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The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX
Global Implications of Financial Secrecy
From Inside America’s Race to Hide the World’s Money — Apr 11, 2026
Inside America’s Race to Hide the World’s Money — Apr 11, 2026 — starts at 0:00
From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is revealed. I'm outlets it In a lot of ways, Alessandro Chesar is your typical entrepreneur. And even though he grew up in Silicon Valley, he did not grow up privileged. Not at all. Not even close. Alessandro is 40, he's married, has two kids, lives just outside of San Francisco. and was the first one in his family to go to college. My grandfather came to his country with you know not a dollar into his name and I mean he worked as a janitor for Elementary schools and movie he worked all around the clock. But fast forward a couple generations and Alessandro is trying to make it big. He gets a job in Silicon Valley at a company called Carta. It helps startups keep track of who owns stock in their companies. from employees to founders to investors. As vice president of sales, Alessandro is spending a lot of time with clients, and he starts to notice a pattern. In the way wealthy investors are handling their shares. most successful startup founders and investors. didn't just hold their shares in their name personally. they would move their shares into trust. Trusts are a way to hold on to and assets. Almost anything from a vacation house to a racehorse to shares of stock. Sometimes a founder would have ten or twelve trusts. uh for different family members that they would put their shares into. I thought they were just being generous. But that wasn't it. We did some research, and we learned. They did it because they were getting tax benefits. Which means that each trust can sell up to 10 million dollars and pay zero taxes. That limit has gone up to 15 million. Why doesn't everybody do this? We looked into it and we saw that You know, it costs on average over a hundred thousand dollars just to set it up. And so the fees are enormous and it really results in only the most successful and richest uh founders and investors are doing it and everybody else is not doing it. Includro, who feels outraged when he sells his own shares in Carta. My jaw dropped and I'm like, wait a second, you just paid zero taxes and I just paid maximum tax? You're an investor. You have way more money than I do. So Alessandro decides he's gonna shake things up. Found his own trust company called Get Dynasty. with the idea of making trusts affordable and available for everyone. We should be giving regular Americans access to the same tools that the richest people are using. Everybody should have access. Everyone should have access. What Alessandro was noticing was just one small part of the booming trust industry. Today on the show. Onshore is the new offshore. Americans no longer need to go overseas to Switzerland or the Cayman Islands to hide assets from the IRS. Because the US is now the number one spot in the world to stas your money. Global watchdog groups say when it comes to helping individuals conceal their, quote, finances from the rule of law, The US is the most complicit country. with the big april fifteenth tax deadline upon us. We're dedicating the whole show today to trusts. Trusts offer completely legal loopholes. the wealthy have long taken advantage of. to not pay their fair share in taxes. And while it may be legal to hide your money We wanna know what are the impacts. For the past few months, reporters Sally Hersch and Leah McGrath Goodman. have been digging into the growing domestic trust industry worth trillions of dollars. You're about to hear from them both. Sally starts us off. are a lot of Finance Bro podcasts out there. And lately Leah and I have been listening to a lot of them because Alessandro has been making the rounds. Meet Alessandro Chesser. A FinTech Trailblazer on a mission to democratize the state. Today on the show my guest is Alessandro Chesser from Our guest today actually does thousands of trusts. Alessandra wants everyday Americans, regular people, to be able to use the same tools that are normally only available to the super rich. You know, the richest Americans they Don't worry about getting sued or going bankrupt or getting divorced because all their assets are in. Asset protection trust. When you put your assets in this kind of trust, they're no longer in your name. So you're protected from creditors, like in a bankruptcy. The most common cause of bankruptcy in America is medical emergencies. So you if you have a medical emergency and you can't afford to pay the bills, you have to file a bankruptcy and you could lose all of your assets. But not if they're in a trust. To be clear, Alessandro isn't trying to be Bergdorfs or Saxmith Avenue. He wants to become more like the target or Macy's of the trust world. Because he thinks the rest of us get in on the secret the wealthy have been keeping. Well. For centuries. To Alessandro Trust protect hard earned assets. Groups that monitor corruption see them more as tools that can be easily abused. I think the trust industry is definitely in a negative light because. Richest people use trust to protect assets and reduce taxes, right? But the poor problem here is not that they're they're using it because it's perfectly legal. The issue here is that the average American can't afford to use it, doesn't have access, has to deal with, you know, maximum taxes, has to deal with zero asset protection. And