450,000 to the Clinton Library foundation during Clinton's time in office.<ref>{{cite news|last=Associated Press|title=Pardoned financier Marc Rich dead at 78|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-500395_162-57591058/pardoned-financier-marc-rich-dead-at-78/|publisher=CBS News|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref> Clinton explained his decision by noting that similar cases were settled in civil, not criminal court.
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Clinton's critics alleged that Rich's pardon had been bought, as Denise Rich had given more than $1 million<ref>http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june01/richpardon_01-26.html</ref> to Clinton's political party (the Democratic Party), including more than $100,000 to the Senate campaign of the president's wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and $450,000 to the Clinton Library foundation during Clinton's time in office.<ref>http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-500395_162-57591058/pardoned-financier-marc-rich-dead-at-78/</ref> Clinton explained his decision by noting that similar cases were settled in civil, not criminal court.
  
Clinton also cited clemency pleas he had received from Israeli government officials, including then-Prime Minister [[Ehud Barak]]. Rich had made substantial donations to Israeli charitable foundations over the years, and many senior Israeli officials, such as [[Shimon Peres]] and [[Ehud Olmert]], argued on his behalf behind the scenes.<ref>{{cite news|last=Reuters|title=Jewish philanthropist Marc Rich, a key donor to Israel, dies at 78|url=http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/jewish-philanthropist-marc-rich-a-key-donor-to-israel-dies-at-78-1.532134|newspaper=Haaretz|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref> Speculation about another rationale for Rich's pardon involved his alleged involvement with the Israeli intelligence community.<ref>[http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0102/18/sm.01.html CNN Sunday Morning News, 18 February 2001: reporting by CNN correspondent Eileen O'Connor]</ref><ref>[http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2009/01/16/holder "The real reason Bill Clinton pardoned Marc Rich"], Joe Conason, ''Salon'', January 16, 2009</ref> Rich reluctantly acknowledged in interviews with his biographer, Daniel Ammann, that he had assisted the [[Mossad]], Israel’s intelligence service, a claim that Ammann said was confirmed by a former Israeli intelligence officer. According to Ammann, Rich had helped finance the Mossad's operations and had supplied Israel with strategic amounts of Iranian oil through a secret oil pipeline. The aide to Rich who had persuaded Denise Rich to personally ask President Clinton to review Rich's pardon request was a former chief of the [[Mossad]], Avner Azulay. Another former [[Mossad]] chief, [[Shabtai Shavit]], had also urged Clinton to pardon Rich,<ref>{{cite news|last=Associated Press|title=Marc Rich dies at 78; last day pardon by Clinton provoked a flood of criticism|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/financier-marc-rich-who-fled-to-switzerland-in-1983-and-was-pardoned-by-clinton-dies-at-78/2013/06/26/c4b9f642-de44-11e2-bc84-8049224b33e1_story.html|newspaper=Washington Post|date=June 26}}</ref> whom he said had routinely allowed intelligence agents to use his offices around the world.
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Clinton also cited clemency pleas he had received from Israeli government officials, including then-Prime Minister [[Ehud Barak]]. Rich had made substantial donations to Israeli charitable foundations over the years, and many senior Israeli officials, such as [[Shimon Peres]] and [[Ehud Olmert]], argued on his behalf behind the scenes.<ref>http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/jewish-philanthropist-marc-rich-a-key-donor-to-israel-dies-at-78-1.532134</ref> Speculation about another rationale for Rich's pardon involved his alleged involvement with the Israeli intelligence community.<ref>[http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0102/18/sm.01.html CNN Sunday Morning News, 18 February 2001: reporting by CNN correspondent Eileen O'Connor]</ref><ref>[http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2009/01/16/holder "The real reason Bill Clinton pardoned Marc Rich"], Joe Conason, ''Salon'', January 16, 2009</ref> Rich reluctantly acknowledged in interviews with his biographer, Daniel Ammann, that he had assisted the [[Mossad]], Israel’s intelligence service, a claim that Ammann said was confirmed by a former Israeli intelligence officer. According to Ammann, Rich had helped finance the Mossad's operations and had supplied Israel with strategic amounts of Iranian oil through a secret oil pipeline. The aide to Rich who had persuaded Denise Rich to personally ask President Clinton to review Rich's pardon request was a former chief of the [[Mossad]], Avner Azulay. Another former [[Mossad]] chief, [[Shabtai Shavit]], had also urged Clinton to pardon Rich,<ref>http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/financier-marc-rich-who-fled-to-switzerland-in-1983-and-was-pardoned-by-clinton-dies-at-78/2013/06/26/c4b9f642-de44-11e2-bc84-8049224b33e1_story.html</ref> whom he said had routinely allowed intelligence agents to use his offices around the world.
  
