• FLASHBACK: Poroshenko Ukrainian Money Laundering Scheme Explained

    April 16, 2022
    3
    Poroshenko IMF Aid Money Laundering Scheme Explained
    President Barack Obama speaks to President Petro Poroshenko at the Oval Office

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    THIS ARTICLE WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON OCTOBER 21, 2019

    As promised, we are now releasing complicated information on the alleged scheme by former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and related officials to launder hundreds of millions of dollars via the Ukrainian sovereign bond market, with the help of the Bank of Ukraine.

    CD Media can confirm this scheme is under investigation by the Ukrainian Prosecutor General and the information has been provided to the FBI.

    First some background.

    Valeriya Gontareva, the former head of the Bank of Ukraine (NBU - Ukrainian central bank) made her reputation at ING Bank where she was responsible for local trading of Ukrainian debt. Her nickname was 'Lerka-Obligashka", loosely translated to English as "Valery-Obligation". She met Poroshenko when she worked at ING and became a trusted financial advisor of the soon to be minister and then president of Ukraine.

    Leaving ING Bank, Gontareva obtained financing from Poroshenko and investors. She and others from the finance sector created ICU Capital -- an investment brokerage house and later investment bank. Her partner at ICU included Makar Paseniuk, a nephew of Oleksandr Paseniuk, and Konstantin Stetsenko. The work team was sourced from various places, including BNP Paribas, ING, Calyon Bank, etc.

    Sources Reveal International Warrant Has Been Issued For Arrest Of Democratic Poster Child Valeriya Gontareva (Former Head of Bank Of Ukraine) For Money Laundering
    Former Governor of the National Bank of Ukraine Valeria Gontareva
    Image by
    Julia berezovska

    As head of the Bank of Ukraine, Gontareva issued liquidity financing for 'special banks'. In Ukraine, this procedure is known as 'refinans' -- a short name for 'refinancing' credit based on collateral deposited by commercial banks at the central bank. Complaintants to the Ukrainian prosecutor's office allege Gontareva and her 'refinancing team' received kickbacks of 10-15% from the procedure. The choice of banks to credit is totally under the control of a few specific individuals at NBU -- the head of the central bank, the head of monitoring, and the head of the banking sector. Gontareva controlled the refinancing rate. It is worth remembering that Gontareva was the head of NBU for three years, yet still remained an owner of ICU the entire time.

    The head of the central bank works with the head of internal debt at the Ukrainian Ministry of Finance (MOF). The MOF issues local bonds (OVGZ) for sale to state-owned banks (Privat Bank, Ukrasbank, Oschadbank) at a discount. The treasury heads of state-owned banks work with the head of NBU to obtain financing from NBU. The NBU could use IMF aid money for the financing.

    After the state-owned banks buy OVGZ, they sell the securities with a larger discount to certain 'shell companies' in Ukraine, or offshore, administered by ICU Capital and others. The shell companies then sell the bonds back to the state-owned banks at a higher price, and ICU or other brokerage firms keep the spread. The state-owned banks will then wait for redemption, or use the bonds as repo collateral at the Bank of Ukraine.

    The end result is that state-owned banks book losses, and the brokerage firms book profits, very large profits. The schemes are a bit different each time and might include multiple 'middleman' shell companies as intermediaries. What is sure is that all of the transactions are visible to NBU. NBU's head of monitoring and the deputy of NBU see the transactions, but close their eyes, not flagging the illicit schemes, alleges prosecutors.

    According to our sources, who at this time do not want to be identified due to fear of retribution, these schemes are performed with many captive banks in Ukraine. There are more than 100 cases open against money laundering in Ukraine using OVGZ. The amount of money laundering numbers in the billions of dollars.

    CD Media Releasing Information On Poroshenko Money Laundering/Biden Cover Up, In Series Of Articles, With Sourcing
    One version of the complicated money laundering scheme of former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko

    The General Prosecutor's Office of Ukraine has issued 2 requests for Valeriya Gontareva that have been declared in open media to answer these accusations; she has refused to speak to the prosecutor and has fled to London. Requests to answer questions have also been issued for Makar Paseniuk and Konstantin Stetsenko. Per the Ukrainian legal code, a warrant can be issued for Gontareva's arrest and possibly already has been.

    Stay tuned on that note.

    CD Media will be releasing a piece shortly on the efforts of the Democratic Party and its conspirators to white-wash the reputation of Gontareva as possible charges are brought. We will also be releasing information on the real story behind the nationalization of Privat Bank in Ukraine.

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    CDM Staff

    The mission at Creative Destruction Media is to be the catalyst for the "process of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one."
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    Doubting Thomas

    Is this how Obama’s net worth went from $6 million (from a book deal) when he entered office to $40 million when he left office?

    Daniel Peters

    Biden is addicted to money laundering, he is jonesin so bad he started a war to start a new money laundering scheme using USA Tax Dollars given to the poor little Ukraine, Biden's war is about making the Biden Crime Family rich. Using your Dollars.

    Missy

    I keep wondering where Valarie Jaresko was in all this...Made an instant Ukrainian citizen so she could become the Ukrainian finance minister,, and then after that, she heads up PROMESA in Puerto Rico, with all those billions of taxpayer dollars flowing into the ultra-corrupt PR gov't?

    M e thinks there's a real story there, and bring in Marie Yavanovich, too.

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