Pursuing the Elusive Euro
by
Fred Reed
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Fred.
A dangerous criminal. Surveillance camera photo taken during
bank robbery. |
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Im
going to tell you how I entered the underworld, and became a money
launderer, and international drug wallah, and remorseless criminal,
just like Carlo Gambino or Bin Laden or Condoleezza Rice. Yes. I
am now of one blood with Pablo Escobar. It is a service of the Anglo-Irish
Bank. I imagine that my picture can be seen on wanted posters in
European post offices.
How
did I come to this frightful pass? I decided a while back to get
such money as I have out of dollars. In the White House the Maximum
Ferret was playing promiscuously at being Sergeant Rock around the
planet, which he seemed to regard as his private litter box, and
would one day inflate the currency to pay for it. He doesnt
pay for my hobbies, I thought. Why should I pay for his? Anyway,
I didnt want to kill Moslems. Various other people, yes, but
not Mohammedans.
Where
to put my minute shriveled pittance, all that is left to me of a
misspent life? (I live in a swell house in Mexico with a lovely
wife, a splendid if occasionally insupportable stepdaughter, a disturbed
dog, a rabbit, and lots of ribs and beer. I dont have many
excuses for feeling sorry for myself. I make the most of them.)
Europe
appealed, redolent as it is of stability, solemnity, and stuffy
reliability. A couple of years before a shill from the Anglo-Irish
Bank of Dublin had come through my Mexican town, which is full of
expatriate money. Ireland, I thought. Just the thing. The Irish
are a delightful race, mildly crazy, sometimes drunken, and literarily
gifted, all of which recommended them to me.
Ireland,
I was sure, had few Calvinist Texans with beady eyes like windows
opening onto a wall, and impenetrable English you could armor a
tank with. I thought of broad green lands and leprechauns and bosomy
barmaids with twinkling eyes and countless magnificent authors and
Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner.
I
duly, and foolishly, sent the bank a deposit, along with copies
of my passport, Mexican residency papers, drivers license,
dogs paw prints, grandmothers DNA, and all the other
dry foliage of my life that the bank required. This was enough,
I thought, to identify several people. But no. The bank was darkly
suspicious. It suspected me of Laundering Money. (I wish it suspected
me of having money.) The multitudinous requirements sprang, I presumed,
from international law intended to discourage honest people from
putting money in banks. Crooks have ways around these requirements,
and also have more money.
Now,
any banks protestations that it wants to avoid the laundering
of money constitute pious fraud. Such assertions would embarrass
an electronic church promoting your grandaunts social security
check. Criminal enterprise reaps immense sums, being unhampered
by governmental regulation. Do you think any bank whatever doesnt
get weak-kneed at the thought of billions in poppy lucre? The drug
trade is a valued part of the worlds economy.
But
all right. I sent this stuff off to Dublin, FedEx and forty-five
dollars. I emphasized, please communicate with me by email, as the
Mexican mails are casual about things like arrival. Please, email.
Many
weeks later, my check to AIB having cleared, I assumed that I had
a properly constituted account. Then Violeta discovered a sodden
envelope in a muddy spot in the road near our house. This missive
turned out to be from AIB. Perhaps the bank had an eccentric conception
of email. Usually I find it in my inbox and not in a hole in the
street.
In
it I discovered that the bank, in the person of a Mr. David Milne,
was not happy with the documentation from my
bank here, Lloyd. He didnt much like the bank. From the
peremptory nature of his eruptions (I shall require
)
I realized that Mr. Milne must be at least a duke, or maybe a dauphin,
or perhaps a king. No doubt his car was escorted by pikemen. As
a barefoot West Virginia boy I was awed by dealing with royalty
but happy to be climbing in the world.
I
cannot lie. His dark suspicions were not entirely without foundation.
I had links with the opium trade.
Violeta
recently found a poppy growing in the back yard, next to the goldfish
pond. I dont know how it got there. We werent even sure
whether it was an opium poppy, though I fervently hoped so. By this
time I rather wanted to belong to the criminal element. Out of sheer
vengefulness I decided to sell that poppy and launder the money
through AIB. I would have, too, except that the rabbit ate it. I
thought she looked very calm for rest of the afternoon.
Since
this column is read by expatriates around the world, suggesting
that they have too much time on their hands, I explained to the
earl that I was a journalist, and asked what would have happened
had I not found his email in the mud hole in front of my house.
Would my money have been confiscated by some august governmental
body given to thievery? What was AIBs objection to Mexican
banks? Did his majesty know something I didnt? He declined
to answer. I suppose that archbishops are quite busy.
The
rub was that he wanted some document from my Mexican bank imprinted
with the banks stamp. But Lloyds doesnt have a
stamp. It isnt how things are done here. I guess that if you
live in a castle surrounded by a moat, and spend your time calking
drafty cracks, you dont have time to learn about banking practices.
Anyway Veronica, my patient account manager at Lloyds, composed
a letter testifying that I existed and so on, had it translated
into English, and sent it to the his Excellency. Forty-five bucks
more for FedEx, which began setting up a branch office to handle
my correspondence.
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Rabbit.
It ate the evidence. |
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This
didnt work either. Nothing does. I have sent document after
document. I wondered why the good baron didnt simply email
Lloyds, which would remove all doubt about whatever it was
that he doubted. I then realized that Lloyds parking lot was
paved, and that it didnt have a muddy spot in which to receive
email. Technology arrives slowly in Latin America.
With
this much trouble getting money into the bank, I assumed that there
could be no earthly hope of getting it out. In fact AIB seemed to
regard depositors with resentment, as annoyances having nothing
to do with its line of work. Perhaps before the bank was born, its
mother was frightened by a client, engendering lifelong gollywoggles
whenever approached by one.
On
and on it went, and goes. I dont know whether I will live
long enough to see my funds, orphaned and sorrowing in some cold
account. They probably wont even recognize me.
September
13, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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Reed Archives
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