List of people named in the Panama Papers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Countries with politicians, public officials or close associates implicated in the leak on April 15, 2016 (As of May 18, 2016)

This is a partial list of people named in the Panama Papers as shareholders, directors and beneficiaries of offshore companies.[1] The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) released the full list of companies and individuals in the Panama Papers on 10 May 2016.[1] ICIJ published the following disclaimer with regard to the data provided: "There are legitimate uses for offshore companies, foundations and trusts. We do not intend to suggest or imply that any persons, companies or other entities included in the ICIJ Power Players interactive application have broken the law or otherwise acted improperly."[1] The disclosures "implicated at least 140 politicians from more than 50 countries" in tax evasion schemes.[2]

Government officials[]

Current or former heads of state or government of their country as defined by their political position at the time of announcement, not whether the documents in the Papers relating to them coincided with their period of office.

Heads of state[]

United Arab Emirates President Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan
Former heads of state
Former Argentine President Mauricio Macri
Petro Poroshenko
  • Argentina Mauricio Macri, former President of Argentina[1]
  • Ukraine Petro Poroshenko, former President of Ukraine[1]
  • Ecuador Rafael Correa, former President of Ecuador[3]
  • Qatar Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, former Emir of Qatar,[1] is listed as owner of Afrodille S.A., which had a bank account in Luxembourg and shares in two South African companies. Al Thani also held a majority of the shares in Rienne S.A. and Yalis S.A., holding a term deposit with the Bank of China in Luxembourg. A relative owned 25% of these: Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani, Qatar's former prime minister and foreign minister.[4]
  • Sudan Ahmed al-Mirghani, former President of Sudan[1] who was president from 1986 to 1989 and died in 2008.[1][5]
Former heads of government
Icelandic Prime Minister Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson left office in April 2016 following the Panama Papers revelations

Other government officials[]