because of that, Alessandro says the rich just keep getting richer. While everyone else stays behind. The wealth gap is real, and it's at its highest level since data was first collected over thirty years ago. And when you account for hidden wealth and secret trusts. It becomes even more extreme. Many states have laws that keep trust private. And that makes it extra difficult to know the true extent of people's wealth. But one place where it can all come out is in the courtroom. Especially big stakes divorce battles. The details of messy divorces pop up everywhere. Take the case of the Paulsons, Jenny and John, one of the most famous hedge fund billionaires on Wall Street. The Balsins had an apartment on Fift Avenue, a ranch in Aspen that John bought from a Southeast Prince. John Left Jenny for registered dietitian and fitness influencer. Classic story. Or not so classic story. Because Jenny alleged that John had put both properties and trusts along with billions in cash. Not only that. She said John kept the trust secret. He said the trusts were for their two kids. But there's no way to know the truth because the trusts are totally private. Lani Davis is one of the lawyers advising Jenny Paulson. You can be Hard to get a hold of. Apologies for my rush. I I've got a judge. A judge on the other line. Sorry. I'm just gonna come right out and say it. In the world of law or politics, we any deal. He's worked with everyone from Martha Stewart to Michael Cohen, President Trump's lawyer, during another case of financial secrecy, the hush money sent to Stormy Daniels. The use of trust. has developed over decades as press become More and more sophisticated and more and more difficult. to figure out because one trust owns another trust owns another trust and each one is incorporated in a different country. Laney says sometimes people only find out about them by accident. In cases like this, the soon to be ex-wife might open the mail and find a financial statement for their spouse's secret trust. Or they could find out in court when both parties are required to disclose if they have trust. But even if you can afford a fancy lawyer like Lanny. And subpoena for documents, it can still be nearly impossible to pierce a trust or know what's inside. And most people who try to hide their assets try to make it as difficult as possible to trace with the assets. are really sitting what bank account, what country. So it can be complicated. Selene says the only hope in some of these cases is that public pressure forces the person with the money to consider settling. That's what happened in the Paulson case. This matter became uh very controversial, not from me, not from anything that I did. Page six article in the New York Post Page six meaning a tabloid of story about him taking up with a nutritionist who he met on Instagram and that publicity and media plus the idea of Transferring money from the marital estate into a secret trust. And this is just my opinion. is one reason why he's not the secretary of the treasury. Paulson actually took himself out of the running, citing, quote, complex financial obligations. Meanwhile, the divorce has been dragging on for years. Divorce disput aren't the only place that trusts get revealed. They come up in other kinds of big lawsuits too, like when the Sackler family, the one behind the Purdue Pharma Empire, used offshore trusts to try to hide billions from victims of the opioid crisis. And they also pop up in big document leaks. Like back in 2021, when the Pandora papers revealed the several people being investigated for dealing drugs, money laundering, and exposing workers to toxic chemicals, heather assets, and trusts. Trusts are secretive and private. So we asked Alessandro, how do trust companies even know who they're dealing with? You know regulations that we have to go through as a licensed trust company. We can't just take anybody's money. Like we have to do background checks. We have to see if there's any negative press on them in their country. In other words, KYC or know your customer. For example, American trust companies are not allowed to do business with customers living in Russia, especially oligarchs. These are federal rules. To complicate things, states have rules of their own. It's really hard to know who's enforcing what. There's always two different sides of the story, right? And so from uh national side, like it's great. We want America to be number one for money. We want all the money flowing here, of course. Does it open up the opportunity for bad actors? Of course. But there's both. There's both sides, right? And you have good money and you have bad money flowing in. But there are a lot of disagreements about what bad money is. Yes, there are criminals, but what about extreme wealth? For more than a century there have been laws on the books trying to prevent an American aristocracy. There's even a group of millionaires who want to prevent it too. They're called the patriotic millionaires. Bob Lord works with them. Bob, uh I think the first question is is how do you become a member of the Patriotic Millionaires? Do you have to be a millionaire? Uh you have to be a little more than a millionaire, actually. You have to have wealth of a good bit more than a million dollars. Uh so that's that's the wealth requirement. And then you have to have a conscience. Bob says there are about 200 members and their mission is pretty simple. It's tax the rich, pay the people, spread the power. Robin Hood, but wealthy. And instead of arrows Progressive tax