Wallace Groves

Wallace Groves (c. 1902–30 January 1988) was a prominent financier, who, after his release from federal prison in 1944, moved to the Bahamas and there founded and operated the free trade zone, resort, and casino development Freeport on Grand Bahama Island. Investigators of U.S. organized crime associate him with the Meyer Lansky syndicate operating offshore casinos from Miami Beach. These ties notwithstanding, he is credited with being a driving force in the development of the modern Bahamian economy.

Early career

Born in (or around) 1902, Groves made an early career in complex financial transactions on Wall Street. Virginia-born, he reportedly came to New York from Baltimore, where he was a bond salesman.[1] His obituary noted that “as a young, flashy, and successful investor, he was involved in several businesses and had controlling interests in several others, including the United Cigar Store and the Wheelan Drug Store chain.”[2] However, his transactions soon caught the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and from 1933 until his imprisonment in 1941, he was frequently in the news for legal or regulatory matters.

Pre-war financier

In 1931, Groves began to assemble a collection of investment trusts and other companies through complex transactions following a certain pattern. He was then reported as having total net assets of $19 million.[3] In 1931, Groves obtained control of Chain and General Equities by underwriting an offering to the stockholders of additional stock and then caused the election of officers of his choice to the board of directors, according to the SEC. Groves then sold to the company “642,517 shares of common stock of Interstate Equities Corp. for appr. $1,325,000 with a gross profit of $369,000 to said Wallace Groves.” The stock had “little or no asset value.”[4] Numerous other suspect transactions of similar nature were revealed to the public by the SEC.

Two other companies, Interstate Equities of New York and Yosemite Holding of Detroit, also came under the control of Groves’s Equity Corporation, by December 1932, netting Groves the market value of these companies “with the expenditure of very small amount of money.”[5] Stockholders filed suit against Groves and his associates[6] In 1933, Groves sold his control of Equity Corp.

In 1936, Groves was president of the Phoenix Securities Corp., with Philip de Ronde, chairman, and Walter S. Mack, Jr., vice-president.[7] This company acquired control of, among others, the South Coast Co., the Celotex Co., and Allied Products. Corp.[8] Groves acquired Phoenix through a hostile take-over in 1931. Phoenix then obtained control of Autocar, United Cigar, Certain-Teed Products, Whelan Drug Stores and other companies. By 1936, Groves revealed that he, as sole owner of offshore Company Montana of Panama, could carry out transactions through it without incurring taxes.[9] This and other uses of foreign tax-havens caused the Treasury Department to report Groves, de Ronde and others to the Congressional Joint Committee to Investigate Income Tax Avoidance and Evasion, alleging "financial legerdemain". Groves then also owned Nassau Securities, Ltd, a Bahamian shell company; de Ronde owned a similar shell. The Bahamian companies served as depositories for funds drained from U.S. companies in the orbit of Groves.[10]

On 1 December 1938, the United States indicted Wallace Groves, his brother George S. Groves, Ernest B. Warriner (fugitive in Canada) and de Ronde (fugitive in France) on 15 counts of mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud.[11]

The case attracted considerable attention in financial circles, where Groves was socially prominent. After lengthy, contested proceedings, on 21 February 1941, the two Groves brothers were convicted. Wallace got two years in federal prison at Danbury, Connecticut. George got eight months. They were each fined $22,000.[12] After his release, Wallace Groves moved to the Bahamas.

Post-war interests in the Bahamas

Groves reportedly first became interested in running a real business in the Bahamas through a lumber and sawmill operation on the largely undeveloped Grand Bahama Island 81 miles off the Florida coast.[13] He used the Abaco Lumber Co. as the springboard for further business ventures. Grand Bahama was deforested in the process.[14]

From 1946, the later Bahamian finance minister, House of Assembly member Stafford Sands served as Wallace Groves’s lawyer and helped pave the way for his business interests. In 1955, Groves secured the seminal Hawksbill Creek Agreement with the colonial government, ceding to him 211 square miles of Grand Bahama Island upon which to develop a free-trade industrial and resort zone. (Groves obtained supplemental agreements in 1960 and 1966.) The agreement freed the Grand Bahama Port Authority from paying taxes, tolls, and excises for 25 years (since extended to 2054), and exempted it from other Bahamian laws, notably immigration laws. By 1965, 416 companies operated under license to the main exempted company. The zone gradually became the most modern, well-run, and prosperous part of the colony, although it was described as only nominally Bahamian.

In 1963, after internal self-government was granted to the Bahamas, Groves further secured the right to operate gambling establishments at Freeport, using the services of Stafford Sands. At the same time, Sands and other high government officials received payments exceeding $1,000,000 from the Grand Bahamas Port Authority. The complex system of continuing payoffs to almost the entire Bahamian elite (known universally as the “Bay Street Boys”) was detailed by the Royal Commission of Inquiry of 1967.[15] The payments from the three casinos (a third was built near Nassau) continued until the United Bahamian Party (UBP) lost power in the 1967 elections and were subject to investigation by the 1967 Commission of Inquiry. They were also detailed in an extensive expose in Life Magazine, 3 February 1967. It was later reported that the decision to operate the casinos was taken in Miami Beach in 1961, at the mob-run Hotel Fontainebleau, at which Meyer Lansky and other mob kingpins were present, and the hotel architect had included a central interior 9,000 sqft “squash ball court” which became the casino.[16] According to Life, the Groves domains were merely the most lucrative component of a complex network of state-sanctioned criminal activities centered on off-shore companies, including money laundering and insurance fraud.

