Hold That Car

Exclusive: U.S. government targets the $30 million Malibu estate of Equatorial Guinea's playboy president-in-waiting -- and Michael Jackson's glove.

BY KEN SILVERSTEIN | OCTOBER 13, 2011

When it comes to being the target of international criminal investigations, the buffoonish clan that runs oil-rich Equatorial Guinea may be setting new records. Just two weeks ago, French investigators seized millions of dollars' worth of sports cars belonging to Teodorin Nguema Obiang, the son of the country's long-ruling dictator. A major investigation of the Obiang family is also unfolding in Spain, where the clan owns multiple properties.

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But the United States has been slow to act against the self-styled prince of Equatorial Guinea. Until now.

I've reported extensively for Foreign Policy on Teodorin's over-the-top lifestyle in California, where he owns a $30 million estate in Malibu and where, according to former household employees I interviewed, he was renowned for sleeping all day and partying all night. (A favorite spot is the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles.) The would-be heir of Equatorial Guinea once rented a yacht owned by Paul Allen to throw a party for his then-girlfriend, the rapper Eve, and even commissioned plans for a custom-built $380 million superyacht of his own.

The U.S. Justice Department and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency have been investigating Teodorin -- Equatorial Guinea's minister of agriculture and forestry and his father's handpicked successor -- on suspicion of laundering funds into the United States and alleged "extortion, theft of public funds, or other corrupt conduct" back at home, according to documents from the government's probe. The investigation, which I first reported in 2009, was launched more than four years ago and until now has moved at a snail's pace, despite repeated congressional investigations that, in addition to the joint Justice Department-ICE probe, have produced mounds of evidence.

Some critics have argued that the U.S. government has been slow to move because American energy firms, led by ExxonMobil, have billions of dollars invested in Equatorial Guinea and most of its oil is exported to the United States. Never mind that his father, Teodoro Obiang, who seized power in a 1979 coup, runs a regime as brutal as it is corrupt.

But last week U.S. investigators finally took action. Several sources I spoke with told me that the Justice Department filed a "lis pendens" -- a written notice that a lawsuit concerning title to property has been filed -- with the Los Angeles County recorder's office. Laura Sweeney, a spokesperson for the Justice Department, confirmed to me that it had filed the document [but she declined to provide further information]. (The recorder's office can take more than a week to process documents and make them publicly available.) The document, I'm told, identifies a number of Teodorin's assets as relevant to the legal action, including his mansion, a private jet, a variety of sports cars, a white crystal-covered glove from Michael Jackson's "Bad" tour, and other memorabilia of the King of Pop.

Javier Espinosa/El Mundo

 SUBJECTS: CORRUPTION, AFRICA
 

Ken Silverstein is an Open Society fellow and contributing editor at Harper's Magazine.

DARREN ROGERS

1:26 AM ET

October 14, 2011

Go Lanny

Seems Teodorin is our friend, and if he is sending the oil home as we require, there should be no problem...unless of course Lanny is right, and they didn't pay him, in which case there might be all sorts of shenanigans starting. It seems there are no cheats in this country, all is as it seems, and daddy likes his boy, so Teodorin should go pay Lanny and get his contacts to smooth things out here.

 

DOMINOES

10:00 PM ET

October 21, 2011

Great story

This is a great story and it must be fun to cover it. Well done and very interesting. How does this guy have all the fun? Talk about a lavish lifestyle with nothing to lose....this guy lives a dream, but I sure would not want this lifestyle. He must get everything he wants, which leaves nothing to go after in life...I would like to see the inside of his house and spend one night as a fly on the wall, watching one of his parties. I bet he has an amazing setup and bedroom that is to die for, I bet he even has a silk comforter...pretty sweet deal, but not for me. Thanks for the update too on the story, this should be interesting to follow.

 

MIRKO22

6:49 PM ET

November 11, 2011

The U.S. government has been

The U.S. government has been slow to move because American energy firms invested a lot of of dollars in Equatorial Guinea.
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