policy. Bob isn't super wealthy himself. By the way, we did ask him. Are you a millionaire? I am not a patriotic millionaire. I'm on I'm the um I'm the senior vice president for tax policy for the organization, but I'm not myself a member. For a minute I thought you were going to say you were an unpatriotic millionaire, but you're okay. Bob is actually a tax lawyer and he's worked with really wealthy clients. So he knows a thing or two about estate planning. Do we have a sense? How much How much in taxes is lost? Through Tax avoidance through tax evasion. Let's do both. Okay. Let's start with avoidance. If you look at one area, estate taxation. It's absolutely huge. If you look at the amount of wealth That is passing. From households in this high echelon, this top zero point one percent. households with over fifty million dollars of wealth. And you try to estimate If their wealth was all subject. how much revenue there would be. versus how much revenue actually is collected. I'd say we lose. More than 80%. the potential revenue. The estate tax was passed over one hundred years ago. It was the end of the Gilded Age. The country had just seen this tiny handful of families think Carnegie's, Asters, Morgan's, like JP, amass this unprecedented amount of wealth. Teddy Roosevelt with his round glasses and bristly mustache wanted to prevent these family dynasties. So he pushed, and the estate tax was passed in 1916. But over the years it's been made way weaker by trusts. Today, your heirs are supposed to pay tax on estates worth more than $15 million. But not really, because before you die, you can just stick what you own in some trusts. It's become the norm for wealthy families to avoid the tax. During the first Trump administration, White House economic advisor Gary Cohn said, Only morons pay the estate tax. So when uh an ordinary American says, Why should I care? If somebody makes a lot of money why shouldn't they do it their way? Because if you concentrate That much wealth. in a relative handful of of families. Concentrating that much power. Elon Musk put $270 million into Trump's campaign, bought himself a position early on in Trump's administration, and the $270 million that Musk invested really in that campaign. Was 0.1% of his wealth. Yeah, his wealth grows that much in a matter of days. So it was a really, really modest expenditure for him. And yet he could really overwhelm the campaign finance system that way. And it becomes this vicious cycle where once they have the ability to buy political power, they can create more wealth. and they can use that additional wealth to get more political power. Bob and Alessandro both see the tax system as broken. They both want large scale systemic change. Bob, that means reform. For Alessandro, it means blowing up the system. You're not gonna fix that problem. by complaining about it and saying, Oh, pay your fair share. It's just not gonna fix anything. The way you fix the problem is by giving everybody access to the same tools. And then if nobody's paying capital gains taxes on startup. And and nobody's paying, you know, any other potential attacks. Like if the IRS is going bankrupt now, then maybe the system will get fixed. Reality check It is really hard to do this, and Alessandro has a long way to go. In the meantime, we're at the beginning of the largest wealth transfer in the history of the United States. mainly from baby boomers. As they die, they're going to pass on an amount of wealth so large it almost feels like an abstraction. One hundred and twenty four trillion dollars. And the trust industry? Gearing up for the boom. Coming up, Sally and Leah travel to the epicenter of this boom. And it's not exactly what you might expect. So we just walked out of the airport and the first thing that we notice is the smell. It is a pig plant. It's hard to miss. That's next. On reveal. Don't go anywhere. From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is revealed. I'm outlets. There's a very Particular odor that hits you square in the face when you land in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. So we just walked out of the airport and the first thing that we notice is the smell. It is a pig plant. It's hard to miss. Reporter Sally Hersch and her reporting partner, Leah McGrath Goodman, have just arrived. This is farm country. But that's not why they're here. Sally and Leah are headed downtown because Sioux Falls is also trust country, and that is where the industry is centered. Jay Jademan and Dan Glenard, two local lawyers, are gonna show them around. Good to meet you, Sally. Nice to meet you. My colleague is just getting. Jay kicks things off. We are the we are the heart of the business community over here at the intersection of 11th Street and Phillips Avenue in downtown Sofall, South Dakota. Here is where the magic happens. I mean here is restaurants, uh banks, trust companies. I mean, if if you are in Sofalls, this is where you wanna be on this fine day. Jay and Dan both moved here to get jobs in the finance industry that took hold decades ago. When a man who Dan says locals call while Bill was governor. And what he did is the Supreme Court. Said that Usuary rates could be defined by the states, basically. And so the whole credit card industry, if you look at your credit card bill, is a lot of it's in South Dakota now. Usury is a fancy word for lending at an excessive interest rate. And what Dan's talking about is in 1978, The Supreme Court decided that banks and credit card companies could use the interest rate in the state