Sucre La Paz, Bolivia – Outrage: NYC Orthodox Businessman Falls Prey To Bolivian Con Artist, Ends Up Jailed

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    This May 2009 photo provided by Miriam Ungar shows Jacob Ostreicher in Brooklyn, New York. Ostreicher, an orthodox Jew from New York City, is being held in a Bolivian prison in the eastern provincial capital of Santa Cruz while authorities investigate him for money laundering. He is the victim, he and his associates say, of a local agent he and his Swiss partner hired to manage their rice plantation in Bolivia's fertile eastern lowlands. They say the agent turned out to be a Colombian confidence woman who became entwined amorously and financially with a murderous Brazilian drug trafficker. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Miriam Ungar)Sucre La Paz, Bolivia – On paper at least, growing rice in Bolivia’s fertile eastern lowlands seemed like a terrific investment. The land was a bargain, the labor dirt cheap.

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    Jacob Ostreicher, a New York City businessman, and his Swiss partners figured they could double their $25 million investment in less than five years. And they could run it remotely.

    Or so they thought. The woman they entrusted to manage the investment turned out to be a Colombian con artist who was involved, amorously and financially, with a murderous Brazilian drug trafficker, they say.

    Now Ostreicher is sitting in an overcrowded, notoriously unruly Bolivian prison, while authorities have spent more than two months investigating him for money-laundering.

    He is the victim, he and his associates say.

    Ostreicher is backed by a local human rights group that says prosecutors have behaved suspiciously in the case, including in their apparent decision to seize and sell millions of dollars’ worth of the rice.

    New York police say Ostreicher has no known criminal record and U.S. diplomats, who have regularly visited him in prison, have raised his case with Bolivian ministers to express concerns about possible judicial abuses.

    The prosecutor who had Ostreicher placed in preventive detention said the American had failed to prove the investors’ money was obtained legally.

    “At no time were his rights ever violated,” Roberto Acha told The Associated Press. However, it is unclear when Ostreicher will get his next day in court.

    Ostreicher, 52, and his wife, Miriam Ungar, say prosecutors never requested proof of the money’s legitimacy. They suspect unscrupulous officials are trying to send them home penniless.

    Ungar is at her wit’s end, she said, with all the conniving she’s seen. “It gives hell a good name,” was her take on Bolivia, a poor, landlocked South American nation with a history of corruption.

    Ostreicher, who owns a Brooklyn flooring company, said he cooperated fully with Bolivian authorities, even when they cautioned him that doing so could incriminate him.

    Beyond his safety in a prison whose interior is largely ruled by its 3,200 inmates, they are worried about losing the more than 30,000 acres the investors bought and 20,000 tons of rice that authorities confiscated.

    The investors’ farm manager, Ronny Suarez, said the state agency in charge of seized drug assets was calling transport companies Wednesday to ask them to pick up the rice.

    “They want to confiscate everything so they can make it theirs and sell it,” he said.

    A woman who answered the phone at the agency’s local office told the AP that officials were not authorized to discuss active investigations. She would not give her name.

    The venture was launched in 2008, just as U.S. relations with President Evo Morales began to seriously deteriorate.

    Morales’ leftist government expelled the U.S. ambassador that year, accusing him of inciting the opposition, and began moving to confiscate big farms and ranches from major landholders, including an American rancher named Ronald Larsen who authorities claimed was exploiting his workers.

    Neither Ostreicher nor the principal investor, a Swiss associate named Andre Zolty, speaks Spanish or had been to Bolivia when they took the plunge, they said.

    They entrusted the venture to Claudia Liliana Rodriguez, who had gained Zolty’s trust years earlier when as a business student in Switzerland she did some work for him. She claimed to come from wealth, they said.

    Ostreicher and Zolty say Rodriguez stole millions from them. Whenever they pressed from afar for documentation, they said, she threatened to quit.

    After several trips to Bolivia to try to sort things out, with Rodriguez constantly evading him, the investors said, they finally learned the disturbing details of how she operated.

    She pocketed their money while buying machinery and supplies on credit and putting land titles in her name, they said.

    Meanwhile, Rodriguez planted rice on land she claimed to have purchased for the investors but that actually still belonged to a Brazilian drug trafficker named Maximiliano Dorado and his younger brother, the investors said.

    Rodriguez paid for the land with a $3.5 million personal check that bounced, they said, never telling them she was getting them involved with a dangerous criminal.

    “Max” Dorado had escaped in 2001 from a Brazilian prison where he was serving a 15-year sentence for drug trafficking, murder and money laundering, according to Brazilian police.

    Soon after the investors learned they had rice growing on Dorado’s land, he was gone. And so was Rodriguez.