 Algeria
 Andorra
 Angola
 Argentina
 Australia
 Botswana
  • Ian Kirby, President of the Botswana Court of Appeal and former Attorney General[1]
 Brazil
 Cambodia
 Chile
  • Alfredo Ovalle Rodríguez, intelligence agency associate[1]
 Democratic Republic of the Congo
 Republic of the Congo
  • Bruno Itoua, Minister of Scientific Research and Technical Innovation and former Chairman of the SNPC[1]
 Ecuador
 France
Dominique Strauss-Kahn
  • Patrick Balkany, Member of the National Assembly and Mayor of Levallois-Perret[25]
  • Jérôme Cahuzac, former Minister of the Budget[1]
  •  [fr], an accountant and auditor for Front National[26][27]
  • Frédéric Chatillon, French businessman, and communications adviser to Front National leader Marine Le Pen[28]
  • Jean-Marie Le Pen, former leader of Front National and father of current leader Marine Le Pen[29]
  • Jean-Noël Guérini, the president of the General council (conseil général) of Bouches-du-Rhône, a member of the Senate of France and a member of the municipal council of Marseille[30]
  • Dominique Strauss-Kahn, former Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund and former Minister of Finance[31]
 Greece
 Hungary
 Iceland
 India
 Israel
 Italy
 Kenya
 Lebanon
  • Elias Bou Saab, Education Minister[41]
  • Saad Andary, Second Vice Governor of the Central Bank[42][43]
  • Marianne Houwayek, Executive Director and Head of the Central Bank Governor's Executive Office[44][45]
 Malta
  • Konrad Mizzi, Minister of Energy and Health.[1][46]
  • Keith Schembri, Chief of Staff to Prime Minister Joseph Muscat[47]
 New Zealand
  • Ken Whitney, legal advisor of Prime Minister of New Zealand, John Key.[48]
 Nigeria
 North Korea
 Pakistan
 Palestine
  • Mohammad Mustafa, former Minister of National Economy[1]
  • Khaled Osseili, former Mayor of Hebron[53]
 Panama
 Peru
 Philippines
  • Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos Manotoc,[54][55][56] Governor of Ilocos Norte, eldest daughter of the late former President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos and former First Lady Imelda Romualdez Marcos.
 Poland
 Rwanda
  • Emmanuel Ndahiro, brigadier general and former chief of the National Intelligence and Security Services[57]
 Saudi Arabia
  • Muhammad bin Nayef, Crown Prince and Minister of the Interior of Saudi Arabia[58]
  • Muhammad bin Fahd, Former Governor of Eastern Province[59]
 Spain
  • José Manuel Soria, Minister of Industry, Energy and Tourism. (resigned April 15, 2016, four days after appearing named)[60]
  • Rodrigo Rato, former Vice President of the Government of Spain, and former president of Bankia and IMF.[61]
  • Ignacio González, former president of the Community of Madrid. His penthouse in Estepona, which is being investigated by the Spanish courts, has links with offshore companies. He has been charged with embezzlement and bribery.[62]
  • Antonio Hernández Mancha, retired senator of Senate of Spain and former president of Alianza Popular (nowadays Partido Popular).[63]
  • María del Carmen Luis Heras, former member of Senate of Spain (PP).[64]
  • Antonio García Pagán, former socialist member of Congress of Deputies.[65]
  • Marta Fernández-Pirla, number two of the Department of Economics at the City Council of Madrid, appointed by the ex-Mayoress, Ana Botella (resigned April 28 after being named).[66]
  • Arturo González Panero, former mayor of Boadilla del Monte. Has been charged in Gürtel case.[67]
  • José Luis Juste, deputy in Aragonese Corts (C's).[68]
  • Elisabeth Rodríguez, city councillor of El Vendrell (PP).[69]
  • Alberto Ruiz Thiery, consul at Zambia.[70]
 United Kingdom
  • Michael Ashcroft, retired Member of the House of Lords[71]
  • Tony Baldry, former Member of the House of Commons[72]
  • David Davies, former Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Defence[73]
  • Michael Mates, former Member of the House of Commons[74]
  • Pamela Sharples, Member of the House of Lords[75]
 United States
  • Gabrielle Fialkoff, director of the New York City Office of Strategic Partnerships in the administration of Mayor Bill de Blasio and a former finance director of the 2000 U.S. Senate campaign committee of former First Lady Hillary Clinton[76]
 Uruguay
  • Sergio Abreu, former Minister of Industry and Ministry of Foreign Relations (Uruguay)[77]
  • Pedro Bordaberry, senator and former Minister of Tourism and Sport (2003–2005).[78]
  • Edgardo Novick, businessman and leader of "Partido de la Concertación"[79]
  • Miguel Brechner, businessman and director of "Laboratorio Tecnológico del Uruguay" (Technological Laboratory of Uruguay)[80]
 Venezuela
 Zambia

Relatives and associates of government officials[]

