Hi Augie or Where ya been.
Here is that article that everyone is talking about from "misc.invest.canada".
[wsj.com] December 30, 1997
Bre-X Account Remains Buried [Image] But Slowly, Leads Are Unmined -----
By PETER WALDMAN and JAY SOLOMON [Image] Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
The day before Michael de Guzman's apparent suicide in March, the Bre-X Minerals Ltd. chief geologist, whose purported gold strike at Busang, Indonesia, would become history's biggest mining fraud, got a phone call from the field.
It was mining engineer Manny Puspos, calling his boss in Jakarta to ask if geologists from Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., the big New Orleans-based mining firm, could take a particular rock sample to test for gold. Freeport was examining the Busang claim, on the island of Borneo, for a planned joint venture with Bre-X of Calgary, Alberta. Mr. de Guzman, before leaving for a mining conference in Toronto earlier in the month, had left strict orders which samples Freeport could test.
But now the Freeport team wanted more. Freeport's own drill-test samples at Busang had shown little worth mining. Suspicious, the geologists insisted on testing core samples from supposedly goldbearing holes provided by Bre-X. Speaking in their native Tagalog, the Philippine language, Mr. Puspos conferred with Mr. de Guzman as the Freeport geologists stood by the phone for an answer.
'It Doesn't Matter Anymore'
"Mike says you can take the core," Mr. Puspos finally said, according to people who were there. "He said it doesn't matter anymore."
Hours later, Mr. de Guzman disappeared from a helicopter over Borneo; chaos reigned. Freeport executives, worried about their own geologists' safety, ordered them to evacuate the remote jungle site immediately. Scurrying to load their choppers to beat a gathering thunderstorm, Freeport's David Potter locked eyes one last time with Mr. Puspos.
"Is there something you want to tell me?" he asked the young Filipino, witnesses say. "No," Mr. Puspos said after a long pause. "No, no, no."
That parting exchange may have been the last, best hope for a full accounting of the Bre-X case, the $4 billion swindle of thousands of investors in Bre-X's once-soaring stock. In the days following the scam's exposure, Indonesian authorities, seemingly embarrassed by the whole affair, let key Bre-X witnesses disappear. Since then, despite multiple inquiries by private investigators, plaintiffs' lawyers, book authors and Canadian police, none of the Bre-X insiders have apparently provided any eyewitness accounts of how 40,000 bags of worthless Busang rocks were salted to yield a staggering estimate for the entire field of 71 million ounces of gold.
Still, pieces of the global Bre-X jigsaw puzzle are falling into place.
Two Filipino Brothers
All roads from Busang lead back to the leafy Philippine town of Desmarinas, which Manny Puspos and his older brother, Cesar, call home. Cesar Puspos, 36 years old, was Mr. de Guzman's right-hand man. A quiet geologist with an excellent work record prior to joining Bre-X, Cesar was credited by the brash Mr. de Guzman with "discovering" the so-called mother lode in Busang's southeastern zone.
While Mr. de Guzman spent much of his time island-hopping among Bre-X's several Indonesian exploration sites, the trusted Cesar Puspos looked after Busang. Cesar and brother Manny, a computer specialist, resided at Bre-X's nerve center in Samarinda, the eastern Borneo city eight hours by boat down river from the Busang site. The Samarinda compound appears to be where the heaviest spiking of Busang rock samples with gold occurred, according to a report commissioned by Bre-X and to The Wall Street Journal's own investigation.
On March 19, the day Mr. de Guzman jumped or fell from a helicopter transporting him to Busang for a showdown with the Freeport geologists, Cesar Puspos was away from Indonesia, apparently en route back from the Toronto conference.
He surfaced nine days later at Mr. de Guzman's Jakarta wake, and then spent a few weeks watching Freeport and others drill more test holes at Busang. In mid-April, Cesar flew to the Philippines for a scheduled vacation. He was due back on the job on May 1 -- the same week that Strathcona Mineral Services Ltd. was scheduled to release its independent geological audit of the Busang claim.
Instead, while Strathcona was exploding the Busang fraud, Cesar Puspos ducked out of sight -- along with $2.2 million of proceeds from his Bre-X stock options. Jerome Alo, a Filipino metallurgist who was the site manager at Busang, pocketed $1.2 million from Bre-X stock options. Manny Puspos, who joined Bre-X late in the game and never received stock options, now works for Benguet Corp., the Philippine mining company that gave Mr. de Guzman and his confidants their start.
