Thursday, June 4, 2026

NEW NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT TO THE U.S. FROM ANTIGUA; CHINESE FUNDING TO RECAPITALIZE GLOBAL BANK OF COMMERCE, SAAB MORAN'S FAVORITE VEHICLE FOR MONEY LAUNDERING

Antiguan government regulators (FSRC) are reportedly putting the finishing touches on a scheme to refloat the insolvent GLOBAL BANK OF COMMERCE, and they intend to accept dodgy Chinese funding to achieve this. Our readers are familiar with the money laundering Global Bank, now under Administration when it was unable to remit the substantial deposits of a Canadian bank customer on demand. More directly, that indigenous bank was the allegedly the primary vehicle for money laundering narcotics profits and terrorist funding by ALEX SAAB MORAN, of the Venezuelan cartel lead by former President NICOLAS MADURO MOROS.

The funding, which will reportedly come from a Hong Kong-based entity (FANCY BRIDGE LTD.) linked to WIOC, which is believed presently to be under criminal investigation in the United States, both linked to corruption involving the country's arrogant Prime Minister, GASTON BROWNE, who has also been interfering with the proceedings filed against Global Bank, by its Canadian victim. Payments into Antigua, for local senior government officials, have apparently been documented by local media.

There is a well-placed fear that, once Chinese funding is placed into Global Bank, it will never be able to secure a correspondent banking relationship in the American financial structure, due to the taint of Saab Moran's extensive laundering history there, and it could end up sanctioned by OFAC. as a National Security threat to the United States.

Antiguan citizens, who are already facing repeated instances where there American-based credit card transactions are being declined, for compliance purposes, could face the nightmare of losing all direct correspondent accounts with U.S. banks, due to Global's prior incestuous intimate working relationship with other Antiguan banks, rendering the entire Antiguan financial structure too high risk for American financial institutions to accept. Antigua could end up totally cut off from U.S. banks, which would push its distressed economy, especially imports, into insolvency.

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