Friends in the right places
Friends in the right places by Jimmy Connerly (Part 2 from MR X)
Scene Six- INT - TROTTERS FLAT - LATER THAT EVENING
Alan is at the table looking through the folders.
There are lots of Financial Times newspapers. Del and Mike are also
at the table. Cassandra and Rodney are sitting on the sofa,
reading.Alan: This is an
ingenious bit of research Mike, you must have a talent!
Mike: Not really, I
just spotted an ad in the Yellow Pages.
Alan: I don't
follow you.
Mike: Private
Detective. I hired him when The Blacks were getting a bit
heavy.
Alan: Well,
whatever you paid him, it's money well spent, this is red-hot
information.
Del:
What's it all about then?
Alan: Well, with
the exception of the brewery, everything that Roy Stater bought
into...
Mike: ...Or took
over.
Alan: Valid point.
Everything he took over was in the Insurance line.
Del:
Insurance?
Alan: Yes Del,
insurance. Life Insurance, Car Insurance, Fire, House, Contents.
All sorts of insurance, you name it, he's bought into it.
Mike: Well there's
no law against that is there?
Alan: Ordinarily
no. But I've checked all of the companies against these back-dated
FT's of Dels.
Del: I
told you these old papers would all come in useful one day didn't I
Rodney.
Rodney: Yeah, you said you might be getting a budgie and
they'd come in handy for lining the cage didn't you Del.
Del:
No, I was thinking of investing again Rodney, after we got all that
money from the watch.
Rodney: Yeah and look where that got us.
Del:
That wasn't these investments....
Alan: Ahem! Getting
back to the matter in hand!
Del:
Sorry Alan.
Alan: Every single
one of the Insurance companies Slater bought into was in serious
financial
difficulties.
Mike: And?
Alan: It's a
classic Ponzi Scheme.
Del:
Too right it's a poncey scheme, fancy buying up a load of failing
companies!
Alan: No, it
doesn't work like that Del.
Mike: Well how does
it work then?
Alan: Slater
appears to have created his own trust, and with it has acquired
Insurance companies that were in financial trouble so could be
purchased at very low prices.
Mike: Doesn't
really explain why he'd want to buy companies in financial
trouble.
Del:
Yeah, say they go bust!
Alan: Insurance
regulators and watchdogs keep a careful eye on Insurance companies.
All companies, whether in trouble or not, are forced to keep very
large reserves, in case they have to pay out to policy-holders.
Usually these reserves are invested in government bonds and
securities but my guess is that Slater's used the moneys to help
him build his own empire.
Del:
How comes he ain't been spotted.
Alan: The trick is
to deceive the companies into believing the money is being soundly
invested.
Del:
And?
Alan: Say Slater is
using the reserve money from say, five companies. Each have five
million in reserves and each expects a profit. Slater will pocket
much of it for himself but will also keep a remainder in reserve.
Say Twenty Million.
Rodney: And five million for himself!
Mike: And if one of
the investors asks for his money back?
Alan: Slater pays
them back from the reserve. Plus a small profit which would be
expected.
Del:
What a great scheme!
Alan: It is. So
long as all the investors don't all ask for their money back at the
same time the scheme goes completely undetected.
Del:
Can you can tell that's what Slater has done?
Alan: Can't prove
it Del but there'd be enough of a case for watchdogs to do a full
investigation.
Mike: We'll tip
them off then.
Alan: Might not be
that simple.
Rodney: Why not Alan?
Alan:: Mike cobbled all
this together two years ago, Slater might have appropriated a lot
more companies since then, for which we have no details.
Mike: Yeah, and the
detective weren't cheap.
Alan: Also, it's
very possible that oversees investments are involved. They would
come under separate jurisdiction depending on the country and
should watchdogs find something suspicious in Slater's dealings in
this country there's nothing stopping Slater making a payment from
abroad to cover any shortcomings.
Del:
Well I reckon we've got enough to do him. He likes deals does he?
Let's see if he likes my deal. You leave this to me now Alan, I'll
handle this from here.
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