Federal Prosecutor [[Mary Jo White]] was appointed to investigate Clinton's last-minute pardon of Rich.<ref>{{cite news|last=Novak|first=Viveca|title=U.S. Attorney White keeps the iron hot|url=http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,106316,00.html|newspaper=Time|date=April 14, 2001}}</ref> She stepped down before the investigation was finished and was replaced by [[James Comey]], who was critical of Clinton's pardons and of then-Deputy Attorney General [[Eric Holder]]'s pardon recommendation.<ref>[http://legaltimes.typepad.com/files/121908-jamescomey.pdf Letter from James Comey in respect of the nomination of Eric Holder to be Attorney General]</ref> Rich's lawyer, [[Jack Quinn (lawyer)|Jack Quinn]], had previously been Clinton's [[White House Counsel]] and chief of staff to Clinton's Vice President, [[Al Gore]], and had had a close relationship with Holder. According to Quinn, Holder had advised that standard procedures be bypassed and the pardon petition be submitted directly to the White House.<ref>{{cite book|authorlink=Daniel Ammann |last=Ammann|first=Daniel|title=The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich|publisher=St. Martin‘s Press|location=New York|year=2009|isbn=0-312-57074-0}}</ref>{{#tag:ref|Holder, however, during his Senate confirmation hearing to become Attorney General in 2009, denied that he had attempted to circumvent the standard procedures for consideration of presidential pardons.<ref>{{cite news|title=Holder admits 'mistakes' in Rich pardon|url=http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/15/holder.hearings/|publisher=CNN|date=January 15, 2009}}</ref> Holder did say that he had "made mistakes" and "made assumptions that turned out not to be true" while managing the pardon request. Congressional investigations were also launched. Clinton's top advisors, Chief of Staff [[John Podesta]], White House Counsel [[Beth Nolan]], and advisor [[Bruce Lindsey]], testified that nearly all of the White House staff advising the president on the pardon request had urged Clinton to not grant Rich a pardon.<ref>{{cite news|title=Hearings: Clinton aides opposed Rich pardon|url=http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=121734|accessdate=June 26, 2013|publisher=ABC News|date=March 1, 2001}}</ref> Federal investigators ultimately found no evidence of criminal activity.
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Federal Prosecutor [[Mary Jo White]] was appointed to investigate Clinton's last-minute pardon of Rich.<ref>http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,106316,00.htm</ref> She stepped down before the investigation was finished and was replaced by [[James Comey]], who was critical of Clinton's pardons and of then-Deputy Attorney General [[Eric Holder]]'s pardon recommendation.<ref>[http://legaltimes.typepad.com/files/121908-jamescomey.pdf Letter from James Comey in respect of the nomination of Eric Holder to be Attorney General]</ref> Rich's lawyer, [[Jack Quinn (lawyer)|Jack Quinn]], had previously been Clinton's [[White House Counsel]] and chief of staff to Clinton's Vice President, [[Al Gore]], and had had a close relationship with Holder. According to Quinn, Holder had advised that standard procedures be bypassed and the pardon petition be submitted directly to the White House.<ref>Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.</ref>{{#tag:ref|Holder, however, during his Senate confirmation hearing to become Attorney General in 2009, denied that he had attempted to circumvent the standard procedures for consideration of presidential pardons.<ref>http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/15/holder.hearings/</ref> Holder did say that he had "made mistakes" and "made assumptions that turned out not to be true" while managing the pardon request. Congressional investigations were also launched. Clinton's top advisors, Chief of Staff [[John Podesta]], [[White House Counsel]] [[Beth Nolan]], and advisor [[Bruce Lindsey]], testified that nearly all of the White House staff advising the president on the pardon request had urged Clinton to not grant Rich a pardon.<ref>http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=121734</ref> Federal investigators ultimately found no evidence of criminal activity.
  