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron, admitted on April 7, 2016, that he personally benefited from his late father's offshore investment fund disclosed in the leaked Panama Papers.[85]
 Argentina
 Azerbaijan
  • Mehriban Aliyeva, Leyla Aliyeva, Arzu Aliyeva, Heydar Aliyev, and , family of President Ilham Aliyev[1]
 Brazil
  • Idalécio de Castro Rodrigues de Oliveira, potential briber of the former President of the Chamber of Deputies Eduardo Cunha and Portuguese entrepreneur[1]
 Canada
 China
  • Chen Dongsheng, grandson-in-law of former Chairman Mao Zedong[88]
  • Deng Jiagui, brother-in-law of paramount leader and General Secretary Xi Jinping[1][89]
  • Patrick Henri Devillers, French business associate of Gu Kailai, convicted murderer and wife of former Minister of Commerce and Member of the Politburo Bo Xilai[1]
  • Jia Liqing, daughter of former Procurator-General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate Jia Chunwang and daughter-in-law of Politburo standing member Liu Yunshan[88]
  • Lee Shing Put, son-in-law of Politburo standing member Zhang Gaoli[88]
  • Hu Dehua, son of former General Secretary Hu Yaobang[90]
  • Li Jasmine, granddaughter of former Politburo standing member Jia Qinglin[1]
  • Li Xiaolin, daughter of former Premier Li Peng[1]
  • Zeng Qinghuai, brother of former Vice President Zeng Qinghong[88]
 Ecuador
  • Javier Molina Bonilla, former advisor to Director of the National Intelligence Secretariat Rommy Vallejo[1]
 Egypt
 France
  • Frédéric Chatillon, business associate of Marine Le Pen, leader of the National Front[91]
  • Arnaud Claude, former law partner of former President Nicolas Sarkozy[92]
  • Nicolas Crochet, accounting associate of Marine Le Pen, leader of the National Front[91]
  • Jean-Marie Le Pen, former leader of the National Front and father of current party leader Marine Le Pen[93]
  • Isabelle Balkany, wife of Patrick Balkany[25]
 Ghana
 Guinea
 Honduras
 Hungary
 Ireland
 Israel
  • Yitzhak Abuhatzeira, son of Rabbi David Abuchatzeira and great-grandson of Baba Sali, and head of Callery Resources[38]
 Italy
  • Giuseppe Donaldo Nicosia, convicted of bribery alongside former Senator Marcello Dell'Utri[1][97]
  • Silvio Sacchi, former judge of Naples, along with his partner Fabio Fraissinet and his accountant Salvatore Bizzarro.[7]
  • Brothers Stefano Ottaviani and Roberto Ottaviani, Italian businessmen. Stefano is the son-in-law of Gianni Letta, former advisor to Silvio Berlusconi[7]
  • Santiago Vacca, Italian accountant appointed by Silvio Berlusconi and Giovanni Toti as coordinator of Forza Italia in the province of Savona[7]
 India
 Ivory Coast
  • Jean-Claude N'Da Ametchi, associate of former President Laurent Gbagbo[1]
 Kazakhstan
  • Nurali Aliyev, grandson of President Nursultan Nazarbayev[1]
 Lebanon
  • Maysa Berri, daughter of Speaker of the Parliament Nabih Berri[98]
  • Marie Gemayel, second cousin of Member of the Parliament Samy Gemayel[99]
  • Ayman Jomaa, son-in-law of Speaker of the Parliament Nabih Berri[100]
 Malaysia
  • Mohd Nazifuddin Najib, son of Prime Minister Najib Razak, Dr. Khadizah Aman Osman, Daughter of Federal Minister and their cousin[1]
 Mexico
 Morocco
  • Mounir Majidi, personal secretary of King Mohammed VI[1]
 Pakistan
  • Hassan Bhutto, nephew of Benazir Bhutto[13]
  • Samina Durrani, widow of former Governor of the State Bank Shahkur Ullah Durrani, and Ilyas Mehraj. Both relatives of Chief Minister of Punjab Shehbaz Sharif[13]
  • Waseem Gulzar, close relative of President of the Pakistan Muslim League-Q and former Prime Minister Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain[13]
  • Maryam Nawaz, Hasan Nawaz Sharif and Hussain Nawaz Sharif, children of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif[1]
  • Dr. Iqbal Saifullah, Pakistani cardiologist and Saifullah family member[13]
  • , chairman of Saif Group and Saifullah family member[13]
  • Zain Sukhera, close friend of former Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani's son[13]
 Palestine
  • Tareq Abbas, son of Mahmoud Abbas[53]
  • Mohammed Rashid, former advisor and financial manager to Yasser Arafat[53]
 Philippines
  • Irene Marcos Araneta,[101][102][103] youngest daughter of the late former President of the Philippines, Ferdinand Marcos and former First Lady, Imelda Romualdez Marcos, youngest sister of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos Manotoc, Governor of Ilocos Norte and Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr, Senator, Philippine House of Representatives from Ilocos Norte[104]
  • Gregorio Maria Araneta III,[105][103] husband of Irene Marcos Araneta, brother-in-law of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos Manotoc, Governor of Ilocos Norte, and Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos, Senator, Philippine House of Representatives, and son-in-law of former First Lady, Imelda Marcos