Stock-Options Bonanza
Records show Bre-X's top executives in Canada earned much more money from Bre-X stock options than did the Filipino employees in the field. No evidence has emerged linking any Bre-X executives to the salting.
All the Bre-X Filipinos, while energetically evading the media, have refused -- until now -- to make any public statements, despite pleas to do so from fellow Philippine geologists who fear Busang has ruined their reputation as a group.
Which brings us back to Desmarinas, an hour's drive south of Manila, and to a small brown house in a subdivision called Villa Catalina. A woman emerges from the screen door and walks toward a visitor at the front gate.
"Cesar is working," she says, identifying herself as the maid. She is pregnant and holds a little girl in her arms who calls her "mama."
The visiting reporter introduces himself. "Is this a BMW?" he asks, reaching for the vinyl covering on a sedan parked in the driveway.
Suddenly, a man thunders out of the house. "What do you want with me?" he yells. "You are the one who is ruining my life: calling my uncle, calling my mother!" His lips and jaw tremble, his head shakes. His voice is choked. He looks like he's about to cry.
Cesar Puspos, though hardly broke, is a broken man. In his first contact with a reporter since Mr. de Guzman's death, he is confused -- one moment insisting he must call his lawyer, the next moment settling into banter, albeit reticent, on the shady sidewalk. He talks for two hours. He is frightened, emotional, prone to personal remorse and self-pity.
Alone With the Mounties
This summer, the Puspos brothers, Mr. Alo and two other Filipinos who worked for Bre-X were summoned by subpoena to the Manila headquarters of the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation. Cesar arrived with his lawyer, expecting to be interviewed by Filipino detectives. Instead, he found four Royal Canadian Mounted Police, a tape recorder and no Filipinos in sight. The Canadians grilled him for four hours.
Cesar says he doesn't remember what they asked, or what he told them. He does remember getting upset, and his lawyer intervening, when, he says, they tried to badger him into a confession. The Mounties hinted they would go easy on him if he cooperated, Cesar says. In particular, they wanted information about John B. Felderhof, former chief geologist and vice chairman of Bre-X, which is under bankruptcy-court protection in Canada.
The Dutch-Canadian Mr. Felderhof, along with Mr. de Guzman, brought the Busang claim to Bre-X Chairman David Walsh and helped drive up Bre-X's share price with wild hyperbole. Since the fraud was uncovered, Mr. Felderhof, who earned at least $35 million from his Bre-X share options, has been holed up in the Cayman Islands, issuing statements protesting his innocence but avoiding journalists.
Cesar doesn't think he gave the Mounties much to go on.
"We were just geologists doing our jobs," he says. "How could I tell them about things I didn't know or didn't see."
The Canadian police haven't given up. They recently asked Cesar and Mr. Alo to take lie-detector tests, Cesar says. This month, some Mounties gave separate polygraph exams in the Philippines to former Bre-X employees Bobby Ramirez and Rudy Vega, according to Mr. Vega. But Cesar says he won't take a polygraph test, worried that he might fail it because of his jangled nerves. Mr. Alo, through his lawyers, is also refusing, Cesar says.
"We don't have to take them if we're not charged with anything," he says.
Since April, Mr. Alo, who used to be one of the more accessible Bre-X employees, has stopped returning phone messages left at his Quezon City, Philippines, home.
Not Even a Guess
Cesar professes to have no idea of how Busang's samples got spiked; he won't even hazard a guess. He does confirm that Bre-X took the unusual step of opening sample bags in Samarinda before sending them for assaying to the nearby city of Balikpapan, as The Wall Street Journal disclosed in May. That news caused consternation among mining professionals, who said exploration samples should never be waylaid or opened between mining site and assay lab. The only reason Bre-X opened the bags, Cesar says, was to check that none had broken in transit. He wasn't the only person who inspected them, he says; several Indonesian staff members handled the job as well. The only reason Busang sample bags accumulated in Samarinda, he says, was because the high volume of samples delayed the assaying.
But in Samarinda, Bre-X's Indonesian workers recall a different drill.
Bre-X rule No. 1: No Busang samples could be shipped from Samarinda unless personally approved by Cesar Puspos, says Muzayanah, who worked as a Bre-X logistics officer for 18 months, and, like many Indonesians, uses a single name. "When Cesar wasn't in Samarinda," she says, "all the bags would stack up until he returned."