As a condition of the pardon, it was made clear that Rich would drop all procedural defences against any civil actions brought against him by the United States upon his return there. That condition was consistent with the position that his alleged wrongdoing warranted only civil penalties, not criminal punishment. Rich never returned to the United States.<ref>{{cite news|last=Baghdjian|first=Alice|title=Marc Rich, 'King of Oil' pardoned by Clinton, dies at 78|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/06/26/uk-marcrich-idUKBRE95P0C920130626|publisher=Reuters|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref>
+
As a condition of the pardon, it was made clear that Rich would drop all procedural defences against any civil actions brought against him by the United States upon his return there. That condition was consistent with the position that his alleged wrongdoing warranted only civil penalties, not criminal punishment. Rich never returned to the United States.<ref>http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/06/26/uk-marcrich-idUKBRE95P0C920130626</ref>
  
 
In an 18 February 2001 op-ed essay in ''[[The New York Times]]'', Clinton (by then out of office) explained why he had pardoned Rich, noting that US tax professors [[Bernard Wolfman]] of the [[Harvard Law School]] and [[Martin Ginsburg]] of Georgetown University Law Center had concluded that no crime had been committed, and that Rich's companies' tax-reporting position had been reasonable. In the same essay, Clinton listed Lewis "Scooter" Libby as one of three "distinguished Republican lawyers" who supported a pardon for Rich. (Libby himself later received a presidential commutation for his involvement in the Plame affair.) During Congressional hearings after Rich's pardon, Libby, who had represented Rich from 1985 until the spring of 2000, denied that Rich had violated the tax laws but criticised him for trading with [[Iran]] at a time when that country was holding US hostages.<ref>[http://archives.cnn.com/2001/ALLPOLITICS/03/02/clinton.library/ CNN, Inside politics: "GOP lawyer: Facts 'misconstrued' in Rich case"]</ref>
 
In an 18 February 2001 op-ed essay in ''[[The New York Times]]'', Clinton (by then out of office) explained why he had pardoned Rich, noting that US tax professors [[Bernard Wolfman]] of the [[Harvard Law School]] and [[Martin Ginsburg]] of Georgetown University Law Center had concluded that no crime had been committed, and that Rich's companies' tax-reporting position had been reasonable. In the same essay, Clinton listed Lewis "Scooter" Libby as one of three "distinguished Republican lawyers" who supported a pardon for Rich. (Libby himself later received a presidential commutation for his involvement in the Plame affair.) During Congressional hearings after Rich's pardon, Libby, who had represented Rich from 1985 until the spring of 2000, denied that Rich had violated the tax laws but criticised him for trading with [[Iran]] at a time when that country was holding US hostages.<ref>[http://archives.cnn.com/2001/ALLPOLITICS/03/02/clinton.library/ CNN, Inside politics: "GOP lawyer: Facts 'misconstrued' in Rich case"]</ref>
Line 50: Line 58:
  
 
==Citizenship==
 
==Citizenship==
Although Rich believed that he had relinquished his United States citizenship when he became a citizen of [[Spain]], an appeals court ruled in 1991 that, for purposes of US law, Rich remained a citizen and therefore was still subject to US income taxes.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,99302,00.html|accessdate=16 October 2009|date=13 February 2001|author=Jessica Reaves|work=Time.com|title=The Marc Rich Case: A Primer}}</ref> He also held Belgian, Bolivian,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2001/06/rich200106|work=vanityfair|title=The Face of Scandal|date=13 June 2001|accessdate= 1 June 2001}}</ref> Israeli, and Spanish passports.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,99302,00.html|work=Time|title=The Marc Rich Case: A Primer|first=Jessica|last=Reaves|date=13 February 2001|accessdate= 12 May 2010}}</ref>
+
Although Rich believed that he had relinquished his United States citizenship when he became a citizen of [[Spain]], an appeals court ruled in 1991 that, for purposes of US law, Rich remained a citizen and therefore was still subject to US income taxes.<ref>http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,99302,00.html</ref> He also held Belgian, Bolivian,<ref>http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2001/06/rich200106</ref> Israeli, and Spanish passports.<ref>http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,99302,00.html</ref>
  
