I was Stunned on my trip to Canada

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These are the two stories that aired tonight on National TV all across Canada at 7pm EST


The Brothers

CTV.ca News Staff

Jeff McLeod thought he had found the answer to escaping his cold, lonely life as a trucker in British Columbia. In 1999, at the age of 52, McLeod decided to take early retirement, pack up and move to Costa Rica – where the weather was warm and the living was easy.

A friend who had already made the move told McLeod about a money exchange and investment company that gave astronomical returns, and after several extended visits to Costa Rica, he was confident he could make a comfortable life for himself there.

“I sold my house, I sold a hobby car, I sold a pickup truck and I sold a Harley Davidson motorcycle,” he says. “Took my money and went there.”

Along with thousands of others chasing the same dream, McLeod poured all of his money into an investment business run by two Costa Ricans – Enrique and Osvaldo Villalobos – where, for a minimum $10,000 cash investment, investors could sit back and watch their assets grow by three to four per cent interest a month. For McLeod -- who initially invested $50,000 U.S., let the interest accumulate, and then reinvested $70,000 -- the return worked out to $2,100 a month.

Canadian investors are probably used to a more formal system – where everything is documented and payouts come in cheque form – but the Villalobos brothers’ company operated far more casually. To collect their earnings, investors had to show up at the brothers’ office at San Pedro Mall in San Jose, where they received an envelope full of cash.

“I thought it was a bit strange, but it seemed to be the way he did business. And there were so many people doing it, so many investors,” says McLeod.

With the interest rolling in, McLeod, like most investors, took a laissez faire attitude, lulled into a false sense of security by the warm temperatures and easygoing outlook of the locals.

But besides the cash payouts, there were other signs that all was not as it seemed with the Villalobos brothers’ business. Michael Nash, a Hamilton, Ontario lawyer whose father invested $180,000 U.S. with the brothers, says he was suspicious the first time he set foot in the brothers’ office.

“There was no permanent furniture,” he says. “It just had the kind of plastic stacking chairs that you’re used to seeing in church basements or auditoriums. The whole impression was that if we needed to be out of here in five seconds, we could be. There was no identification, absolutely none, to tell you what kind of an office you were in. There was nothing indicating this is an investment operation, this is a financial institution of any kind.”

Even more suspicious was the fact that the walls were covered in religious Christian posters. “The take I had on it was that since we have nothing else to offer you in terms of security or assurance, we’ll at least give you the impression that since we’re all Christians here, you can trust us,” says Nash.

The tactic worked, Nash says. “Some people that I knew, that I spoke to down there, even said though they themselves were not religious people, they were influenced by the fact that he was religious and so many others who were religious had their faith in him.”

Still, it all went without a hitch, until 2001, when the RCMP turned up a link to a Canadian drug ring. With the help of an informant, The RCMP uncovered a plot by a group of Hells Angels to import a massive shipment of Colombian cocaine into Canada, via Trinidad and Costa Rica. The ring-leader was a Canadian drug trafficker, named Bertrand St. Onge, who spent his winters in Costa Rica, and – like so many others there – invested with the Villalobos.

According to RCMP documents, the Hells Angels members had confided in the informant that the Villalobos brothers had used the money handed over by legitimate investors to fund “illicit operations,” and paid out huge interest to keep investors quiet.

On July 4, 2002, the RCMP arrested the Canadian traffickers and seized a 600-kilogram shipment of cocaine with a street value of $140 million – one of the biggest drug busts in Canadian history. On the same day, Costan Rican police raided the home of Enrique Villalobos as well as his office in San Pedro mall.

“It wasn’t until the moment of the raid that we found out and verified that the Villalobos brothers didn’t have the currency exchange as their only business,” says Guillermo Hernandez, the senior prosecutor in Costa Rica who assisted the RCMP with their investigation. “It was a façade to be able to recruit foreign investors in their investment business.”

Police seized a list of clients – more than 6,000 names, including about 1,000 Canadians – who had invested $600 million with the Villalobos brothers over the years. All of the brothers’ assets, including 50 offshore bank accounts, were frozen while police launched a criminal investigation.

Three months later, Osvaldo was arrested and Enrique fled the country. But before he left, he released a statement to his investors, saying: “We ask respectfully of all creditors to maintain their understanding, their discretion and their confidence in the sense that we will do anything necessary to finally finish this situation so we can normalize the payment of all their debts.”

Investors like McLeod have rallied around the brothers, calling them “honest” and “honourable” and saying they were unfairly targeted because they cut into the business of local banks. And they are convinced their investments could still be recovered.

“The money is should still be invested and earning interest,” says McLeod, “and if that’s the case, if (the brothers are) allowed to continue (their) business, then (they) should have the capital to pay everybody.”