This bottleneck prompted angry phone calls from PT Indo Assay Laboratories, Bre-X's assay lab in Balikpapan. When Cesar wasn't around, the sample flow stopped, says John Irvin, Indo Assay's general-manager. It caused unheard-of delays for such a hot exploration project. In its Busang geological audit, Strathcona found one Busang sample, drilled on Nov. 16, that didn't reach Indo Assay until March 13.
What happened in between?
Pantiyani, who worked as a Bre-X accountant in the Samarinda compound from March 1996 until last May, shared an office wall with the staff recreation room where sample bags were stored.
She and other former Bre-X workers say the sample bags would arrive by truck from the Samarinda wharf during normal business hours, and were unloaded on the driveway outside the staff quarters in the rear of the compound. Then, usually around dusk, Cesar and local workers would move certain bags inside the staff house, placing them on the recreation-room floor. When the shipments backed up, say former Bre-X staffers, the room became so jammed with bags of rocks that it became difficult to thread one's way to the adjoining kitchen.
Alone With the Bags at Night
Pantiyani saw Cesar opening the bags in the evenings, alone, she says. Sometimes, she says, she would be in the room when Cesar, working from documents in his hand, would line up the sample bags in sequence, open them and sometimes dip a pen or pencil inside as if mixing the rocks. She says she never saw him add any foreign material. But she and other Bre-X workers say Cesar would often remain in the recreation room long after midnight, by himself.
In the morning when Pantiyani arrived at work, most of the bags would already be resealed and ready for shipment to Indo Assay. It seemed so routine, "I never paid much attention to it," she says.
Cesar Puspos, invited to lay blame elsewhere for Busang or to come up with any theory at all for how it happened, the man who knows more about Bre-X's sampling procedures than anyone else alive, says simply, "I can't." He declines to speculate on what understandings may have existed between his superiors Messrs. de Guzman and Felderhof. "Whatever they discussed," he says, "they didn't tell me."
The evidence of broader involvement in the fraud, beyond the Filipinos on the ground, is scant. Mr. Walsh, Bre-X's chairman in Calgary, was the money-raiser and stock-promoter and made many millions on Bre-X. But he was completely detached from the geological side. Mr. Felderhof, Bre-X's top geologist, might have recognized warning signs emanating from Borneo and the Busang data, say geologists who helped uncover the scam. But Mr. Felderhof appears to have been too enamored of Mr. de Guzman's abilities and of their prospective riches to pay any heed, they say.
Mr. Felderhof spent little time in Indonesia, and deferred most questions about the site's geology to Mr. de Guzman, according to former Bre-X employees and executives of other mining companies. At a geological presentation in Jakarta last year, Mr. Felderhof couldn't even name the main river traversing the site, one geologist recalls.
But in the only scientific paper written about Busang, which was authored, in order, by Messrs. Felderhof, de Guzman, Cesar Puspos and Indonesian geologist Jonothan Nassey, the writers made "special mention" of primary author Felderhof in the acknowledgments, citing "his vast geological expertise and inspiration."
'In the Dark'
"Mike kept Felderhof in the dark on most things," says Glen Greisbach, a Canadian geologist who worked for Bre-X. "Felderhof was totally naive, a dupe."
The Filipinos, on the other hand, could be ruthless. Messrs. de Guzman, Alo and Cesar Puspos ran Busang with an iron fist, controlling all project information among themselves, say former Bre-X employees. When Bre-X geologist Dimas Sudibyo, an Indonesian, asked Cesar Puspos why Bre-X had made the unorthodox decision to process so-called in-fill, or less-promising rock samples, at Busang, while sending the more-promising rocks directly to Samarinda, Cesar shot back, "Because I'm the boss," Mr. Dimas recalls.
One of the more mysterious episodes occurred in January, when a fire gutted several buildings at Busang. The blaze broke out before dawn in a second-story suite housing Mr. Alo's office, former workers say. Among the property destroyed were thousands of pages of Busang logs, the detailed impressions of freshly drilled core by Bre-X geologists.
Later, loss of those records would thwart anyone wanting to compare Busang's extraordinary, yet erratic, assay results with the scientific descriptions of the same rocks as they came out of the ground.
As panic swept through the Busang camp, Mr. Alo directed the futile efforts to extinguish the blaze, former workers say. When the fire burned itself out at about seven in the morning, he ordered a bulldozer to plow the site under, despite complaints from some Bre-X employees who wanted to look for remains of their things, according to former workers.
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