 
==Private life==
 
==Private life==
 
After spending several years in Zug, Switzerland, Rich moved to Meggen, a city in the Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland, residing in a house called ''"La villa rose"'' (the pink villa) on the shores of Swiss Lake Lucerne, where he zealously guarded his privacy. Rich owned property in the ski resort of St Moritz, Switzerland, and in Marbella, Spain. He was an art collector and friends said he lived surrounded by Renoirs, Monets and Picassos.<ref>"The Face of Scandal", Maureen Orth, ''Vanity Fair'', June 2001</ref>
 
After spending several years in Zug, Switzerland, Rich moved to Meggen, a city in the Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland, residing in a house called ''"La villa rose"'' (the pink villa) on the shores of Swiss Lake Lucerne, where he zealously guarded his privacy. Rich owned property in the ski resort of St Moritz, Switzerland, and in Marbella, Spain. He was an art collector and friends said he lived surrounded by Renoirs, Monets and Picassos.<ref>"The Face of Scandal", Maureen Orth, ''Vanity Fair'', June 2001</ref>
  
Rich was a strong supporter of [[Israel]] throughout his life, having donated around $150 million to institutions such as the Israel Museum], Tel Aviv Museum, research centres and theatres over the years.<ref>{{cite news|last=Sadeh|first=Shuki|title=How foreign donors reshaped Israel: A who's who|url=http://www.haaretz.com/business/how-foreign-donors-reshaped-israel-a-who-s-who.premium-1.510037|accessdate=30 November 2013|newspaper=Haaretz|date=17 March 2013}}</ref>
+
Rich was a strong supporter of [[Israel]] throughout his life, having donated around $150 million to institutions such as the Israel Museum], Tel Aviv Museum, research centres and theatres over the years.<ref>http://www.haaretz.com/business/how-foreign-donors-reshaped-israel-a-who-s-who.premium-1.510037</ref>
  
 
==Death==
 
==Death==
Rich died of a stroke on 26 June 2013, at a Lucerne hospital. He was 78 and is survived by two daughters, Ilona Schachter-Rich and Danielle Kilstock Rich. He was buried in Israel.<ref>{{cite news|title=Marc Rich, Pardoned Financier, Dies at 78|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/business/marc-rich-pardoned-financier-dies-at-78.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-nytimes&_r=0|publisher=NY Times|accessdate=26 June 2013|first=Douglas|last=Martin|date=June 26, 2013}}</ref>
+
Rich died of a stroke on 26 June 2013, at a Lucerne hospital. He was 78 and is survived by two daughters, Ilona Schachter-Rich and Danielle Kilstock Rich. He was buried in Israel.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/business/marc-rich-pardoned-financier-dies-at-78.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-nytimes&_r=0</ref>
  
 
==Awards==
 
==Awards==
Line 67: Line 75:
  
 
==Additional sources==
 
==Additional sources==
*{{Cite book | author=Copetas, A Craig | title=Metal Men: Marc Rich and the 10-Billion-Dollar Scam | publisher=Putnam | location=New York | year=1985 | isbn=0-399-13078-0}}
+
*Copetas, A Craig (1985). Metal Men: Marc Rich and the 10-Billion-Dollar Scam. New York: Putnam. ISBN 0-399-13078-0.
*{{Cite book | author=[[Daniel Ammann|Ammann, Daniel]]| title=The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich | publisher=St. Martin‘s Press | location=New York | year=2009 | isbn=0-312-57074-0}}
+
*Ammann, Daniel (2009). The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. New York: St. Martin‘s Press. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.
* {{Cite journal| first =George  | last = Lander| date =November 24, 2008 | title =  A Pardon to Remember | url =http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/22/opinion/22lardner.html?ref=opinion | journal=The New York Times | accessdate=May 12, 2010}}  Detailed account leading up to the pardon.
+
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/22/opinion/22lardner.html?ref=opinion Lander, George (November 24, 2008). "A Pardon to Remember". The New York Times. Retrieved May 12, 2010.]
 
* [http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/clinton/pardonrpt/ ''Justice Undone: Clemency Decision in the Clinton White House''], Report of the House Committee on Government Reform
 
* [http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/clinton/pardonrpt/ ''Justice Undone: Clemency Decision in the Clinton White House''], Report of the House Committee on Government Reform
 
* "[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1171955.stm Marc Rich: Hero or villain?]" - BBC News, Thursday, February 15, 2001
 
* "[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1171955.stm Marc Rich: Hero or villain?]" - BBC News, Thursday, February 15, 2001

Latest revision as of 14:30, 5 March 2023

Person.png Marc Rich   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(billionaire, oil dealer, businessman, financier)
Marc Rich.jpg
BornMarcell David Reich
18 December 1934
Antwerp, Belgium
Died26 June 2013 (Age 78)
Lucerne, Switzerland
CitizenshipBelgium,  Bolivia,  United States,  Israel,  Spain
Criminal charge
tax evasion, fraud
Founder ofGlencore
Interest ofAlan Duncan
Billionaire commodities trader. He was best known for founding the commodities company Glencore, with deep ties to Mossad. US President Bill Clinton pardoned him in his last day in office.

Marc Rich (born Marcell David Reich) was an international commodities trader, hedge fund manager, financier and businessman. He was the founder of the spot market for crude oil and became the most famous commodities trader. He was best known for founding the commodities company Glencore and for being indicted in the United States on federal charges of tax evasion and illegally making oil deals with Iran during the Iran hostage crisis. He was in Switzerland at the time of the indictment and never returned to the United States.[1]

Marc Rich received a controversial presidential pardon from US President Bill Clinton on 20 January 2001, Clinton's last day in office.[2]

Early life, marriage and career

Marc Rich was born in 1934 to a Jewish family in Antwerp, Belgium.[3][4] His parents were working-class Jews who emigrated with their son to the US in 1941[5] to escape Nazi Germany. His father opened a jewellery store in Kansas City, Missouri. The family moved to Queens, New York City in 1950, where Rich's father started a company that imported Bengali jute to make burlap bags. Rich's father later started a business trading agricultural products and helped found the American Bolivian Bank.

Rich attended high school at the Rhodes Preparatory School in Manhattan. He later attended New York University, but dropped out after one semester to go work for Philipp Brothers (now known as Phibro LLC) in 1954. He worked as a commodities trader for his father, who sought to build an American manufacturing fortune through burlap-sack production.

Rich married Denise Eisenberg, a songwriter and heir to a New England shoe manufacturing fortune, in 1966. They had three children, one of whom, Gabrielle Rich Aouad, died at age 27 of leukemia in 1996.[6] The couple divorced in 1996; she continued to use the name Denise Rich. Six months later he married Gisela Rossi, although that marriage also ended in divorce, in 2005.

He worked with Philipp Brothers, a dealer in metals, learning about the international raw materials markets and commercial trading with poor, third-world nations. He helped run the company's operations in Cuba, Bolivia, and Spain. In 1974 he and co-worker Pincus Green set up their own company in Switzerland, Marc Rich & Co. AG, which would later become Glencore Xstrata Plc.[7] Nicknamed "the King of Oil" by his business partners, Rich has been said to have expanded the spot market for crude oil in the early 1970s, drawing business away from the larger established oil companies that had relied on traditional long-term contracts for future purchases. As Andrew Hill of the Financial Times put it, "Rich’s key insight was that oil – and other raw materials – could be traded with less capital, and fewer assets, than the big oil producers thought, if backed by bank finance. It was this highly leveraged business model that became the template for modern traders, including Trafigura, Vitol, and Glencore...."[8]

His tutelage under Philipp Brothers afforded Rich the opportunity to develop relationships with various dictatorial régimes and embargoed nations. Rich would later tell biographer Daniel Ammann that he had made his "most important and most profitable" business deals by violating international trade embargoes and doing business with the apartheid regime of South Africa.[9] He also counted Fidel Castro's Cuba, Marxist Angola, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas, Muammar Gaddafi's Libya, Nicolae Ceausescu's Romania, and Augusto Pinochet's Chile among the clients he serviced.[10] According to Ammann, "he had no regrets whatsoever.... He used to say 'I deliver a service. People want to sell oil to me and other people wanted to buy oil from me. I am a businessman, not a politician."