  • Fernando Martin "Borgy" Marcos Manotoc,[101][55] son of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos, Governor of Ilocos Norte, grandson of former First Lady, Imelda Marcos[106]
  • Matthew Joseph Manotoc,[101][55] son of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos, Governor of Ilocos Norte, grandson of former First Lady, Imelda Marcos[106]
  • Ferdinand Richard Michael Marcos Manotoc,[101][55] lawyer, son of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos, Governor of Ilocos Norte, grandson of former First Lady, Imelda Marcos[106]
  • Ricardo Gabriel Kalaw Manotoc,[107] family member of Tommy Manotoc, President of National Golf Association of the Philippines; Tommy Manotoc is the estranged husband of Maria Imelda "Imee" Marcos, Governor of Ilocos Norte.
  • Antonio "Tonyboy" Ongsiako Cojuangco,[108] former chairman of Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company, second cousin of President Benigno Aguino III,[citation needed]son of late socialite, Imelda Cojuangco, close friend of former First Lady, Imelda Marcos[109]
  • Ramon Ongsiako Cojuangco Jr,[108] brother of Antonio "Tonyboy" Cojuangco, second cousin of President Benigno Aguino III[citation needed]
  • Miguel Ongsiako Cojuangco,[108] brother of Antonio "Tonyboy" and Ramon Cojuangco, telecommunications executive, second cousin of President Benigno Aguino III[citation needed]
  • Trinidad Cojuangco Yulo,[108] sister of Antonio "Tonyboy", Ramon, and Miguel Cojuangco, second cousin of President Benigno Aguino III[citation needed]
 Russia
  • Sergei Roldugin, friend of President Vladimir Putin[1]
  • Arkady Rotenberg, friend of President Vladimir Putin[1]
  • Boris Rotenberg, friend of President Vladimir Putin[1]
 Saudi Arabia
  • Salman bin AbdulAziz bin Salman bin Muhammad bin Saud bin Faisal, member of the Saudi royal family[110]
 Senegal
  • Mamadou Pouye, friend of Karim Wade, himself the son of former President Abdoulaye Wade[111]
  • Pierre Goudiaby Atepa, architect and special adviser to former President Abdoulaye Wade[112]
 South Africa
 South Korea
 Spain
  • Spanish Royal Family associates:
    • Pilar de Borbón, sister of former King Juan Carlos I, and her husband Luis Gómez-Acebo.[115][116]
    • Bruno Gómez Acebo, son of Pilar de Borbón and Juan Carlos I's nephew.
    • Iñaki Urdangarin, former Duke of Palma, husband of Infanta Cristina, daughter of former king Juan Carlos I. He has been charged in a huge corruption scandal in the Nóos case; his wife has also been charged. He was advised by Mossack Fonseca.[117]
    • Amalio de Marichalar, IX Count of Ripalda, brother of Jaime de Marichalar, former husband of Elena de Borbón, daughter of former king Juan Carlos I and sister of the present King of Spain Felipe VI.[118]
    • Cristina Valls Taberner, close friend of Letizia Ortiz, the Queen of Spain.[119]
    • Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, a German philanthropist and businesswoman who had a loving relationship (mistress) with former king Juan Carlos I.[120]
    • Mohamed Eyad Kayali, Syrian magnate and close friend of Juan Carlos I, who pays for his hunting in the Savannah.[121]
  • Mar García Vaquero, current wife of former Prime Minister of Spain, Felipe González.[122]
  • Jesús Barderas, businessman and close friend of Felipe González.[123]
  • Cándido Conde Pumpido Jr., son of former General Prosecutor of Spain and magistrate of the Supreme Court of Spain since 1995, Cándido Conde-Pumpido.[124]
  • Micaela Domecq Solís-Beaumont, wife of Miguel Arias Cañete, European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy and former Spanish Minister of Agriculture, Food and Environment[125]
  • Oleguer Pujol, son of Jordi Pujol, former President of Catalonia[126]
  • Francisco and Juan José Franco Suelves, great-grandsons of Spain's former dictator Francisco Franco[127]
  • Thyssen Family: Borja Thyssen, the son of Carmen Cervera, Baroness Thyssen-Bornemisza.[128]
  • Demetrio Carceller Coll and his sons. He was the son of Demetrio Carceller Segura, Minister of Industry and Commerce at the beginning of Franco's dictatorship.[129]
  • Francisco Paesa, an agent of Centro Nacional de Inteligencia, the Spanish secret service[130]
  • Rafael Anson Oliart, president of Real Academia de Gastronomía (Royal Academy of Gastronomy) and former CEO of RTVE.[131]
 Syria
  • Rami and Hafez Makhlouf, cousins of President Bashar al-Assad[1]
  • Ahmad Sleiman, Governor of Edlib, Syria.[1]
 Taiwan
  • Tsai Ying-yang, older brother of president of Taiwan Tsai Ing-wen[132]
 United Kingdom
  • Sarah, Duchess of York, former wife of Prince Andrew[133]
  • Ian Cameron, father of Prime Minister David Cameron[134]
  • David Sharples, son of Baroness Pamela Sharples[135]
  • Mark Thatcher, son of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher[136]
 United Nations

