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In the September filing, the U.S. attorney alleged that Kareri gained the trust of several embassy officials and had oversight of their accounts at Riggs, including the accounts of the African countries of Benin, Togo, Mozambique and Equatorial Guinea. Equatorial Guinea was Riggs's largest deposit customer before Riggs closed the account early this year as federal regulators were raising questions about the bank's failure to comply with laws designed to prevent money laundering.
Both court filings cite an internal Riggs investigation of Kareri and his management of Equatorial Guinea's accounts. The December papers said the Riggs investigation found that Kareri "had made unauthorized interbank transfers of large sums of monies that he oversaw to corporate accounts that were controlled by his wife," Nene Fall Kareri. Her lawyer, Nina Ginsberg, was traveling yesterday and could not be reached for comment.
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"As Riggs has previously disclosed, at the beginning of 2004, Riggs terminated Mr. Kareri and referred the matter to appropriate authorities," said Mark Hendrix, a Riggs spokesman. "It would be inappropriate for Riggs to comment further about his activities given investigations by various authorities underway."
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Kareri, who joined Riggs in 1994, managed more than a dozen embassy relationships. Equatorial Guinea's accounts at Riggs were fueled by hundreds of millions of dollars in payments from oil companies producing the country's vast reserves. At one point, Equatorial Guinea and its officials had more than $700 million in various deposit accounts at Riggs. A federal grand jury and the Securities and Exchange Commission are looking at whether bribes were paid by U.S. oil companies to the ruling family of Equatorial Guinea through the Riggs accounts.
According to a Senate subcommittee report in July, Kareri oversaw multiple suspicious transactions involving Equatorial Guinea accounts. The report cited such "lax oversight" by Riggs officials of Kareri that he was able to wire more than $1 million from the country's main oil account into an offshore company he controlled. That company, Jadini Holdings, was incorporated by Kareri's wife.
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