One of his biggest market coups came during the 1973-1974 Arab oil embargo, when he used his Middle Eastern contacts to circumvent the embargo and buy crude oil from Iran and Iraq. After purchasing the crude for roughly US$12 per barrel, Rich doubled the price and sold it to supply-starved US oil companies. Later, following the overthrow of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, during the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Rich used his special relationship with Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the revolution, to buy oil from Iran despite the American embargo. Iran would become Rich's most important supplier of crude oil for more than 15 years.[11] Due to his good relationship with Iran, Rich helped give Mossad’s agents contacts in Iran.[12]

His company, Marc Rich Real Estate GmbH, is involved in large developer projects (e.g., in Prague, Czech Republic).[13] Rich was accused of being involved with the Bank of Credit and Commerce International. Rich and Marvin Davis bought 20th Century Fox in 1981. With Rich a fugitive, Davis sold Rich's interest to Rupert Murdoch for $250 million in March 1984.[14]

Net worth

Forbes reported Rich had a net worth of US$1.0 billion as of 2010.

US indictment and controversial pardon

n 1983 Rich and partner Pincus Green were indicted on 65 criminal counts, including income tax evasion, wire fraud, racketeering, and trading with Iran during the oil embargo (at a time when Iranian revolutionaries were still holding American citizens hostage). The charges would have led to a sentence of more than 300 years in prison had Rich been convicted on all counts. The indictment was filed by then-US Federal Prosecutor (and future mayor of New York City) Rudolph Giuliani. At the time it was the biggest tax evasion case in US history.[15]

Hearing of the plans for the indictment, Rich fled to Switzerland and, always insisting that he was not guilty, never returned to America to answer the charges. In 1989 the United States Justice Department ceased using statutes of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act (otherwise known as the RICO Act) in tax cases such as the one in which Rich and Green were indicted, and began relying instead on civil lawsuits.[16] Rich's companies eventually pled guilty to 35 counts of tax evasion and paid $90 million in fines, although Rich himself remained on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Ten Most-Wanted Fugitives List for many years,[17] narrowly evading capture in Britain, Germany, Finland, and Jamaica. Fearing arrest, he did not even return to the United States to attend his daughter's funeral in 1996.[18]

On January 20, 2001, hours before leaving office, US President Bill Clinton granted Rich a highly controversial presidential pardon. Several of Clinton's strongest supporters distanced themselves from the decision.[19] Former President Jimmy Carter, a fellow Democrat, said, "I don't think there is any doubt that some of the factors in his pardon were attributable to his large gifts. In my opinion, that was disgraceful."[20] Clinton himself later expressed regret for issuing the pardon, saying that "it wasn't worth the damage to my reputation."

Clinton's critics alleged that Rich's pardon had been bought, as Denise Rich had given more than $1 million[21] to Clinton's political party (the Democratic Party), including more than $100,000 to the Senate campaign of the president's wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and $450,000 to the Clinton Library foundation during Clinton's time in office.[22] Clinton explained his decision by noting that similar cases were settled in civil, not criminal court.

Clinton also cited clemency pleas he had received from Israeli government officials, including then-Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Rich had made substantial donations to Israeli charitable foundations over the years, and many senior Israeli officials, such as Shimon Peres and Ehud Olmert, argued on his behalf behind the scenes.[23] Speculation about another rationale for Rich's pardon involved his alleged involvement with the Israeli intelligence community.[24][25] Rich reluctantly acknowledged in interviews with his biographer, Daniel Ammann, that he had assisted the Mossad, Israel’s intelligence service, a claim that Ammann said was confirmed by a former Israeli intelligence officer. According to Ammann, Rich had helped finance the Mossad's operations and had supplied Israel with strategic amounts of Iranian oil through a secret oil pipeline. The aide to Rich who had persuaded Denise Rich to personally ask President Clinton to review Rich's pardon request was a former chief of the Mossad, Avner Azulay. Another former Mossad chief, Shabtai Shavit, had also urged Clinton to pardon Rich,[26] whom he said had routinely allowed intelligence agents to use his offices around the world.