Non-government officials/organizations[]

International Federation of Association Football[]

Michel Platini
Persons associated with the world governing body FIFA
Football team owners and executives
  • Spain Josep Lluís Nuñez, Spanish businessman, president of FC Barcelona from 1978 to 2000.[142]
  • Spain Carles Vilarrubí, Spanish businessman and vice-president of FC Barcelona.[143]
  • Spain Eduardo Fernández de Blas, Spanish vice-president of Real Madrid.[144]
  • Spain José Manuel García Osuna, Spanish businessman, soccer administrator and former owner of CD Castellón[139][145]
  • Spain Real Sociedad (Spain) and its presidents—principally Iñaki Otegui—under the leadership of José Luis Astiazarán, Miguel Fuentes, María de la Peña, Juan Larzábal, and Iñaki Badiola[146]
  • France Poland Waldemar Kita, Franco-Polish businessman, president of Football Club de Nantes[147][148]
  • Republic of Ireland Dermot Desmond, Irish businessman and majority shareholder of Celtic F.C.[149]
  • Russia Dmitry Rybolovlev, Russian businessman, president of AS Monaco[148]
  • Uruguay Daniel Fonseca, Uruguayan former footballer, now a football agent.[150]
  • France Robert Louis-Dreyfus, French businessman, owner of Olympique de Marseille[148]
  • Greece Sokratis Kokkalis, Greek businessman, former owner of Olympiacos F.C.[151]
  • Romania Cristian Borcea, former president of FC Dinamo București (1995–2012)[152]
Football players
Lionel Messi
Andy Cole
  • Sweden Mattias Asper, Swedish retired goalkeeper[146]
  • Russia Valeri Karpin, Russian retired midfielder, current coach of FC Torpedo Armavir[146]
  • Turkey Nihat Kahveci, Turkish retired footballer[146]
  • Turkey Tayfun Korkut, Turkish retired footballer and manager[146]
  • Serbia Darko Kovačević, Serbian retired footballer[146]
  • Argentina Gabriel Schürrer, Argentine retired defender[146]
  • Netherlands Sander Westerveld, Dutch retired goalkeeper, current coach of Ajax Cape Town[146]
  • United Kingdom Andy Cole, English former footballer[136]
  • Argentina Gabriel Heinze, Argentine former footballer, account with his mother.[146]
  • United Kingdom Kevin Keegan, English former footballer and manager[153]
  • Argentina Lionel Messi, Argentine footballer for Barcelona, and his father Jorge Horacio Messi[139][140]
  • Denmark Brian Steen Nielsen, Danish former footballer and sports director of Aarhus Gymnastikforening[154]
  • Denmark Marc Rieper, Danish retired footballer[154]
  • Netherlands Clarence Seedorf, Dutch retired footballer[155]
  • Argentina Leonardo Ulloa, Argentine footballer[146]
  • Brazil Willian Borges da Silva, Brazilian footballer formerly of Chelsea, now playing for Arsenal[136][156]
  • Chile Iván Zamorano, Chilean retired footballer, account during Real Madrid years[146]
  • Uruguay Diego Forlán, Uruguayan footballer who plays for Peñarol, as well his mother Pilar Corazo and his brother Pablo[157]

Motorsports[]

  • Spain Àlex Crivillé, Spanish former Grand Prix motorcycle road racer[126]
  • Germany Nico Rosberg, German 2016 Formula 1 World Champion [158][159]
  • Italy Jarno Trulli, Italian former Formula 1 driver[160]

Other sports[]

Tiger Woods

Media personalities[]

