Broke, sick and lonely, Allen Stanford heads to court

HOUSTON,  (Reuters) – No one calls him Sir Allen  Stanford anymore. He is inmate number 35017-183.
On Monday, the Texas financier heads to court in Houston to  battle charges that he operated a $7 billion Ponzi scheme from  Stanford International Bank Ltd, his offshore bank on the  Caribbean island of Antigua. By all accounts, his was a life of  luxury, filled with private jets, yachts, mansions and the sport  of cricket.

Allen Stanford
Allen Stanford

Deemed a flight risk in June 2009 by a federal judge, the  6-foot billionaire has been in jail, sporting prison-issue green  and orange jumpsuits and shackles instead of the dark,  tailor-made suits he once ordered in bulk.
Stanford, a native Texan who was knighted by the government  of Antigua in 2006, is accused of misleading investors about  certificates of deposit (CDs) issued by his offshore bank, in  one of the biggest white collar fraud cases since Bernard  Madoff.
The CDs were touted as safe, with funds “generally invested  in investment grade bonds, securities and foreign currency  deposit,” according to literature distributed by Stanford’s  brokerage firm.
Instead, prosecutors allege, Stanford invested CD proceeds  in illiquid pet-project investments that included Caribbean real  estate, a Cowboys and Indians magazine and a pawn shop operator.  He also loaned more than $2 billion to himself.
The alleged Ponzi scheme started to unravel in late 2008 as  the financial crisis deepened and more and more investors asked  for redemptions, a situation that left Stanford scrambling for  cash.
Prosecutors will likely rely heavily on the testimony of the  firm’s former Chief Financial Officer James Davis, who pleaded  guilty in August 2009 and has been cooperating with the  government. The two men were college roommates at Baylor  University in Waco, Texas.
In past interviews, Stanford has blamed Davis, a theme that  is likely to be repeated by the defense at trial.
“I didn’t oversee anything in the investment portfolio, that  was the CFO’s responsibility,” Stanford told Reuters in a 2009  interview. “The CFO had investment committees, the chief  investment officer reports to him.”
Stanford, 61, has pleaded not guilty to 14 criminal counts  of fraud, obstruction of a federal investigation and conspiracy  to launder money.
Among the alleged crimes prosecutors expect to prove to the  Houston jury is that Stanford was involved in falsifying  financial statements and made false statements about Stanford  International Bank’s financial condition.

PAUPER IN LOVE
Stanford’s health has declined since his arrest.  He was injured in a jailhouse brawl in 2009 and suffered from an  addiction to a powerful anti-anxiety medication. He has  hepatitis B and cirrhosis of the liver, and, if convicted, will  likely spend he rest of his life in prison.
The SEC seized all of Stanford’s assets in February 2009  after filing a civil lawsuit. His lawyer at the time, Dick  DeGuerin, said the government’s action did not even leave enough  money for his client to buy underwear.
Once No. 205 on Forbes’ list of richest Americans,  Stanford’s defense is paid for with U.S. tax dollars and his  81-year-old mother is struggling to help.
“I’ve maxed out my credit cards and I’m on my last few  thousand dollars of savings,” said Sammie Stanford.
She even had to do a reverse mortgage on her home  “to get some extra cash,” she said in December after a court  hearing.
After his arrest, Stanford had a bevy of women, four of whom  are mothers of his six children, attend his court hearings. He  had a “fiancee” half his age even though he remains legally  married.
Stanford lavished the women in his life with trips on  private jets, luxury homes and, in one instance, spousal support  payments of $100,000 per month, according to court documents.
His oldest daughter, Randi, lived in a luxury Houston  high-rise paid for by her father, for whom she worked.
Court records from a 2007 paternity case, that was settled,  showed Stanford also paid about $150,000 a year in child support  for two other children who lived with their mother in a $10  million house in Florida.
But now, in addition to losing his fortune, Stanford has  only the support of his parents and family and not the harem of  loyalists seen earlier.
Only his mother lasted through the entire three days of  testimony last month at a hearing in which Stanford was judged  competent to stand trial.
The man who once ran a business with operations in 140  countries has different priorities now. In a recent court  hearing he could be heard complaining about being served a  peanut butter sandwich on stale bread.
The case is USA v. Robert Allen Stanford, U.S. District  Court for the Southern District of Texas, No. 09-cr-00342.