Federal Prosecutor Mary Jo White was appointed to investigate Clinton's last-minute pardon of Rich.[27] She stepped down before the investigation was finished and was replaced by James Comey, who was critical of Clinton's pardons and of then-Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder's pardon recommendation.[28] Rich's lawyer, Jack Quinn, had previously been Clinton's White House Counsel and chief of staff to Clinton's Vice President, Al Gore, and had had a close relationship with Holder. According to Quinn, Holder had advised that standard procedures be bypassed and the pardon petition be submitted directly to the White House.[29]{{#tag:ref|Holder, however, during his Senate confirmation hearing to become Attorney General in 2009, denied that he had attempted to circumvent the standard procedures for consideration of presidential pardons.[30] Holder did say that he had "made mistakes" and "made assumptions that turned out not to be true" while managing the pardon request. Congressional investigations were also launched. Clinton's top advisors, Chief of Staff John Podesta, White House Counsel Beth Nolan, and advisor Bruce Lindsey, testified that nearly all of the White House staff advising the president on the pardon request had urged Clinton to not grant Rich a pardon.[31] Federal investigators ultimately found no evidence of criminal activity.

As a condition of the pardon, it was made clear that Rich would drop all procedural defences against any civil actions brought against him by the United States upon his return there. That condition was consistent with the position that his alleged wrongdoing warranted only civil penalties, not criminal punishment. Rich never returned to the United States.[32]

In an 18 February 2001 op-ed essay in The New York Times, Clinton (by then out of office) explained why he had pardoned Rich, noting that US tax professors Bernard Wolfman of the Harvard Law School and Martin Ginsburg of Georgetown University Law Center had concluded that no crime had been committed, and that Rich's companies' tax-reporting position had been reasonable. In the same essay, Clinton listed Lewis "Scooter" Libby as one of three "distinguished Republican lawyers" who supported a pardon for Rich. (Libby himself later received a presidential commutation for his involvement in the Plame affair.) During Congressional hearings after Rich's pardon, Libby, who had represented Rich from 1985 until the spring of 2000, denied that Rich had violated the tax laws but criticised him for trading with Iran at a time when that country was holding US hostages.[33]

Legacy

Glencore International AG was a corporate successor to Marc Rich & Co. One month before Rich died, it merged in May 2013 with another firm to become Glencore Xstrata headquartered in Switzerland. Trafigura Beheer BV, based in Netherlands is another corporate successor, though unrelated. Trafigura AG, is the main office, based in Lucerne, Switzerland.

Citizenship

Although Rich believed that he had relinquished his United States citizenship when he became a citizen of Spain, an appeals court ruled in 1991 that, for purposes of US law, Rich remained a citizen and therefore was still subject to US income taxes.[34] He also held Belgian, Bolivian,[35] Israeli, and Spanish passports.[36]

Private life

After spending several years in Zug, Switzerland, Rich moved to Meggen, a city in the Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland, residing in a house called "La villa rose" (the pink villa) on the shores of Swiss Lake Lucerne, where he zealously guarded his privacy. Rich owned property in the ski resort of St Moritz, Switzerland, and in Marbella, Spain. He was an art collector and friends said he lived surrounded by Renoirs, Monets and Picassos.[37]

Rich was a strong supporter of Israel throughout his life, having donated around $150 million to institutions such as the Israel Museum], Tel Aviv Museum, research centres and theatres over the years.[38]

Death

Rich died of a stroke on 26 June 2013, at a Lucerne hospital. He was 78 and is survived by two daughters, Ilona Schachter-Rich and Danielle Kilstock Rich. He was buried in Israel.[39]

Awards

In May 2007 Rich received an honorary doctorate from Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel, in recognition of his contribution to Israel and to the university's research programs.[40][41] He received the same honor from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheba, Israel, on 18 November 2007.[42] The Chaim Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer in suburban Tel-Aviv, Israel, honored Rich with the Sheba Humanitarian Award 2008. Former recipients of this award include actor Michael Douglas, actress Elizabeth Taylor, and former US President Gerald R. Ford.

