Anonymous ID: 8b709d Aug. 6, 2022, 8:02 a.m. No.17077585   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8089

>>17071160

POTUS mispronounced Romney as Rhymney tonight and it led me to Romney and Maxwell, Ghislane’s father

 

Romney and Maxwell

How Mitt Romney's $250m fortune was built by two of England's most disreputable business figures

By Daniel Miller 05:28 EDT 20 Jul 2012

 

Newspaper boss Robert Maxwell and Guinness fraudster Jack Lyons invested millions is Republican's first equity fund at Bain & Company

 

Bain's British office was subsequently caught up in Guinness scandal as advisers to the drinks firm

Romney under pressure to release tax returns for the years before 2010 as Obama accuses him of profiteering from the destruction of companies

 

Presidential hopeful Mitt Romney built his $250 million fortune with the help of two of Britain's most disreputable business figures - Guinness fraudster Jack Lyons and crooked newspaper boss Robert Maxwell.

 

In the 1980s both men invested large sums in the Republican candidate's first private equity fund, started during his years at Bain & Company, which launched his now highly controversial career in finance.

 

Flamboyant publishing tycoon Maxwell was the former head of the left-wing Mirror Group newspapers and a one-time owner of the New York Daily News.

 

He died in mysterious circumstances in 1991 at the age of 68 after falling overboard from his luxury yacht off the Canary Islands after which it was discovered he had plundered hundreds of millions from an employee pension scheme.

 

Lyons, who died in 2008, was one of the notorious 'Guinness Four' convicted for a massive share trading fraud in which they attempted to inflate the price of Guinness shares to assist a take-over bid for Scottish drinks company Distillers.

 

He was subsequently fined £4 million for theft and false accounting and stripped of his knighthood.

 

In 1984 Lyons, a former colleague of Mr Romney's at Bain & Company, along with members of his family invested almost $3million in Mr Romney's capital fund.

 

He then recruited Maxwell who invested $2 million in the fund.

 

Both Lyons and Maxwell kept money in tax havens and the latest revelations will be a blow to Romneywhose financial career is increasingly being brought into question.

 

Romney has claimed his fortune and career history is proof of his ability to run the country.

 

Mr Romney was a senior management consultant at Bain during one of the most controversial periods in the firm's history when they became caught up in the Guinness scandal as advisers to the drinks firm.

 

Bain Capital, the firm's investment arm, was set up by Mr Romney in 1981 and run from his Boston office.

 

Lyons was hired to help set up a British office and became the fund's first investor with a $2.5 million stake via a front company in Panama.

One Bain executive based in London at the time told the paper: 'Jack took an interest in Bain almost as if we were his sons.

 

'He wanted us to succeed in the UK and he introduced us to a lot of people . . . I remember attending a luncheon in London with Robert Maxwell.'

 

Around $12 million was invested by Bains partners including Mr Romney who is believed to have put up at least $160,000.

 

The fund was phenomenally successful, and according to a prospectus, yielded an average return of 173 per cent a year on stakes in 21 firms.

 

In 1986 Lyons joined a group of Guinness allies buying up stock in the firm in an attempt to boost the share price prior to a takeover bid for rival firm Distillers.

 

It was a success and at the time Bill Bain, the firm's founder and Mr Romney's mentor, wrote to Lyons saying: 'We are all delighted and look forward to hearing the story of how you managed to pull it off.'

 

Lyons and three others were later convicted of theft and false accounting. Lyons avoided jail due to ill health. but he was stripped of his knighthood and CBE, and fined £4 million.

 

Although there is no suggestion that Mr Romney, nor anyone at Bain in Boston had any knowledge of the wrongdoing a Bain employee in London described the period as 'traumatic'.

 

He told the Telegraph: 'Mitt was just another partner watching this thing unfold.'

 

Another British former colleague described him as 'bloodless'adding 'He was the sort of person that you would admire rather than like, and I think that continues to bedevil his political career.'

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2176398/Mitt-Romneys-250m-fortune-built-Englands-notorious-business-figures.html