One source (Valentine, 2004) holds that Groves had fronted for Lansky “since 1951, when he sold valuable Key Biscayne property” for him, but another (Block, 1998) holds that Louis Chesler (see below) moved Groves into the Lansky orbit in 1961. The American public came to know first of the situation in the Bahamas on 5 October 1966, when the Wall Street Journal published a detailed expose of the trades involving Groves, Sands, Lansky and others.[17] The Journal also wrote that an unpublished tell-all book, The Ugly Bahamian, written by Alan Witver, a former employee of Groves, had been bought up and repressed by Sands.

Groves controlled his company both directly and through various partners. His wife Georgette was part owner, as was a British subject, Keith Gonsalves. But Life noted that Groves’s “silent partner in all three gambling salons and spokesman for the Syndicate is Lansky.” The mob’s take from the casinos were then estimated over a million dollars a year.

The Freeport development, complete with a first-rate airport, became very successful and created a prosperous enclave catering primarily to American tourists, including cruise ship passengers, and to expatriate Americans choosing to live in stylish comfort close to U.S. shores. The Lucayan Beach Hotel became well-known and its casino, the Monte Carlo Room, attracted U.S. high-rollers. Reports in the 1960s were that the hotel was struggling, but the casino was exceptionally profitable, and the skim was transferred to the Miami mob. Groves’s businesses could not, by statute, be audited in the Bahamas.[16] Groves was also affiliated with the mob-owned La Costa Country Club in San Diego County. He promoted the development in the 1960s on behalf of Moe Dalitz, and was a frequent guest.[18]

Wallace Groves was associated with numerous companies, most significantly the well-known Mary Carter Paint Co., which became Resorts International before beginning to operate Atlantic City, New Jersey casinos in 1978. Among objections to this move were listed that “the M.C.P.C….engaged in the purchase of Bahamian real estate with individuals of unsuitable character and nature, specifically Wallace Groves, a convicted swindler, and Louis Chesler, an associate of criminals….The M.C.P.C. entered into partnership with Mr. Groves’s wife and staffed one of its casinos after a company official had visited Mr. Lansky.”[19] Numerous mob-affiliated gambling experts, including Dino Cellini and many of his family members, worked for Groves in the Bahamas. Chesler, a Canadian, operated the Freeport gambling resort for a number of years. Chesler’s criminal associations and work for Groves are detailed in Block (below). In 1965, it was reported that it was Mr. Chesler who brought the promotion, talent and connections necessary to turn the hotel resort and casino into a major success.[20] Chesler, as a British subject, was allowed to operate the casino, but Groves forced him out and replaced him with a Bahamian. It was reported that Chesler, a proven and successful promoter, had showed up in 1960 with $12 million to invest. He brought in “a retinue of jet-set friends and satraps and a go-go attitude.”[16] Chesler’s surreptitious funneling of $11 million to the Lucayan project caused the collapse of Atlantic Acceptance of Canada in a major scandal, 15 June 1965.[21] At the same time in 1965, a number of “undesirable” Americans and Italians were ejected from the islands. However, investigators reported that Chesler and his associates still controlled the gambling operations. Chesler testified to the Royal Commission of Inquiry in 1967 that the American underworld had “absolutely no” connection with the Freeport casinos, and that he merely consulted Meyer Lansky for “advice on the staffing of the casino.”[22]

It appeared that after the end of UBP monopoly on power in the Bahamas, Groves’s influence was on the wane. The new prime minister, Mr. Lynden Pindling, made new arrangements for payments and diversified into narcotics trafficking, ceding the island of Norman's Cay for use by Carlos Lehder. The Freeport complex, which was deemed very successful, continued in operation, and in 1968 a new Groves casino complex was opened on Paradise Island near Nassau. It was run by Eddie Cellini.

Last years

Groves lived in grand style in Freeport in a large, blue-green tiled home, and spent his leisure on his private island, Little Whale Cay 33 miles off Nassau. He ruled his concession in monarchial fashion: “Residents and employees often complained that the authority which had broad power to expel, ran the island in police-state fashion.” In 1968 and 1978 he sold off parts of his business empire for large sums ($80 and $38 million, respectively). He sold his GBPA interest to Sir Charles Hayward. Wallace Groves died in 1988 in Miami of a stroke. He was 86.[2]

Allegations of underworld association

The activities of Wallace Groves attracted the considerable attention of numerous chroniclers of transnational financial crime on account of his extensive connections with the top names of the financial underworld. The following is a sampling:

References

  1. Block, p. 27.
  2. 1 2 "Wallace Groves Is Dead at 86; Developer of Resort in Bahamas". New York Times. 1 February 1988. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  3. NYT, 11 November 1931.
  4. NYT, 6 August 1936.
  5. NYT, 29 July 1936.
  6. NYT, 14 June 1933
  7. NYT, 31 March 1936.
  8. NYT, 30 March 1936.
  9. NYT, 19 November 1936.
  10. NYT, 19 June 1937, 8 May 37.
  11. NYT, 2 December 1938, 28 April 1940.
  12. NYT, 25 February 1941.
  13. NYT, 15 February 1965.
  14. Block
  15. Life, 3 February 1967.
  16. 1 2 3 Life, 3 February 1967.
  17. Wall Street Journal, 5 October 1966.
  18. Newton, pp. 180, 206, 239.
  19. NYT, 10 December 1978.
  20. NYT, 15 February 1965.
  21. Can. Aspects detailed in Sweethearts, below.
  22. NYT, 2 September 1967.
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