where they're headquartered instead of the home state of their customers. Which of course meant that companies went shopping for states with the most lenient rules. Wild Bill saw an opportunity. he pushed through an emergency bill that let lenders raise interest rates as high as they wanted. That made South Dakota a magnet for credit card companies. Financial institutions now hold $3.7 trillion here, but that's not all credit card money. Over $900 billion comes from the trust industry. And I just want to point out one thing before we move any further. Most of these buildings are like two stories high. I see a few that are three stories. It's very like cute. It's not like tall skyscrapers. As Leah and Sally are standing outside the trust companies tucked between coffee shops, chic boutiques, and five and dimes, they're surprised because you would never suspect so much money is held here. One question for you guys. If we were to drive outside of the city limits, what would we see? Corn and soybeans. So this billion dollar city center. We drive outside just a little ways and it's cornfields. It's cornfields. Corn and soybean fields. This land of corn and soybean fields is investing in a new crop, and it's paying off. In just five years, the size of the trust industry in South Dakota has more than doubled. Sally and Leah head to the center of the action and ask if there's enough oversight as the billions pour in. The population in Sioux Falls is small, just over a couple hundred thousand, and about a hundred trust companies have set up shop here. It's an industry built on privacy, so it was hard to find someone willing to talk. But eventually we did. David Warren. How's that? Are we all okay? I can hear you very well. Like Alessandro, he runs his own company, Bridgeford Trust. Only his is a lot bigger. Twive billion dollars in assets. Thanks for reaching out to us. How South Dakota is it I heard it's not too cold there today. You got lucky, it's sunny. It's really beautiful. It's my first time here. David doesn't actually live in South Dakota. He made it clear that like many people, he just opened his business here to take advantage of all the trust friendly laws. So we hopped on a Zoom call with him from the red velvet couch of our Victorian inn in Sioux Falls. David sees the work that he does as something that can help families, even save lives. He likes to use the word virtuous to describe it. What has happened unequivocally, and some people don't like it when I say this, but It's the truth. The United States has been considered in the last three or four years as a tax haven and a privacy haven and an asset protection haven. People get nervous about that word haven, but New York Times used it, so I can use it. And so the point is international families that are in countries that are far less stable than the United States are looking for stability and certainty and safety. And privacy. And so I feel like we're doing very good work and virtuous work because these family in some cases, like in Mexico, it's a matter of life and death. I mean, if the Mexican family is discovered to be worth a billion dollars. Their kids are gonna be targeted and they're gonna be kidnapped and people it happens all the time. So I I get very defensive of our industry because it's easy to criticize, but we're not selling taxophage and we're not working giving ass protection to people who are breaking the law. What we're doing is very virtuous, I believe. David says there are other good reasons to create trust too. He says wealth can be destructive. Take the rich families who pass on their wealth over generations. That'd be great for all of us to have a billion dollars, but you know what happens to third generation? They're all drug addicts, they're killing themselves, and they're not productive members of society. So that's why I say what we're doing is pretty virtuous because this money can destroy does destroy families. Put the money in a trust though and you can set it up so that third generation can only spend it on certain things, like say college or a house. Trust companies like David's love South Dakota. The state has gone out of its way to sell itself, the same way it did with credit card companies. In nineteen ninety seven, Governor Janglow, the guy locals call Wild Bill. Establish the Governor's Task Force on Trust Administration Review and Reform. David is a fan. Oh, I love the task for it. It's the only state in the country that I'm aware of that has it. It's one of the reasons why I came to South Dakota. The task force's goal, and I am quoting from the South Dakota Division of Banking website here, is establishing and maintaining South Dakota stature as the premier trust jurisdiction in the United States. Some see it as a rubber stamp committee, but not David. It is extremely effective, as you probably know. They they develop a bill every year. called the Governor's Bill. And really what it's there to do is to continue to enhance, tweak the trust laws, and continue to keep South Dakota, I believe, number one. The bill is never not passed. And I think in most cases it's all they passed unanimously. And these bills have led to a kaleidoscopic range of trust products for every kind of customer. There's trust for the unborn. There's the quiet trust where the beneficiary doesn't even know the trust exists. And there's the trust that doesn't require a beneficiary at all. Purpose trust. What is a purpose trust? What's the purpose of a purpose trust? Uh I I love the purpose trust. Uh uh the definition of the