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The Shadow Hunter

The Shadow Hunter

Titel: The Shadow Hunter Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Michael Prescott
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contents on the screen. A series of folder icons appeared. The first was labeled “BARWOOD, HOWARD.” Others bore the names of various people connected to Kris—friends, coworkers, attorneys and managers, even her housekeeper.
    He accessed Howard Barwood’s folder. Inside were more folders, arranged alphabetically: BANK ACCOUNTS, CLIENT LIST,CREDIT HISTORY, FINANCES, INSURANCE, MEDICAL RECORDS, MOTOR VEHICLES, REAL PROPERTY, TAXES, TELEPHONE RECORDS.
    Abby sat on the bed beside him, looking over his shoulder. She sighed. “There aren’t any secrets anymore, are there?”
    “Not many. It takes some effort to uncover all this, of course. A surname scan delivers the basic info: driver’s license, vehicle registration, voter registration, and real estate holdings. The Lexis-Nexis property database supplies previous or secondary residences. We check employment history with an executive name search. Most of our information comes from the subject’s credit history. It tells us where he travels, what he does for entertainment, where he likes to shop. Then there are insurance policies, medical records, phone bills, property tax filings, financial statements…”
    “All technically off-limits to snoops and hackers.”
    “But accessible to those in the know.” He opened the ASSETS folder. “When I first investigated Howard, the Barwoods’ net worth was twenty-four million dollars. That was in 1994. Recently we took another look. This is the figure now.”
    Abby leaned close to the screen. “Twenty million,” she said. “So either they’ve made some lousy investments or there’s something funny going on.”
    “It’s something funny.” Travis scrolled through pages of spreadsheets, highlighting figures in the Date Sold column. “Howard has begun liquidating his assets.”
    “If the assets are held jointly, wouldn’t he need Kris’s approval?”
    “Most of these accounts were set up so as not to require a cosignatory. It makes it more convenient for either asset holder to write a check.”
    “And also more convenient for one asset holder to move funds around without the other’s knowledge. Where did the profits from the asset sales go?”
    “Into a local bank account set up in Howard’s name.”
    “His name alone. No Kris?”
    “No Kris.”
    The bed creaked as Abby tucked her legs under her in a swami pose. “I’m beginning to see where this is going. The money didn’t stay in that bank account, did it?”
    “No, it didn’t.” Travis found Howard Barwood’s statements in the BANK ACCOUNTS folder. Cash withdrawals had been made at irregular intervals. “Cashier’s checks,” he explained. “Fifty or a hundred grand at a pop. After that, the money trail runs cold.”
    “You have no idea where all that cash is going?”
    “Yes and no.”
    “I thought you might say something like that.”
    “Did you? Why?”
    “Because you still haven’t explained how dummy corporations fit into all this.”
    “Good point. I haven’t. There is another factor.” He opened the REAL PROPERTY folder. “When we ran a property search on Howard Barwood, we found a house in Culver City.” An address came up on the screen. “At first glance there’s nothing odd about that. Howard owns a number of properties, small and large. But recently he sold this house, taking a loss. The buyer was something called Trendline Investments. They’re incorporated in the Netherlands Antilles, if that means anything to you.”
    “A haven for offshore banking. Airtight secrecy laws.”
    “Very good. Now look at Howard’s credit card statements.” Travis opened the CREDIT HISTORY folder. “They include the purchase of round-trip airline tickets to Willemstad. It’s the capital city of the Netherlands Antilles.”
    “So let me take a shot in the dark. Trendline Investments is a dummy corporation. Howard set it up. He sold the Culver City house to himself.”
    “I think so. Can’t prove it, but his trip to the Antilles is strong circumstantial evidence. He stayed for two nights, enough time for him to execute all the paperwork required to establish a shell corporation with its own bank account.”
    “When?”
    Travis scrolled down to the hotel charge, dated November 22, 1999. “Late last year. Shortly before the transfer of the deed to the Culver City house, and shortly before the other assets started to mysteriously disappear.”
    “And Kris doesn’t know?”
    “There’s no evidence that she does. Of course,

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