In Montreal, a group of investors who say they had to return to Canada because they are broke, are considering a class action lawsuit to force the Costa Rican government into international arbitration. They say Costa Rica was asked by Canada to investigate a particular sum that was linked to drug traffickers – and not to seize clean money belonging to thousands of innocent investors.

But at this point, the Costa Rican government has only been able to recover $7 million of the hundreds of millions invested, and the whereabouts of hundreds of millions of dollars – and of Enrique Villalobos – remain a mystery.

Jeff McLeod had to return to a life hauling produce across B.C. after he lost his money. “It’s just pretty much everything I owned,” he says.

Now, all he’s left with is regret for buying into a fool’s paradise.

“In retrospect, I can say I didn’t look into it well enough, but at the same time, I was dealing with a man with a 20-plus year reputation for making his payments to investors,” he says. “I would certainly be smarter to spread my investments around a little bit.”

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1078504447135_23///?hub=WFive
 

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The Tourists

CTV.ca News Staff

More than one million tourists travel to Costa Rica every year, thanks to PR campaigns espousing the Latin American nation as a model of eco-tourism, rife with spectacular scenery, tropical rainforests and untouched beaches.

But there’s a dark underbelly to Costa Rica’s tourism industry– one they don’t show you in the brochures or on the country’s official tourism website. But there are countless other websites, ones that boast about Costa Rica’s thriving sex tourism industry, and these have scores of men flocking to the tropical paradise in pursuit of one thing: Cheap sex with young women – even with girls.

Prostitution is legal in Costa Rica, though only with women 18 or older. But laws prohibiting buying sex with minors haven’t stopped the market for underage sex from thriving.

“There are thousands of girls who are being sexually exploited by perverts who think that for 20 or 30 dollars, they can have sex with a child,” says Bruce Harris, who runs a non-profit organization, called Casa Alianza, helping poor and homeless children.

Costa Rica is quickly replacing countries like Thailand and the Philippines as the North American sex tourist’s destination of choice. “They’ve been looking for countries that are closer, easier to get to,” says Harris. “They’re looking for countries where the laws are weak or they’re not enforced; where there is corruption so they can buy themselves out of a situation; where there’s poverty, because where there’s poverty, there are a lot of children who are desperate – and desperate children do desperate things in order to eat.”

There’s no slinking down dark alleyways to find underage sex in Costa Rica. Prospective tourists can get the lowdown on arranging for these trysts over the Internet before they go, and once they arrive, can make contact at hotels in the “Gringo Gulch” area in downtown San Jose or even through taxi drivers. One hotel – the Del Rey – is Costa Rica’s best-known sex destination, and is called “one stop shopping” for sexual adventure online on the World Sex Guide.

Immigration cards tourists are given on arrival warn that sex with minors is an illegal act in Costa Rica, but when you’re talking about an impoverished country, often money talks a lot louder than the rules.

“People come here and think they can do whatever they want because it’s a poor country,” says Harris. “They have no respect for the dignity of children. … They would never do this is Toronto or Vancouver or Saskatchewan. So why do they come here? Because they think they can get away with it.”

The men who go down to Costa Rica to buy sex don’t see it as exploitation. They think they are doing the women a favour – giving them U.S. dollars in exchange for their “company.”

“They love it when you treat them like a lady, and then they’ll come back and reward you … talking to her about her life and liking her will get you a long way,” one man, recorded on hidden camera inside a well-known sex bar, told W-FIVE.

But often, Costa Rican sex workers are too poor to have any other options, and the lifestyle is a necessity, not a choice. “The great majority of these girls who are being sexually exploited are poor, often uneducated … and what they want to do is to make money to help feed their other brothers and sisters,” says Harris. “They’re not doing it because they like it.”

Other women have been trafficked into the country from places like Colombia, Panama, and even the Philippines, Bulgaria and Romania, Harris says. They come believing they’ll be earning decent money working as waitresses or at the hotel, but once they get to Costa Rica, the traffickers take their passports and they are forced into prostitution.

While previous administrations have turned a blind eye to the underage sex trade, a key inaugural promise of President Abel Pacheco in 2002 was to derail sex tourism. But Ana Leon, director of Costa Rica’s National Institution for the Protection of Children, says that’s not an easy task.

“The problem is very complex because there are many people involved who have financial interests … people who are making money out of selling children’s sexual services to foreigners,” she told W-FIVE.

“We have to fight against those who are behind the business. We have to fight against the tourists. Besides being a criminal issue, I think it’s a very serious moral and ethical issue.”

But with so many girls turning to prostitution as a means of escaping poverty, Leon says the government also faces a battle from the sex workers themselves. “A girl would say, ‘I earn $200 a night with two tourists. … Are you going to give me $200 a night?”