Hong Kong actor Jackie Chan
Pedro Almodovar
Simon Cowell
  • Republic of Ireland Paul McGuinness, Irish manager of Irish rock group U2[164]
  • Spain Bertín Osborne, Spanish singer and TV personality[168]
  • Spain Pedro Almodóvar, Spanish film director, screenwriter, producer and former actor[169]
  • Spain Agustín Almodóvar, Spanish film producer and younger brother of filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar[169]
  • Spain Imanol Arias, Spanish actor[170]
  • Spain Peru Mario Vargas Llosa, Spanish-Peruvian writer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature[171]
  • Spain Juan Luis Cebrián, Spanish journalist, co-founder of El País, CEO of Prisa, Spanish media conglomerate[172]
  • Spain Teresa Aranda, Spanish journalist and businesswoman, ex-wife of Juan Luis Cebrián[173]
  • Spain Carmen Lomana, Spanish celebrity and socialite[174]
  • Spain Lalo Azcona, Spanish journalist, popular for the first transmissions and editions of Telediario of TVE during the Spanish transition to democracy[175]
  • Spain Marina Ruíz Picasso, great granddaughter of Spanish painter Pablo Picasso[176]
  • India Amitabh Bachchan, Indian actor[177]
  • India Ajay Devgan, Indian Actor[citation needed]
  • India Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Indian actress and former Miss World[177]
  • United States Stanley Kubrick, American filmmaker[162]
  • United States Emilio Estevez, American actor, director, and writer[178]
  • United States David Geffen, American business magnate, producer, film studio executive, philanthropist and co-founder of DreamWorks[179]
  • Hong Kong Jackie Chan, Hong Kong actor[180][181]
  • Morocco France Micheline Roquebrune, wife of actor Sean Connery[182]
  • United Kingdom Emma Watson, English actress[183]
  • United Kingdom Simon Cowell, English reality television personality, entrepreneur, film, record, and television producer[136][162]
  • United Kingdom Paul Burrell, former butler to Princess Diana[184]
  • Germany Jurgen Wolff, German screenwriter known by sitcoms like Benson or Olsen twins movies.[185]
  • Italy Barbara d'Urso, Italian television actress and singer[186]
  • Italy Franco Dragone, Italian-Belgian theatre director, best known for his work for Cirque du Soleil[187]
  • Italy Carlo Verdone, Italian actor, screenwriter and film director[186]
  • Mexico Edith González, Mexican actress and dancer.[188]
  • Mexico Alfonso de Angoitia, Mexican Executive Vice President of Grupo Televisa, S.A..[188]
  • Puerto Rico Daddy Yankee, Puerto Rican singer, songwriter, record producer and actor[189]
  • Dominican Republic Juan Luis Guerra, Dominican singer[190]
  • Colombia Juanes, Colombian singer[191]
  • Uruguay Orlando Petinatti, Uruguayan entertainer and radio host[192]
  • Taiwan Nicky Wu, Taiwanese actor[193]

Business people[]

 Canada
  • Louise Blouin, Montreal native, former businesswoman[194]
  • , British-Canadian metals magnate[195]
  • Frank Giustra, Canadian mining magnate[76]
  • David Ho, Vancouver billionaire facing criminal charges[196]
  • Leonard D. Jaroszuk, Canadian oil executive[197]
  • Annette Laroche, administrator for 150 companies incorporated in Quebec[198]
  • Helene Mathieu; legal consultant based in Dubai, member of the Quebec Bar, worked with Mossack Fonseca to form shell companies[199]
  • Fred Sharp, principal of Corporate House, and its overseas subsidiary, Bond and Co., Canadian representative of Mossack Fonseca since 1994.[200]
 France
 India
 Indonesia
  • Robbyanto Budiman, Indonesian businessman[207]
  • Subianto Arpan Sumodikoro, Indonesian businessman[207]
  • Rani Imanto Rachmat, Indonesian businessman[207]
  • Garibaldi Thohir, Indonesian investment banker and coal entrepreneur, brother of Erick Thohir[207]
 Ireland
  • Sean Mulryan, Irish property developer[164]
  • Stanley Watson, Senior partner of Ireland's largest corporate tax-law firm to U.S. multinationals, Matheson[208][96]
 Israel
  • Idan Ofer, London-based Israeli business magnate, founder of Tanker Pacific[39][40]
  • Teddy Sagi, a London-based Israeli billionaire businessman founder of Playtech and the majority shareholder of Market Tech Holdings, which owns London's Camden Market, and of two AIM-listed technology companies[39][40]
  • Bank Leumi's Israeli bank: representatives and board members[39][40]
  • Jacob Engel, Israeli businessman active in the African mining industry[39][40]
  • Dan Gertler, Israeli billionaire businessman, founder and president of the Dan Gertler International[38]
  • Durgham Maraee, Israeli lawyer and CEO of Wataniya Mobile[53]
  • Jacob Weinroth, Israeli attorney, founding partner of Dr. J. Weinroth & Co law office, and owner and director of Sapir Holdings[39][40]
  • Lev Avnerovich Leviev, Israeli businessman, philanthropist, investor and owner of Lexinter International Inc., which holds shares in Vauxhall Securities Inc,[38] and chairman of the Africa-Israel Investments corporation.[209]
  • Beny Steinmetz, Israeli businessman, with diamond-mining, engineering and real estate companies, and his business partner and brother [38]
 Italy
Luca Cordero di Montezemolo
  • Adriano Chimento, Italian jeweler[210]
  • Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, Italian businessman and politician[211][212]
  • Valentino Garavani, Italian fashion designer and founder of the Valentino SpA brand and company, and his partner Giancarlo Giammetti[7]
  • Gabriele Volpi, Italian-born Nigerian businessman[7]
  • Francesco Ambrosione, Italian entrepreneur[210]
  • Marco Angelo Angiolini, Italian property developer[210]
  • Michele Anti, Italian financial prosecutor[210]
  • Gianluca Apolloni, Italian business consultant[210]
  • Ercole Astarita, Italian entrepreneur[210]
  • Gabriele Benfenati, Italian shipowner[210]
  • Gian Angelo Perrucci, Italian businessman in the petroleum industry[7]
  • Salvatore Bizzarro, Italian business consultant[210]
  • Simone Cimino, Italian businessman[7]
  • Marco Perelli Cippo, Italian businessman[7]
  • Guido Umberto Farinelli, Italian Businessman[210]
  • Antonio Daniele, Italian entrepreneur[210]
  • Giovanni Fagioli, Italian businessman and shipowner[213]
  • Alfio Fazio, Italian entrepreneur[210]
  • Carlo Fazio, Italian entrepreneur[210]
  • Carlo Focarelli, Italian businessman[7]
  • Domenico De Leo, Italian accountant and business consultant[7]
  • Gianfranco Morgano, owner of Grand Hotel Quisisana[7]
  • Marco Toseroni, Italian businessman[214]
 Japan
  • Makoto Iida, co-founder of Secom[215]
  • Juichi Toda, co-founder of Secom[215]
 Malaysia
  • Vishen Lakhiani, co-founder and CEO of Mindvalley, and author of The Code of the Extraordinary Mind [216]
 Mexico
  • Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Mexican billionaire business mogul, who is owner of Felicitas Holdings Limited, a company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands[citation needed]
 Pakistan
  • Abdullah family members Yousuf Abdullah, Shahid Abdullah, Nadeem Abdullah and Amer Abdullah, who own Sapphire Textiles[13]
  • Sadruddin Hashwani, Pakistani businessman, chairman of Hashoo Group, and his son Murtaza Hashwani[13]