    Dorado was captured by police and deported to Brazil in December. Ostreicher and his wife say Rodriguez had betrayed him after a quarrel over the ranch.

    When Bolivian counternarcotics police raided the ranch, Ungar said, “they asked the workers on the farm, ‘Who do you work for?’ And they said they worked for us.”

    Ostreicher, a loquacious man described by his Brooklyn rabbi friend Saul Klein as tough but good-hearted, had by then fired Rodriguez and filed civil and criminal complaints against her. The investors took out a full-page ad in the biggest newspaper in Santa Cruz, the eastern provincial capital, in March to announce the news.

    Ostreicher said by phone from prison that when Bolivian prosecutors first came calling, they were courteous and friendly, even if they did keep asking him to buy them lunch.

    In May, Rodriguez returned to Santa Cruz and was arrested on money-laundering charges. She was later transferred to a prison in the capital, La Paz, and the AP was unable to locate her lawyer. A secretary for the judge handling her case said she did not know the lawyer’s name.

    Less than a week after Rodriguez’s arrest, prosecutors raided his office, hauling away computers, cell phones and hundreds of documents. On June 3, he was arrested and thrown into a cell that he said reeked of feces and urine.

    Acha and another prosecutor told the judge who ordered Ostreicher jailed that Zolty, the principal investor, was being investigated by Swiss authorities for money-laundering, according to a transcript of the hearing obtained by the AP.

    That claim was disputed by Swiss federal police, who confirmed on Tuesday the authenticity of a document they issued June 6 at Zolty’s request. It said neither Zolty nor his firm are under police investigation.

    The Santa Cruz chapter of the respected, independent Permanent Committee for Human Rights has been assisting Ostreicher. Its vice president, Carlos Cortez, is persuaded that Rodriguez “used and defrauded” them.

    Miriam Ungar, meanwhile, has been running her insurance business from Santa Cruz while taking her husband all his meals, because they are Kosher and no one else at Palmasola prison shares their special religious diet.

    “I have to take double of everything,” Ungar said, “because the guards take half of whatever I take him.”

    He’s not just the only observant Jew at Palmasola, Ostreicher said. He’s the only American.

    Rabbi Klein said local rabbis have been trying to figure out how to help Ostreicher but recognize that Washington’s leverage in Bolivia is weak.

    “He is a well-loved person,” Klein said. “What is this? It’s a horror movie.”

    UPDATE: Aug 25 5:00 PM
    VIN News has learned that High profile international attorney Mordechai Tzvin recently met a deputy president of south American country, and tried to meet other top leaders of south American countries that are in close relationship with the Bolivian president trying to help in this case. Tzivin told VIN News, “Unfortunately The Bolivians do not sympathies any help that comes from the USA.”

    Tzvin is widely known with his mysterious high profile connections, and other international cases, including a victory against Colombia in the case of Yair Klien and the case of the Yeshiva Bochrim in Japan.


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    30 Comments
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    shredready
    shredready
    12 years ago

    why no outcry or benefits here is someone who really deserves it

    madaan
    madaan
    12 years ago

    “Rabbi Klein said local rabbis have been trying to figure out how to help Ostreicher but recognize that Washington’s leverage in Bolivia is weak.”

    US influence is weak????? How can that POSSIBLY be? I thought that once the eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil Bush was replaced by the Anointed One (B. Hussein Obama), the sun would shine, the flowers would open up, the bluebirds would happily fly in the skies, and all the world would love and respect us.

    Instead we have world leaders of all stripes stunned at our bowing, blundering “leader,” and they are wondering how it is that a great nation could voluntarily commit suicide.

    Obama voters: That “hope and change” thing is working out just fine for you, right? Checked your home equity recently? Suckers.

    With that said, I hope that Mr. Ostreicher may soon be freed, B”H.

    satmer
    satmer
    12 years ago

    Yanke, we all pray for you , for a fast and save return keep up the faith you are one block away from home
    Yakov yide ben shindal

    Let’s s go yankee

    MYZHS
    MYZHS
    12 years ago

    H’ASHEM Y’RACHEM, MAY BE THIS SHOULD BE A GREAT LESSON WHAT ”C’HZAL ” ARE TEACHING US ” C’HABDIEHU-V’CASHDIEHU”

    mo613
    Active Member
    mo613
    12 years ago

    i hope and pray mr ostriecher gets home safely,its just beyond common sense,how someone invests 25 million it growing rice in Bolivia buying land etc,,,,
    and knows nothing about farming ,never sees the land ,and hopes to make money i just dont get it,who is this guy? it sounds like a great story for a book,,,hashem yeracham

    eighthcomment
    eighthcomment
    12 years ago

    Matir asurim-beside Tehillim how can we help

    12 years ago

    to have a wife at your side 24/7 so supportively and courageously is worth more than 25 million dollars.

