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Portimão former councillors face trial for fraud and money laundering

caritoAfter a five year wait, Luís Carito, the former Portimão deputy mayor (pictured), the man who swallowed evidence when his Ferragudo home was searched by Police in 2013, is to face trial this coming January.

Carito is accused of money laundering, destroying evidence and using a business allied to the Council for his significant personal gain.

When the Police arrived to search his house, Carito snatched a document from the hands of one of the inspectors, fled to his terrace and ate it.

This bizarre and desperate act on June 19, 2013 is described in detail in the Court documents which refers to “a document, white paper, A4 format, on which was written several names, followed by numbers, in the order of tens of thousands, compatible with monetary values."

Carito and co-defendants are accused of stealing €4.6 million from public funds, money that will have to be returned if they are found guilty.

Luís Carito, as well as being the deputy mayor of Portimão, also was the chairman of Portimão Urbis, a council-owned business which was used as the start point in a series of scams and fiddles to the benefit of the defendants.

Carito's trial starts on January 22, 2019, alongside Artur Curado, Luís Marreiros and Carlos Barros, all of whom are accused of using a network of companies to defraud the Council and its trading subsidiaries.

The money that was overpaid by the Council was routed through the municipal companies, Portimão Turis and Portimão Urbis.

The five accused are alleged to have colluded in stripping cash from Portimão Urbis by setting up fictitious contracts with other private companies, including Pictures Portugal, a private initiative to create a cinema city in Portimão.

Another part of the investigation covered contracts involving the Portimão stadium, rebuilt in 2010 at a cost of between €800,000 and €1 million.

_________

From, 'Portimão councillor arrests, what’s it all about? (June 2013)

The crimes in question are related to Portimão's operating company Portimão Urbis and with other companies, including this company's ‘training partner’ that aimed to train employees, but didn’t.

This training was for the Picture Portugal project which aimed to create a vast film industry complex, Cidade do Cinema (Cinema City) near the ill-fated Autodrome Internacional do Algarve. This film production project, its finances and those involved are being investigated.

The two Socialist Party officials, Luís Carito and Jorge Campos, were at the time of the alleged offences in 2011 on the board of directors of Portimão Urbis.

The others arrested were Lélio Blanca an administrator at Portimão Urbis and two businessmen, Artur Curado from the Algarve Film Commission, and Luis Marreiros a director of Picture Portugal.

This Cinema City project had a budget of €3 million and never left the drawing board. Portimão council invested €700,000 in 'research and consulting,' despite being the most indebted council in the country and almost totally lacking in commercial expertise.

Travel to Los Angeles to meet with stakeholders and meetings in India involving minister Paulo Portas to win investment... the picture is emerging and there is of course more to come. What seemed at first to be a case of a shell company invoicing for services not rendered could turn into a major fraud.

Picture Algarve modestly promised to transform Portugal into the ‘cradle’ of world cinema and Portimão council and the Algarve Film Commission submitted the project in May 2009 which provided for the creation of a film making complex and more bizarrely the construction of a theme park.

Now we move to the Autodrome where the film industry complex was planned using a 150 hectare plot next to the Autódromo Internacional do Algarve. The project management claimed to have recruited the actor Joaquim de Almeida as one of the media faces to promote the project.

Back then Luís Carito, the president of Portimão Turis, later integrated into Portimão Urbis, revealed that of the initial investment of €750 million, €550 million was to build the amusement park, and the remaining €200 million was for the production of the film industry complex.

The amusement park business was linked by Carito with the American company Universal Studios, and was to be on the theme of ‘cars and the history of cinema.’ It is not yet known if Universal Studios bosses have ever heard of Carito, Portimão or the Algarve, but we have asked.

The proposed film industry complex was to include the construction of eleven film studios, two of which were to be completed by late 2010, which would lure film producers and directors to the Algarve.

In 2010 the project led by Picture Portugal’s Artur Curado and Luis Marreiros, was to be managed in partnership with Portimão Urbis which would hold a 20% stake in the company.

In March 2010, Luís Carito, then president of Portimão Urbis, admitted that planning had slipped due to delay in completion of the economic study, but assured the world that the project would continue.

Apparently investors were lining up to back this film complex at the southwestern tip of Europe. CBS-Paramount, Universal, Fox, Sony and Warner Brothers were allegedly all set to join Portuguese investors.

US based ambassadors of the enterprise were the actor Joaquim de Almeida, and Carlos Mattos a Portuguese businessman and winner of two US Academy Awards. Their task was to convince the US big hitters to invest a substantial part of the €25 million needed to build the first phase of the studio complex.

There was even talk in 2009 of re-filming the Steve McQueen classic "Le Mans" with Brad Pitt, Al Pacino and Penelope Cruz. This however required USD52 million from Picture Portugal by the end of 2009.

An anonymous tip-off in 2011 led police to start a detailed investigation into the management and cash trail involved in this whole ill-fated enterprise, culminating in this week’s arrests or many of the key players.

https://www.algarvedailynews.com/cases/autodrome/9611-portimao-councillor-arrests-what-s-it-all-about

 

See also: 'Portimão former councillors face five years in prison'Portimão former councillors face five years in prison'

 

 

 

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Comments  

0 #2 Ed 2018-11-12 18:25
Quoting Peter Booker:
Ed, thank you for reminding us of the background. But what became of that other crook, Manuel da Luz, and his houses?

As for the former mayor of Portimão, Manuel da Luz and the president of the local football club, Fernando Rocha, they were investigated but the Public Prosecutor's Office has shelved any legal action against them.

Manuel da Luz, mayor of Portimão between 2000 and 2013 and chairman of the board of directors of Portimão Urbis, was accused of the whole range of crimes but managed to convinvce the prosecutors that he delegated everything to do with finance, local businesses and tourism, to his deputy, Luís Carito.

"However, although the accused Manuel da Luz does not incur criminal liability, this does not exempt him from the liability that can be attributed to him and from any financial liabilities that may be levied on him," the accusation reads.

According to the prosecutor, as mayor and head of the municipality's management "it was up to him to ensure the sound management" of public funds.

Manuel da Luz is guility of no more than gross incompetence, but this is no great revelation.

See https://www.algarvedailynews.com/news/10965-portimao-council-corruption-charges-listed-by-the-public-prosecutor-21-face-trial
0 #1 Peter Booker 2018-11-12 08:12
Ed, thank you for reminding us of the background. But what became of that other crook, Manuel da Luz, and his houses?

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