Scams & Frauds
Sustainable Capital Group in yet another reorganization
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Sustainable Capital Group, formerly Silva Tree, is undergoing yet another "reorganization", according to Patrick Visser. That includes mysterious new directors.
Bananama Republic (https://www.bananamarepublic.com/tag/costa-rica/)
Sustainable Capital Group, formerly Silva Tree, is undergoing yet another "reorganization", according to Patrick Visser. That includes mysterious new directors.
Sustainable Capital Group has apparently closed down its websites for projects in Suriname and Mozambique as well as a Spanish real estate site and now dabbles in sustainable window dressing with piƱatas.
Just before he was arrested in Costa Rica for fraud and embezzlement, Sustainable Capital Group principal Maurice Sjerps was hit with a court ordered auction of his condo building, in a case brought by Banco de Costa Rica.
William Lipton, the gun nut who organizes Town Hall shooting practices to kill intruders in Volcan, has a history of arms trafficking in Costa Rica, Bananama Republic can reveal.
Financial hustler and gambling cheat Mark Boswell loses court case from one of the many people who want their money back.
Of course you could wait for it: Patrick Visser of the Sustainable Capital Group (formerly Silva Tree) had to write something on his blog on how he is "moving into 2013".
Maurice Sjerps, accomplice of Patrick Visser in the Silva Tree/Sustainable Capital Group swindle, has been arrested in Costa Rica for yet another teak scam.
Martinelli's predisposition with the murky world of espionage and international intrigue was further exposed today by two revelations in the Spanish language press about Panama becoming a center of anti-Chavez plotting.
Minister of Security Raul Mulino, also known as the "Butcher of Bocas", gifted with a bottomless imagination where it comes to promoting our glorious nation, has announced plans to hermetically seal the border with Costa Rica.
The Costa Rican Supreme Court last week agreed to take a case challenging the constitutionality of a US-Costa Rican agreement that allows for US military presence. The agreement cannot go into effect until the Supreme Court rules, thus postponing the arrival of US forces.