    12 years ago

    How long has he been in prison? The article doesn’t say

    Moser
    Moser
    12 years ago

    Finally we have a situation where it really it a mitzvah to help this guy get out of jail. See people, this is what was meant by redeeming of those in captivity, not the latest fraudster in NY to steal from people and sponsor a bunch of kiddushes and give a lot of tzedakah. I wish this guy all the best in rectifying his situation.

    ishbibele
    ishbibele
    12 years ago

    Yanky is a nice guy and a bal chesed. Hashem will set him free

    Nussi
    Nussi
    12 years ago

    Where is the Yated this is the real thing how come your so quite mr L

    chesed72
    chesed72
    12 years ago

    where is the outcry for our brilother in need from all orgonizations?? how come I didn’t hear about this ontill now?? why only for the bucherim in japan??? I’m I missing something?? or maybe it isnt such a grand stage as the japan story, & some fony askonim won’t get as much attention by helping this poor man?…. can we get together & start doing halacha lmaseh??

    sechelyoshor
    sechelyoshor
    12 years ago

    Why does a person who has $25,000,000 feel the need to invest in risky overseas deals? Even if he put that money into bonds and earned just a few percent interest, would he he still have enough for his children, grandchildren, and many mosdos all around him?
    He seems like a nice guy but I don’t understand the need to try to double his $25,000,000 within a short period of time.
    I guess chazal really knew what they were talking about when they said “mi sheyaish lo mana rotzeh masayim”

    maersk
    maersk
    12 years ago

    i dont know who this guy is,but if you want to take risks with your money-fine-just dont expect everyone else to cry for you when you mess up………………

    Shaul in Monsey
    Shaul in Monsey
    12 years ago

    Well since everyone gave all their money for the innocent Rubashkin I guess this guy is just out of luck. This whole case sounds like a conspiracy and a war on kosher rice. The Syrians are really in trouble come Pesach time.

    Darth_Zeidah
    Darth_Zeidah
    12 years ago

    I hate to disagree with you, sechelyoshor, and I hope you will not be gefrunzled, but it is R’ Jacob Ostreicher and other entrepreneurs like him that made America great and economically sound.

    Ostreicher gives the lie to the story that charedim do nothing all day except to sit in kollel (allegedly in many cases), not to work and to rely on handouts and alms from other Jews.

    Moreover, rich people have more money to spend, or to give away, and that causes a cascade effect whereby money trickles down from the richer to the less fortunate.

    shredready
    shredready
    12 years ago

    The venture was launched in 2008, just as U.S. relations with President Evo Morales began to seriously deteriorate.

    Morales’ leftist government expelled the U.S. ambassador that year, accusing him of inciting the opposition, and began moving to confiscate big farms and ranches from major landholders, including an American rancher named Ronald Larsen who authorities claimed was exploiting his workers.

    Neither Ostreicher nor the principal investor, a Swiss associate named Andre Zolty, speaks Spanish or had been to Bolivia when they took the plunge, they said.

    They entrusted the venture to Claudia Liliana Rodriguez, who had gained Zolty’s trust years earlier when as a business student in Switzerland she did some work for him. She claimed to come from wealth, they said.

    strange

    Tzi_Bar_David
    Tzi_Bar_David
    12 years ago

    While I know there is a Bolivian government supported program to encourage coca farmers to switch to rice (coca being the key ingredient in cocaine); it’s unclear why an American would see that as a good investment given the socialist tendencies of the current Bolivian administration.

    lakewooder
    lakewooder
    12 years ago

    Don’t make a big fuss of this, Yated. If we keep it quiet, we are more likely to see a yeshua.

    Phineas
    Phineas
    12 years ago

    Why does he have to prove his investment money was obtained legally? Doesn’t the prosecutor bear the burden of proof that the money was ill gottten? This is just theft by government and if Bolivia had anything worth boycotting, we would be obligated to investigate that avenue of redress.

    heyward
    heyward
    12 years ago

    It’s well known that the Bolivia’n goverment are the biggest crooks. Perfect example his wife brings him his koshers meals she has to bring double. One meal for the guards. What is he going to eat when Yanky Bezrat Hashem comes home ?

    12 years ago

    The public can greatly help Mr. Ostreicher by contacting the US Embassy in La Paz, Bolivia and telling them (in a very respectful manner) that there is community outrage regarding what is being done to an innocent man and that we would like to know what is being done to help an innocent US citizen. The number to call is 011-591-2-216-8000 and ask for John Creamer, US Charge D\’Affaires