Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2002 Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2002, Denver Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371 Author: Kelley Shannon, Associated Press Writer Note: AP writer Natalie Gott contributed to this report. MORALES SAYS SANCHEZ SHOULD HAVE KNOWN OF DRUG MONEY LAUNDERING Democratic gubernatorial candidate Dan Morales said Monday opponent Tony Sanchez should have known about drug money laundering at his Laredo savings and loan in the 1980s. "Let me be clear: I do not allege that Mr. Sanchez knew that Mexican drug money was being laundered through his business. But I absolutely do believe that he should have known," Morales said. Morales, who has pledged he won't run a negative primary campaign, said Sanchez's business background should be scrutinized, including his management of the failed Tesoro Savings and Loan. Sanchez should explain how $25 million in drug cartel money was laundered through the thrift over 17 months in 1983 and 1984 and why Tesoro officials wired $8 million of that money to an account in Panama as federal agents were about to freeze those assets, Morales said. At the time, Sanchez was chairman and majority shareholder at Tesoro. The money laundering probe has been the subject of news reports for several months since Sanchez entered the governor's race. At a rally in Austin on Monday, Sanchez said Morales is wrong and doesn't know the facts. "These are desperate acts of a desperate man," Sanchez said. "The polls are showing that he's plummeting and that we're going to be victorious and I think these are very desperate acts. I feel sorry for him because he's falling apart." Earlier, Sanchez's spokeswoman Michelle Kucera said Sanchez has nothing to hide and said "Tesoro was victimized by unscrupulous people who represented themselves as legitimate businessmen." Sanchez campaign manager Glenn Smith also noted that when Morales himself went to Mexico to work on his anti-drug initiative as attorney general, he wound up meeting with the main target of the Mexican anti-narcotic squad. "We sympathize with Morales being fooled by someone pretending to be someone they weren't," Smith said. Last year, Sanchez commented on the Tesoro probe involving two depositors and said neither he nor any officer of the institution was accused of wrongdoing and that they were exonerated by three federal agencies and a federal judge. "But it happened on my watch and I took full responsibility. I also took steps to make sure it never happened again, and it didn't," Sanchez said. David Almaraz, a former assistant U.S. attorney, said last August that "there was never any type of suspicion that any of the heads of the bank, the stockholders, the president, had any knowledge of these transactions." Sanchez, a multimillionaire, made his fortune through the Laredo-based bank holding company International Bancshares Corp. and in the oil and gas business, among other ventures. He has never held elected office. Because his background is in business, his business record must be examined, Morales said. Morales said: "How can Mr. Sanchez claim to be able to keep drugs out of our schools and our communities, when he cannot keep drug money out of his own business?" Morales, citing his own background as a Bexar County prosecutor and as the attorney general, said as governor he would make fighting drugs and drug money laundering a high priority. Sanchez said Morales should not try to compare himself to Sanchez. "He's never had a job outside of politics. He doesn't know what management is from the private sector," Sanchez said. At his lunchtime rally, where about 300 enthusiastic supporters were offered 400 pounds of barbecue brisket along with potato salad, Sanchez tried to focus on other topics. Sanchez again stressed his proposals for improving education and questioned whether failed state leadership contributed to the state's projected $5 billion shortfall. He also told the crowd he wanted to keep homeowner insurance rates down through more regulation of the industry. He proposed drafting a law that would force insurance companies, especially those who are not currently regulated by the state, to justify any proposed premium hikes. He also said he would give the Texas Department of Insurance the tools it needs to enforce the law and refocus its efforts toward lowering the cost of property insurance for homeowners. "We're just very concerned that insurance rates are double the national average, and we are going to try do some things to change that," Sanchez said. He criticized Morales and Republican Gov. Rick Perry on economic development, saying neither has created a job. Sanchez boasts that his family's businesses and activities have created more than 75,000 jobs since 1981. Now that he has raised questions about Sanchez's savings and loan, Morales may face more questions about his dealings with private attorneys in the state's $17.3 billion tobacco settlement, reached when he was attorney general. State and federal investigators have looked into contracts with private lawyers hired to pursue the case, including a friend of Morales who tried to claim up to $500 million despite complaints from the other attorneys that he did little or no work. Morales said he is prepared to discuss those allegations. "The entirety of the lawyers who worked on the tobacco case provided substantive, valuable contributions to the state's ultimate victory," Morales said. The Democratic primary is March 12. Sanchez and Morales along with Bill Lyon and John WorldPeace are in the race. The winner faces Perry, who is unopposed in his party, in November. AP writer Natalie Gott contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D