purpose trust is to exist to perpetuate a particular purpose or paradigm or or or or goal or objective. So it doesn't necessarily benefit a person, a beneficiary. It benefits a concept, which I love. It turns out the most common concept is a pet. people leaving money to their pug or Chihuahua or both. But as you already know, trust come with a far less cute and far more dangerous side. The secrecy they offer leaves room for serious criminal activity. Victoria Hanneman is a professor at the University of Georgia Law School. She specializes in taxes, trusts, and estates. And she's been watching as states compete to be the most trust friendly places in the country. States like Wyoming. Alaska. Tennessee. Especially Nevada. Nevada is giving South Dakota a run for its money. You know the end of the day there Many Things that make Nevada a more attractive trust jurisdiction. Including the fact that if you visit, you may not get snowed in for a week eating at a TGI Fridays next to an airport. Seriously though, Victoria's concerned about secrecy, wealth disparity, and more. From her point of view, these states are in a race to the bottom. strengthening laws that make trusts secretive and protect them from outside interference, like lawsuits. From the client perspective, these are positives, and there are actual lists that rank the states. Picture US News and World report for college rankings, but a state by state Ranking of states that are the best state to set a trust up in. We were in a Zoom call with Victoria when we asked if we could look at a list together. I actually have these lists open. Can we can I screen share for a minute? Okay, South Dakota. Tell us what we're looking at. The first category is whether or not You can have A Trust that lasts forever. So you notice that The South Dakota Trust statute has no time limit. You can have a perpetual trust. Nevada puts a limit of three hundred and sixty five years. Why well wait a second. We have to stop you here for a second. Why would you need a trust that lasts forever? Because if the goal is to amass wealth. You're only going to die being able to spend so much of it. Right. The wealthy and the ultra wealthy seem very interested in cryogenic preservation after death. They want to live forever. They want to be frozen and potentially be brought back. This is the conversation in the Hamptons right now. And this is like this is your bank account when you come back. Well, so here's the thing. Like if you're resurrected, you don't want to come back forward. You don't want to be brought back to life just to have to fly commercial. David, the trust company owner, knew all about the kind of trust Victoria's talking about. It's a kind of purpose trust. So we asked him if South Dakota is a hot spot for them. It has the best and most flexible purpose trust statute in the country. So I think the answer is yes, and that's why they're coming to South Dakota. And South Dakota, you know, they want these statues to be the best in the country, by the way. They're doing this on purpose, as I'm sure you've learned. This isn't accidental. This industry is very important to the economy of of uh South Dakota, and I actually think it's brilliant. Forever trust hadn't been possible because states had laws limiting how long a trust could last. That was supposed to prevent the hoarding of wealth over generations. But South Dakota was the first state to make trusts that last forever legal. Still, leaving money to a future, thought out, cryogenic self is untrodden legal territory. It's just it's fascinating because the cryogenics trusts are really testing the outward boundaries of theory. on how flexible we want these instruments to be. And do we even give a shit about wealth inequality and what that's gonna look like in two or three centuries as money just Compounds. The wealth gap not just between the rich and poor, but the wealth gap between the dead and alive. To be clear, this is a case of trust diverting money out of the tax system. Mm. Possibly forever. And you also have the IRS who refuses to comment right now on what happens if you come back to life. We don't know if you're going to be treated as a new taxpayer or as an existing taxpayer. Aside from tax questions about corpsicles, as Victoria likes to call them, there are more pressing matters when it comes to trusts. Victoria says it's really the secrecy that's the big worry. And that's something South Dakota excels at. So no public trust registries and limited disclosures. And trusty silence provisions. and quiet trust statutes. So beneficiaries may not even know that a trust exists and creditors can't find assets and courts don't have any visibility unless litigation's forced. So there are statutes protecting transparency and secrecy, which also as an aside makes it extraordinarily difficult for the federal government. to ensure that Um Assets. are being taxed properly. Right. If you can't find assets. You can't audit assets. We wanted to ask whether South Dakota is going too far and if there's enough oversight. So we reached out to Governor Larry Roden's office. His press secretary emailed a statement that said the trust industry in South Dakota is a major reason why the state has, quote, one of the strongest economies in the nation. And that it's following federal laws and keeping bad actors out. But that was it. The governor declined to be interviewed. We also tried Brett Aftal, the head of the state's division of banking, the main regulator. He also declined. We even reached out to the chair of the governor's task force on trusts, Jennifer Bunkers, multiple times. She didn't respond. The task force has 10 members, and almost all of them work at law firms and trust companies right here in Sioux Falls. So we went looking for them. So we just stopped at our first office. It was Dorsey and Whitney Trust Company and He was in a meeting, so we're still on the trail for people at the Trust Task Force. We are at stop number two, Trident Trust Company. Here at General Trust Company, number three on our list. So the office was completely empty. So it looks like it moved. We're looking we're looking for General Trust Company. They were listed as being on the second floor and wondering if you know if they're still in the building. You have no idea? Check with the owner of the building. Two doors down. Okay. It was a wash. No one would talk to us. Except one guy, Tom Simmons. He's a trust lawyer, a professor at the University of South Dakota's Knutsen School of Law. And a member of the State Trust Task Force. Unlike someone who works at a law firm or secret of trust company. Tom says he gets a pat on the back when he gets quoted in the press. That's why he was open to speaking with us. Tom is firmly pro-trust. I think it's fair to say it means jobs. It means Pretty well paid. Jobs, uh white collar. Jobs and an industry. That Uh doesn't have a lot of smoke stacks. Right. Right. There's no like lumber coal. That's there's not a lot. There's no there's no trust Uh open pit miner. Right. Here's Tom's philosophy about trust. He thinks the wealth gap is real, but the trust only play a small role. In fact, he doesn't think trusts are that problematic. And he says worries about them being used for nefarious purposes. Are overblown. I think honestly if you're a really bad guy like from the breaking bad show. And you had the barrels of money and you wanted to stick it somewhere. I think Walter White buries it in the desert and that doesn't turn out that well. But he's trying to hide ill gotten funds. I would think that one of the last places you would want to put criminal enterprise funds is in a trust with a trust company or a bank. because of their reporting requirements to law enforcement and And taxing authorities. There are reporting requirements, but over the years they've been watered down. And there are other problems. Everything from a lack of reporting to a lack of enforcement. When you talk to Tom, you learn pretty quickly that he has this very abstract. This one idea he talks about. Bad people can have money that's clean. I once mentioned this is in an interview and and my wife heard it and cautioned me, like, never make that example again, but I'm I'm gonna go ahead and do it. So You take you take Bill Cosby. Bill Cosby has done criminal horrible offensive repulsive things. I don't know that he should pre- be prohibited from having a bank account. What if those horrible repulsive things had to do with money? So that that's a very good point because my the point with that example is that the horrible things that he did. didn't generate funds. And so we could we could say that all of the funds that Bill Cosby had are from ISPY and Sesame Street and Jell O commercials, and that's those aren't ill-begotten funds. Last month Bill Cosby lost a nearly sixty million dollar civil suit. So yes, maybe his jello money isn't ill begotten. In theory, someone like him could still use trusts to hide assets to avoid legal penalties. When it comes to potentially dirty money, like the kind from foreign autocratic leaders sanctioned by the US. Tom says it's not always black and white. Pandora Papers disclosures that I thought was interesting was There was a trust company. With a trust. one of Vladimir Putin's girlfriends. That doesn't necessarily tell us that there was anything wrong about the funds that were in the account. On the other hand, those funds Might have belonged to Putin himself. We just don't know. And that's why the secrecy of a trust is a major problem. Still, we want to be clear that there are those who use trusts for totally legit reasons. Like when a family creates a trust for one of their kids with a disability who can't care for themselves. Tom sees the privacy trust provide in those kinds of cases as necessary. Even humane. Since none of the state banking regulators would talk to us, we had a lot of questions for Tom. For example, yes, the state is supposed to examine trust companies every two to three years, but they don't share the results or even verify if they were done at all. Why not? Like if you're a journalist and The state is saying we're really careful with compliance and governance. We do this exam every twenty four months and then you see something like a trust company have a big problem. The question is is was anyone examining them? And so when the state comes back and says that's not public information, it doesn't have great optics. I'm curious if there are other reasons why the state would think that it would be worthwhile to kind of keep things like that hidden. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, I would just speculate that I guess I can see the discussions being If we if we tell the public We examined this trust company last month. Is that really helpful information for consumers in any way? Or is it potentially misleading? Does it suggest they were in trouble? And that's why they you know, if I get audited by the IRS, it's not a regular occurrence and it's probably a bad thing. And I I I would imagine that some of the discussion I think you can you can safely say, though, that if the state is required to examine every trust company every two years, that they're doing that. And if they won't confirm when the last examination was, it's just because their rules don't permit that. You said that um if the state is supposed to inspect trust companies every twenty four months that we can assume that it's done so? And I thought, What? Are you kidding me? Not where I come from. Like we can't trust the government for anything. And so I was like, really? Like, really? Are we supposed to just trust this the government when it and I see you kind of Cracking up in your quiet way, smiling. It's the first time a conservative C ever said trust the government. I personally would have a high degree of confidence that the division of banking is being operated according to the rules. I know enough people that work there that are of very high integrity that that would be something that if I had to guess, I would guess that they're doing it by the book. David Warren, the owner of the trust company we heard from earlier. did confirm that his trust company had been examined by state auditors. It's tedious and it's a lot of work and they go they really go everything with a fine tooth comb and they should. Because if we're selling ourselves in the marketplace as doing good work and not doing anything bad. Then we have nothing to hide. And I mean you would not believe how extensive these regulate regulatory exams are. And they're going they're ongoing for weeks and weeks and weeks. David really only has one quibble. Once the state does the examination, they rate the company, kind of like the way the Department of Health rates restaurants. Only he says they won't let the trust companies publicize their ratings. I'm like, why it's like getting a report card and you got an A. I can't tell anybody. What's the point of going to have a, you know, what's the point of having a report card? It also means the public can't know how Trust Company stacks up. We searched high and low, but couldn't find any record that South Dakota had ever cracked down on one of its trust companies for wrongdoing. Tom also told us the state had never revoked a trust company charter. We asked the division of banking about this. They never responded. Just one more layer of secrecy. What's happening in South Dakota is much larger than this one state. And it's a vast network of more than just trust companies. You know, it's two thousand tax lawyers in Washington, DC, and they're not working for you and me. The impact on the nation and the world. That's next on Reveal. From the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX, this is revealed. I'm Al Ludson. We've been telling you about the booming trust industry in South Dakota. Now we're gonna introduce you to a guy who can explain the implications of financial secrecy far beyond Sioux Falls. Jim Henry is a lawyer who spent years working for corporations like General Electric, IBM, and the international consulting firm McKinsey <unk> Company, where he was the director of economic research. Today, Jim is a Global Justice Fellow and Lecturer at Yale. and the founder and chairman of United Against Money Laundering, an international group that works to expose financial crime. He also helped create the tax justice network and organization that advocates against tax havens. Jim has been investigating tax havens for five decades. and he's joining me to talk about what he's learned. Jim, thanks so much for being here. Good to be with you. Take me back. What did the tax haven landscape look like when you first started investigating this industry? When I started studying this industry, there were fifteen offshore havens at most. Switzerland, Panama, the Channel Islands. Uh by now there's more than a hundred and sixty. and it's become an explosive uh industry and the US has taken on the role Of being the biggest laundromat for the world's money with Lots of Russian money Chinese money. uh money from the developing countries. And the Middle East pouring into the United States uh because it is a secrecy haven. And it's also the center point for the enablers. So w what do you mean by enablers? A lot of folks have focused on financial secrecy jurisdictions, you know, the top havens. But in the background There's an industry that cuts across borders. That's populated by banks, hedge funds. Asset managers. and accounting firms. There are giant international law firms that make their living every day by setting up secrecy Structures that protect Their clients from regulation from disclosure from their relatives who want to sue them. uh you know, for a share of the trust. And those are the key players in terms of Exercising regulatory influence. you know, it's two thousand tax lawyers in Washington, D C and they're not working for you and me. You know, I always thought that places like I don't know The Bahamas or Somewhere like Switzerland, where the places that people were hiding money because of financial regulation. But actually the United States is a place where people are doing that. Well, beginning in the late nineties, many states in the United States started offering L Cs in addition to Delaware, but they also started to offer trusts. And by now there's fifteen states. That offer secretive trusts that are as good as anything you can find in uh you know the Channel Islands or Cook Islands. You know, they're offering protection against creditors. They had very short statute of limitations. the US role has become uh paramount. There's no question that the total sums