guys, they caught the filthy old pervart.
the feds probably caught him in the nbc nightline show where they have sting operation to catch neighbourhood's old pervs and th camera!
hahahaha!
i know i shouldn't be openly laughing at another man's misery! but i thought about it a lot, this guy doesn't deserve humanity! he is a fraud, a con-man, a mega-thief who stole billions of other people however earned $ and tried to get away with it along with touching other folks' wives inappropriately that you all already know!
from cricinfo:
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/ci/c...ry/391361.html
The Satanford meltdown
Satanford found in Virginia
Cricinfo staff
February 20, 2009
People queue outside the Bank of Antigua, owned by the Stanford Group, early on Wednesday © PA Photos
After 48 hours below the radar, Allen Stanford has been located in Virgina and served with the complaint from the Securities and Exchange Commission by FBI officials. A spokesman said that Stanford had not been charged and had surrendered his passport.
An FBI agent, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the AFP agency the papers were served around 1.45 pm while sitting in a car, adding the authorities did not believe he had been purposely hiding.
This news emerged even as raids continued on his offices across the US and investors and depositors queued up to recover their money from his various companies.
On Wednesday, Stanford, who has been accused of being involved in an alleged US$8 billion fraud, allegedly attempted to hire a private jet to fly him from Houston to Antigua, but his credit card was declined and the hire company insisted on a wire transfer. Stanford's accounts were frozen on Tuesday.
In an interview with the Houston Chronicle newspaper earlier on Thursday, Stanford's father James also said he had no idea of his whereabouts. "I'd spoken to him a week or so ago about problems with the business climate in general, but nothing of this magnitude," he said. "I cannot imagine, I cannot believe, I will not believe what is being alleged actually happened. I cannot believe that my son would run."
It was a sentiment echoed by thousands of ordinary people who had invested in his companies or put their money in his banks. Long queues formed outside the Bank of Antigua in St John's as investors tried to withdraw cash despite assurances that the bank had enough money to meet all its liabilities. Queues were also reported in other countries where people had invested in Stanford companies.
Faced with widespread anxiety on the island, where Stanford employs more than 5% of the total workforce, Antigua's prime minister, Baldwin Spencer, went on television to urge people to remain calm although he admitted the scandal could have "catastrophic" consequences.
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