Pacheco told W-FIVE Costa Rica’s underage prostitution problem “embarrasses us terribly,” and cited the recent bust of a prostitution ring as an example of how his government is making progress.

But he pinned much of the blame on the tourists, saying “Who is more at fault, the one who sins for the pay or the one who pays for the sin?” The statement begs the question: Do countries that wouldn’t tolerate these practices at home have any obligation to stop their own citizens from engaging in sex tourism elsewhere?

In 1997, Canada passed a law making it a punishable offence to sexually abuse children outside of the country. But with no charges laid under that law to date, Canadian men who visit Costa Rica in search of young sexual conquests have little or nothing to worry about.

“It looks great on paper,” says Ben Perrin, a Canadian who helped found an organization fighting the trafficking of children for sex. “What’s needed now is some form of enforcement that’s effective.”

Perrin say the first step to enforcement would be setting up better connections between countries known to be destinations for sex tourists, including liaison officers on the ground at such destinations.

“How (is Canada) supposed to know that a child in Costa Rica has been abused by a Canadian when there’s no one on the ground to liaise with the local officers?” he says.

But with the problem far outside of Canada’s backyard, the solution still lies with the Costa Rican government to invest in a campaign to save its children from tourists who travel there to exploit them.

Costa Rica has spent years and millions of dollars trying to lure tourists to the country. But unless it finds a way to draw them for the right reasons, it risks becoming known as the “Bangkok of the western hemisphere” – infamous for selling its women and children to foreigners.

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1078505621112_73914821///?hub=WFive
 

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That is some bad shit, I mean...these things happened...but I think some Tico's need to get together and go to the gov't to say something about stopping the Costa Rica bashing......my freaking family wants me to move home because they don't feel "right" about me being here....wow!
 

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Ghost...why is it "bashing" if they're are reporting on the truth. There are many websites and TV programs that talk about the rain forests, nice weather and waves and great sport-fishing. But if something is brought up that is unflattering to CR, somehow that's "bashing", according to you.

The child prostitution piece fails to mention that Ticos are also part of the problem, as foreigners are not the only solicitors of under-aged prostitutes. Furthermore, the exploitation of these minors almost always takes place with the participation of a family member who is involved in exploiting the child.

BTW...Granpa Pacheco speaking in biblical terms with his scripture quotes and "sin" jargon is enough to make me want to puke. What a phoney piece of shit he is. Maggot.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by American:
BTW...Granpa Pacheco speaking in biblical terms with his scripture quotes and "sin" jargon is enough to make me want to puke. What a phoney piece of shit he is. Maggot.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Are you two RELATED?

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If I was, then maybe I could have been his "Ambassador to the Sportsbooks" and assisted him with all those 5- and 6-figure checks he received from certain large sportsbooks as "contributions." This guy is dirty.

The Villalobos brothers were also "supporters" of his.
 

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All i have to say to all of the ass..... that keep on talking shit about CR, is remember the reason why you are here and shut the **** up, if you dont like it, I dont think anybody has a gun to your head for to stay here, and American GET A LIFE.
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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Dirty Angel:
All i have to say to all of the ass..... that keep on talking shit about CR, is remember the reason why you are here and shut the **** up, if you dont like it<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

That's as weak as it gets, but why am I surprised.

BTW...Why were all the little commie students at UCR protesting when the U.S. attacked Saddam Hussien's regime in Iraq? If the Ticos don't like what the U.S. does to their Iraqi friends, they can shut the f*ck up. Is that how we should look at it, kid?

[This message was edited by American on March 08, 2004 at 04:15 PM.]
 

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Reality check number 1) You might have forgotten that there is people that didn't agree with the attack even in the States that doesn't make them "commies" does it, you are a little to quick to use "labels" to disqualify everything and never give any kind of solid argument (perfect tactic for your history "classes")

Reality check number 2) the "commies" can say whatever they want, they happen to be citizens of Costa Rica voicing their opinions in Costa Rica, should they say the same thing in the States I supose you would tell them to shut the **** up and leave wouldn't you?

Reality check number 3) American is a dumbass
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(not a label but a scientific fact)
 

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Reality check No.4) You're still stuck in that toilet. How's the traffic these days?
 

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Not bad thanks for asking, how is your spelling doing Grandpa?

Any luck recovering from Alzheimer's? Did your combo of Viagra/Rubber doll arrive today?
 

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I told you to stop doing heroin long before your brain got long term damage....now that you are completely crazy it's too late
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Ghost, the US government just can't stand to see anyone getting over. Seeing a bunch of ex pats making a decent chunk of change under the table in a tropical country nearly pushes them over the edge.

If you read am costa rica you wonder how you leave the house with out being killed.

Let them continue to hate, just get yourself setup with a nice place to kick back out in the country.
 

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