How To Hide A Billion Dollars: Three Techniques The Ultra-Rich Use To Dodge Ex-Spouses, The Taxman And Disgruntled Business Partners

  • 📰 Forbes
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 113 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 48%
  • Publisher: 53%

Sverige Nyheter Nyheter

Sverige Senaste nytt,Sverige Rubriker

How to hide a billion dollars: 3 techniques the ultra-rich use to dodge ex-spouses, the taxman and disgruntled business partners

At 81, high-frequency trading pioneer Ed Bosarge is in court battling ex-business partners, the founder of a stem cell clinic he took control of and the wife he dumped. She says he’s got billions stashed in a constantly changing array of offshore and South Dakota trusts.or more than a decade through 2015, Houston-based Quantlab was a money machine, generating more than $3 billion in cumulative profits from proprietary high-frequency trading that on some days accounted for 3% of NYSE volume.

Forbes estimates Ed Bosarge is worth at least $1 billion. But as he and his lawyers tell it, the couple’s community property assets total just $25 million since an array of trusts own not only his Quantlab stock, but also their homes in Houston, Aspen, London and Maine and the 72-acre island in the Bahamas where they docked their three yachts, including the eponymous 180-foot Marie, replete with a baby grand piano. After the divorce papers were served, one of the trusts even repossessed a $1.

The two newer and increasingly popular techniques are domestic asset protection trusts and “trust decanting.” DAPTs allow rich folks to put assets in a U.S. trust for their own benefit and then protect those assets from future creditors. Traditional trust law prevented someone from shielding assets in a trust, if they continued to control those assets and used them for their own benefit—and that’s still the case in a majority of states.

Marie says when she married Ed in 1989, he seemed to be broke. “I loved him for his mind truly,” she says. Her original wedding ring was a cubic zirconia and shortly after their marriage, their home in Houston was foreclosed on, Marie says. But in 1991, that same Capital Technologies bought an 8,600 square foot mansion on North Boulevard in Houston’s museum district, where Ed Bosarge still lives. The then-happy couple moved in and Quantlab was eventually born there.

“If you decant one trust into two or two into one, assets from one may get split up into three. Just depends on the needs.” With even Switzerland and Luxembourg now forced by an international crackdown on tax evasion by the rich to turn over records of some account holders, tiny South Dakota has become a nouveau international trust magnet, attracting more than $300 billion in assets.Courtesy Marie Bosarge

Marie Bosarge is essentially caught in a Catch-22: To have any hope of proving fraud in her Texas divorce case, she needs to know what’s in the South Dakota trusts. A judge in Harris County Family Court in June dismissed three of Marie’s claims, while allowing three others to go forward — including that Ed violated his fiduciary duty toward her. Trial is set for November, pandemic pending.

 

Tack för din kommentar. Din kommentar kommer att publiceras efter att ha granskats.

msg? me..

On the non bizarro world this is titled How to Get Your Ass Thrown in Prison.

How can I hide something I don't have

mukasiri With an increase in digital eyes, it’s becoming too difficult to even hide anything in your head. I heard of this man who hid money in his mother’s grave and when he came back a property developer had bought the land and erected multi-story buildings.

Shame on South Dakota for making laws that allow fraudsters to keep committing fraud. Delaware fits into that scenario somewhere too.

or with charitable foundations .. they donate to evade the tax authorities and pay less taxes .. they want to take the money accumulated in the grave ?

Here is the Scam, Softbank buying futures on no volume causing the market to open higher every day. Then cashing in on out of the money options. F..king crooks.

At 81, high-frequency trading pioneer Ed Bosarge is in court battling ex-business partners, the founder of a stem cell clinic he took control of and the wife he dumped, Marie Bosarge

😂😂 Thank you for sharing! I keep worrying about my enormous wealth and this will definitely help! 😅👌🏼3️⃣ 💰

They always report these things with shock and awe; the reality is that most people in the same situation would probably do the same, or have those thoughts. This is nothing new.

Lol! I'm wealthyyyyyyyyyyyy! Confirmed! sootakunyc

thanks needed this

Vi har sammanfattat den här nyheten så att du kan läsa den snabbt. Om du är intresserad av nyheterna kan du läsa hela texten här. Läs mer:

 /  🏆 394. in SE

Sverige Senaste nytt, Sverige Rubriker

Similar News:Du kan också läsa nyheter som liknar den här som vi har samlat in från andra nyhetskällor.

A Kenosha man says the Trump-supporting 'owner' of a destroyed business in a photo op was actually his predecessor who sold the shop 8 years agoTom Gram, the owner of a destroyed Kenosha business, is accusing President Donald Trump of using his business for political gain, TMJ4 reported. 35 thousand gun deaths a year, not a peep from Trump or GOP GUN PEDDLERS... This is misleading as he does own the property the business is on. LYING TRUMP LET COVID SPREAD across America LYING TRUMP LOVES VIOLENCE- because his racist fans LOVE IT! VOTE POS TRUMP OUT NOVEMBER 3rd
Källa: YahooNews - 🏆 380. / 59 Läs mer »

Fast-Growing Cloud Security Company Okta Just Hired A New CIOThe $29 billion business has brought on board Alvina Antar, the former CIO of Zuora, to help support its expansion plans.
Källa: Forbes - 🏆 394. / 53 Läs mer »