Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jan 2000 Source: The Examiner (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 2000 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ DUBLIN BANK HANDLED FLORIDA DRUG CASH A US drugs dealer, jailed in Florida, had cash laundered through the Guinness and Mahon Bank, the Moriarty tribunal heard yesterday. Fernardo Pruna, a Florida landowner, was charged and convicted after an intensive investigation by the US Narcotics Bureau into the secretive Cayman Island bank. It was an investigation that caused great concern among the Irish directors of the Dublin based bank, including the late Des Traynor. They were worried that information concerning coded secret offshore deposits might also be made available to revenue authorities. In 1984, Guinness Mahon, Dublin, was particularly concerned about an international convention between the American, British and Cayman governments, intended to combat the international narcotics trade and the money laundering involved in making drugs profits available to criminal elements. Mr John A. Collins, a co director of Cayman Trust with the late Des Traynor, wrote to Mr Traynor concerning his fears. He suspected that potential customers, eager to use the offshore deposits for tax evasion, might be deterred. The late Mr Traynor shared his fear. In a report to the Guinness and Mahon board, he noted the decline of business activities and stated it might be necessary to revise their forecast downwards for the coming year because of a loss of confidence in the secrecy of the Cayman accounts. These fears were further fuelled by American newspaper headlines, claiming that Cayman banking secrecy had been smashed. The investigation culminated in the smashing of an international drug ring, based in Miami. Between 1985 and 1988, Guinness and Mahon advanced loans exceeding one million US dollars to Fernardo Pruna and his wife from Florida, on the introduction of the Cayman Trust. The couple owned land in Dade County, Florida, over which Guinness and Mahon took security because it had difficulty in obtaining loan interest payments. An indictment was obtained against Fernardo Pruna as the organiser of an major drugs smuggling operation from 1981 to 1988. Pruna was convicted and jailed in the Florida State Penitentiary. Mr Coughlan pointed out that the tribunal was not suggesting that any of the Irish interests in Guinness and Mahon were involved. But he added that it was "the irregular and unorthodox banking methods used by them which facilitated this particular type of activity to allow money to be effectively laundered". - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson