Tuesday, March 8, 1988/The Battalion/Page 7 B Street hZ'mih? cormuma DOING HLnL r mms m N£V£H 3££N mt BLFOHi. by Jon Caldara M ON HOT TONIGHT TUO STUD? TRIM MI m lUOULDN'T ST£ THIS TILTH . YOUNG LW? ' f. Waldo by Kevin Thomas Warped .fok ntitNpm ioo HAVE A SE/V*£ OF HUMOR? HAD A GKEEV 80DY, BLUE LEGS? SPUH A GREAT RIG JO-FOOT WEB IN y00R BACK YAKPPAVP WHEW by Scott McCullar OH, THAT* RIGHT, THAT'S ONE OF MY JOKES THAT A/OgoDY EVER LAUGHS AT... Paper says FBI investigating brokers hired to aid Connally §AN ANTONIO (AP) — Former U.S. Treasury Secretary John Con nally, scrambling to save his crum bling real estate empire, paid two novice brokers to search for refi nancing, but the plan fell through and the men are now under investi gation, the San Antonio Light re ported in a copyright story. Bexar County prosecutors, fed eral banking officials and the FBI are looking into whether the money brokers swindled Connally, former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes and others des perate for cash when the Texas economy was scraping bottom, the Ligbt reported Sunday. “The very reason Ben Barnes and John Connally — otherwise smart and shrewd businessman — were taken by these guys was because they were incredibly desperate,” said an investigator who requested anonym ity. “They needed cash and they needed it fast.” As lenders began closing in on Barnes and Connally, former Texas governor, in 1986, they began searching worldwide to find new fi nancing avenues, but it was not easy. “Texas was literally red-lined all over the country financing-wise,” Barnes told the newspaper. Barnes turned to Ed Harper, a former real-estate agent and used- car salesman, and David Rowold, an oil-and-gas leasing agent, who were doing business as Tascosa Holding Inc. of San Antonio. Barnes and Connally paid the men $20,000 to help them out of their worsening fi nancial conditions, he said. Barnes said Tascosa’s failure to come through as promised was not the last straw that hurled him and Connally into bankruptcy, but, if it had actually come through, it might have staved off some of their disas ter. Harper and Rowold said they were conned by international schem ers who were using them as middle men and they went bust as a result. While Barnes and Connally were their biggest-name clients, Tascosa also worked for other Texans in need of millions to save failing pro jects, but none got the financing they were promised by the two men, the newspaper reported. “These men weren’t just some lo cal guys,” an investigator told the Light. “They were hitting up people all over the country.” Barnes and Connally did not im mediately return telephone calls to the Associated Press on Monday. Harper and Rowold have unlisted telephone numbers and could not be contacted. Barnes told the newspaper that in early 1986, Harper and Rowold walked into his Austin office and of fered him a quick fix to soften the possible blow of his financial prob lems. The first loan they promised to line up for Barnes and Connally was a $16.8 million loan to refinance a 200-acre mixed-use project in Aus tin, theLie-htreported. Rowold said the refinancing he and Harper were trying to arrange for Barnes and Connally totaled $200 million, but they never deliv ered a penny of the money, the newspaper said. Rowold and Harper said they were enticed into a new career in in vestment banking more than two years ago by men who operated a Hong Kong money brokering firm and wanted a Texas base to help in crease their business. Rowold and Harper said the com pany, DINVON Investments Ltd., never closed any of the loans they sent it. “I guess I’ve got about $9 in my pocket right now,” Rowold said. Rowold said they also got sucked into deals with the International Bank of the South Pacific, based in the island nation of Tonga. In March 1986, the U.S. Comp troller of the Currency informed American banks that the Tonga bank was doing business illegally and warned them not to conduct busi ness with it because of the problems. The offshore bank was to have backed the Barnes-Connally loans and several others with standby let ters of credit that never materia lized.. The owner of the bank, Dennis Lyle Walker, was found dead in a Las Vegas hotel room in July 1987, and it was unclear whether he was directly involved with Tascosa or DINVON, the newspaper reported. Barnes, meanwhile, said he spent thousands of dollars on travel and hotel accomodations in the Tascosa deal. Barnes said he spent a week in a Hong Kong hotel room waiting for DINVON to get the letter of credit approved. He said he also spent three weeks in New York trying to get a U.S. lender, G.E. Capital Corp., arranged by Harper and Rowold, to approve the loan. That loan was to have been se cured with a letter of credit from the offshore bank, according to a May 12, 1987, letter that investigators found among Tascosa’s files. Personal details about Harper and Rowold are sketchy. Rowold, 49, said he was an oil and gas attorney for Exxon in Houston, until 15 years ago when he struck out to start his own business. Harper, who is in his 70s, oper ated a tire store near downtown San Antonio before moving to Rockport in the early 1960s, where he was sales manager for a real estate firm. He also said he was Barnes’ cam paign manager in Rockport when Barnes ran for governor in 1972. Pari-mutuel betting taxes drop ji across country as tracks suffer AUSTIN (AP) — Under pressure from race track owners, state law makers across the country have cut pari-mutuel taxes to shore up tracks in the wake of declining attendance and reduced betting. While the first legal on-track bets probably won’t be placed until the end of the year in Texas, many peo ple are already giving odds the same thing will happen here, despite the initial optimism. “I would wager that whoever builds a track in Texas within two years will be before the Legislature asking for a reduction in the state share g ofthe pari-mutuel pool, Don Pnce director of the M;"n«o,a Rac ing Commission, told the Dallas Morning News. Sponsors of the Texas pari-mu tuel betting bill said they don’t ex pect to see any cuts in the state’s 5 percent tax, the newspaper reported Monday, “I sure don’t want us to, and I don’t think we will have to,” said state Sen. O.H. “Ike” Harris, the Dallas Republican who co-sponsored the bill. But Harris said there already was talk about lowering the tax in the “start-up years” and allocating the difference to the tracks in an effort to encourage investors. “They say they cannot build a track” because of the expense, Har ris said. “It’s going to be tough. But I say that they don’t have to build a $75 million track. They can build something less expensive and allow for expansion.” Texas betting advocates last No vember relied heavily on the pitch of new jobs and new state revenues to win voter approval of the proposal to legalize on-tracking betting. Texas betting advocates last No vember relied heavily on the pitch of new jobs and new state revenues to win voter approval of the proposal to legalize on-tracking betting on dog and horse races for the first time in 50 years in Texas. Texas voters overwhelmingly ap proved the measure amid the state’s worst economic slump in decades. ALE NOW IN THi JUi AJ.ii III I IT'S A HIT !!! 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