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
John Deuss“Secretly procuring oil for South Africa is the business of a very select group of oil traders. Besides Deuss, the central players include West German Gert Lutter; Marc Rich, a fugitive from American justice; and the South Africa-based Italian, Marino Chiavelli.”John Deuss
Executive Intelligence Review
24 June 1988
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References

  1. Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.
  2. http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2001/may/13/features.magazine37
  3. http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss_news/King_of_oil_discloses_his_secret_lives.html?cid=7657620
  4. Los Angeles Times: "Pardon Reignites Jewish Stereotypes" by Walter Reich February 25, 2001
  5. http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/business/2012/10/ns-business-profile-marc-rich-glencores-fugitive-founder
  6. "Denise Rich", New York Social Diary
  7. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-26/marc-rich-fugitive-commodities-trader-in-80s-dies-78.html
  8. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7602780e-de5c-11e2-9b47-00144feab7de.html
  9. http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2013/jun/26/marc-rich-commodities-trader-fugitive-dies?INTCMP=SRCH
  10. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daniel-ammann/how-i-met-the-biggest-dev_b_368050.html
  11. Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.
  12. http://www.economist.com/news/obituary/21580438-marc-rich-king-commodities-died-june-26th-aged-78-marc-rich Marc Rich: Marc Rich, king of commodities, died on June 26th, aged 78
  13. "Former U.S. fugitive has local ties", Michael Mainville, The Prague Post, 28 February 2001
  14. http://books.google.com/books?id=ZWleLGIrwBcC&pg=PT167%7Caccessdate=19 February 2012
  15. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3071886/ns/news-special_coverage/t/double-life-marc-rich/#.UJE5d2dbxBl
  16. "My Reasons for the Pardons", W. J. Clinton, The New York Times, 18 February 2001
  17. BPS.org
  18. http://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/11/us/plotting-a-pardon-rich-cashed-in-a-world-of-chits-to-win-pardon.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm
  19. http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/23/us/clinton-pardons-democrats-this-time-clintons-find-their-support-buckling-weight.html?src=pm
  20. http://articles.latimes.com/2001/feb/21/news/mn-28265
  21. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/politics/jan-june01/richpardon_01-26.html
  22. http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-500395_162-57591058/pardoned-financier-marc-rich-dead-at-78/
  23. http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/jewish-philanthropist-marc-rich-a-key-donor-to-israel-dies-at-78-1.532134
  24. CNN Sunday Morning News, 18 February 2001: reporting by CNN correspondent Eileen O'Connor
  25. "The real reason Bill Clinton pardoned Marc Rich", Joe Conason, Salon, January 16, 2009
  26. http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/financier-marc-rich-who-fled-to-switzerland-in-1983-and-was-pardoned-by-clinton-dies-at-78/2013/06/26/c4b9f642-de44-11e2-bc84-8049224b33e1_story.html
  27. http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,106316,00.htm
  28. Letter from James Comey in respect of the nomination of Eric Holder to be Attorney General
  29. Ammann, Daniel. The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. ISBN 0-312-57074-0.
  30. http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/15/holder.hearings/
  31. http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=121734
  32. http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/06/26/uk-marcrich-idUKBRE95P0C920130626
  33. CNN, Inside politics: "GOP lawyer: Facts 'misconstrued' in Rich case"
  34. http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,99302,00.html
  35. http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2001/06/rich200106
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  40. "Pardoned billionaire to get honorary degree from Bar-Ilan University", Haaretz, 15 May 2007
  41. The Rich Foundations: "Marc Rich receives honorary doctorate"
  42. News @ BGU Winter 2008, "Six Honored for Their Outstanding Accomplishments", 11 April 2008

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