that we're talking about in terms of assets that are protected by financial secrecy in the case of trusts. are you know tens of trillions of dollars in the case of the United States. And that we become the largest single market for. Financial secrecy. Yeah. Who's responsible for enforcing laws when it comes to You know, these financial crimes. The ones that are actually financial crimes because a lot of this stuff has been codified, right? Um is is it' it's legal. Yeah. Um, but the things that are not legal Who is tasked with enforcing those laws? Well the Powers unfortunately distributed all over the federal government. But let me take the example of US Treasury. They have a unit called FinCEN. Uh they have about two hundred people with a budget of about two hundred million dollars. And they are extremely stressed. They're administering a system that the banks every year spend about fifty five to sixty billion dollars to identify transactions that are quote suspicious. This is a a gigantic case of Kabuki theater because they're piling up all of these identified suspicious activity reports and trying to keep up with uh having them investigated by either the IRS criminal division. Or the FBI. Uh, you know, law enforcement is uh only able to select a tiny fraction of these suspicious activity reports. Uh to honor. But in the case of specific example, we had uh JP Morgan having identified more than four thousand one hundred and twenty five suspicious activity reports involving Jeffrey Epstein. Uh they sat on those until Epstein died because they didn't want to raise tackles. And Epstein, it turned out, had introduced A lot of influential clients to JP Morgan. So that's an example of where FinCEN reports were being covered up. You know, it isn't really a partisan issue. I mean if the Biden administration also sat on these Epstein Fin Sen reports. he was in office. Uh there are a lot of laws that have been on the books to fight bribery, corruption. And money laundering. And uh the the real issue is whether you have administrations that are willing to enforce them, what kind of resources they have. How do these Financial crimes affect Everyday Americans In ways that maybe we don't know of. Well, they're affecting our political system. They are making our lawmakers very responsive to certain interests rather than others. Uh you visited South Dakota. I mean This industry has enormous influence on the state level. As well as in the federal government. But in terms of Just having a tax code that's not responsive to ordinary Americans. It's become profoundly regressive. And I think that's One impact they need to understand is how The tax system has been corrupted. Do you see any any Glimmers of hope anywhere? Well, in principle the problems that we're solving, uh we're to we're addressing here are relatively straightforward. I mean it isn't like we're trying to cure cancer here, and we just need to get back to working constructively. And the global haven industry, I think, is an example. uh of a problem that's relatively easy to solve. You know, it's not Theoretical issue. You have outrageous levels of financial secrecy. You have Uh really unfair corporate taxation that's basically not enforced. These are all things that are not technical problems, they are political problems. The real challenge for us uh think across borders is to organize. And to identify a handful of very practical solutions that we can support. In New York State right now, for example, I'm supporting a a movement to restore a one percent tax on stock trades. which was on the books from nineteen oh five until nineteen eighty two. Uh since then it has been rebated to Wall Street. You're talking about seventy five to a hundred billion dollars a year. It's being handed back. uh to Wall Street. But that's an example of a very practical Progressive sales tax. something that people should organize around and get behind. But it turns out when you look at who are the biggest contributors to political parties in New York, They are the high frequency traders on Wall Street. Uh and that includes the Democratic Party's biggest donors. Yeah. So, you know, it's a political problem and we somehow have not been able to tackle. These problems that have Really solid, I would say, uh solutions. Jim Henry, thank you so much for talking to me today. Great. My pleasure. Keep up the good work. That was Jim Henry, an economist, attorney, and tax haven expert. Sally Hersch and Leah McGrath Goodman reported today's show. Sally also produced the episode with help from Claire Davenport. Cynthia Rodriguez edited the show. Thanks to Nolan Edgar for help with sound engineering at Brattleboro Community Television. Artist Chariskus and Melvis Acosta fact check today's show. Legal review by Victoria Baronetsky and James Chadwick. Our production manager is the great Zulemacab, score and sound designed by the Dynamic Duo, Jay Breezy, Mr. Jim Briggs, and Fernando, my man, yo Aruda. Take Telanitas is our deputy executive producer. Our executive producer is Brett Myers. Our theme music is by Camarado Lightning. Support for reveals provided by the Reva and David Logan Foundation, the John D and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Park Foundation, the Schmidt Family Foundation, and the Hellman Foundation. Support for Reveal is also provided by you, our listeners. We are a co-production of the Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX. I'm Al Ledson. And remember, Always more to the story.
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