  • Mahmood Ahmad, Pakistani businessman, CEO of Berger Paints[13]
  • Bashir Ahmed, Pakistani businessman, chairman of Buxly Paints[13]
  • Sultan Ali Allana, Pakistani businessman, chairman of Habib Bank Limited[13]
  • Gohar Ejaz, Pakistani businessman, financier of Channel 24[13]
  • Shahbaz Yasin Malik, Pakistani businessman, managing director of Hilton Pharma, and his family.[13]
  • Aqueel Hassan and Tanwir Hassan, Pakistani businessmen brothers, owners of Pizza Hut's Pakistan branch[13]
  • Zulfiqar Lakhani, Pakistani businessman and owner of Lakson Group and Express Media Group[13]
  • Hussain Dawood, Pakistani businessman, chairman of Dawood Hercules Corporation Limited, Engro Corporation Limited, Hub Power Company Limited, Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund and the Dawood Foundation[13]
  • Azam Sultan, Pakistani businessman, chairman of ABM Group[13]
  • Gul Muhammad Tabba, Pakistani businessman, managing director of Lucky Textiles[13]
  • Zulfiqar Paracha, Pakistani businessman, owner of Universal Corporation (Pvt) Ltd[13]
  • Ahmed Ali Riaz, son of Pakistani business magnate Malik Riaz Hussain, founder and owner of Bahria Town[13]
  • Javed Shakoor, Pakistani businessman related with Buxly Paints[13]
  • Shahid Nazir, Pakistani businessman, CEO of Masood Textile Mills[13]
  • Abdul Rashid Soorty, Pakistani businessman, owner of Soorty Enterprise[13]
  • Shahzeb Budhani, Pakistani Business tycoon, CEO of Real State development of Pakistan[13]
 Panama
 Spain
  • Alberto Cortina and his cousin Alberto Alcocer, Spanish businessmen, owners of Grupo ACS, the biggest construction company in the world and of 21% of Ence, the largest paper pulp and biomass energy company in Europe[218]
  • Javier de la Rosa and his daughter Gabriela de la Rosa, Spanish businessman and lawyer.[219]
  • Miguel Blesa, Spanish financial officer, banker and president of the board of Caja Madrid from 1996 to 2009, which since 2013 is being investigated by judicial irregularities during his tenure and arrested by this corruption scandal.[220]
  • Eufemiano Fuentes, Spanish sports doctor, implicated in the Operación Puerto doping case[221]
  • Carlos Ortega, CEO of Pepe Jeans, Spanish clothing group[182]
  • Edmundo Rodríguez Sobrino, Spanish businessman, former executive of Canal de Isabel II[222]
  • Eugenio Mora Olivella, Spanish textile businessman and former president of Burberry in Spain[223]
  • Manuel Fernández de Sousa, former president of the Spanish fishing company Pescanova[224]
  • Demetrio Carceller Coll and his sons, Spanish businessman. He was the son of , Minister of Industry and Commerce at the beginning of Franco's dictatorship. Demetro Carceller y Arce (1962), his son, is a director and shareholder of Sacyr (6.04%), director of Gas Natural and chairman and shareholder, with 23% of the beer Estrella Damm. He is the president of the Disa oil plus shareholder of Natural Gas, Ebro and CLH.[129]
  • Martinón family, Spanish owners of Grupo Martinón, hotel company[225]
  • Escarrer family, Meliá Hotels International Spanish executives[225]
  • Riu family, Spanish owners of RIU Hotels & Resorts[225]
  • Santiago Rosselló, Spanish banker, CFO of Banca Privada d'Andorra; appears as a proxy in the same offshore company as Joan Pau Miquel[226]
  • Javier del Valle Petersfeld, Spanish lawyer and tax consultant, imputed in the Gürtel case[227]
  • Pretus Becerra, Spanish lawyer and executive of Bufete G. Petreus[228]
  • Javier Sanchís (CEO), Ana Isabel (Product responsible), Francisco Ruano Martín (Expansion responsible): leaders executives of Multiopticas.[229]
  • Jordi Mirarnau Banús, former CEO of COMSA.[230]
  • Josep Maria Torrens, CEO of Petromiralles and former mayor of Santa Maria de Miralles.[231]
  • Jordi Robinat, developer.[232]
  • Puig family, owners of Flamagas.[232]
  • Rodés family, industry business family.[232]
  • Sarasola Marulanda family.[233]
  • Francisco Ortiz von Bismarck, economist and businessman. Son of , descendants of Otto von Bismarck.[234]
  • Miguel Ángel Marcano, consultant of Abanca Holdings.[234]
  • Luis Pineda, CEO of Ausbanc.[234]
  • Carlos Cassina, businessman.[235]
  • José María Caballé, Servigroup owner, the largest hotel chain in Benidorm.[236]
  • Javier Merino, businessman, ex-husband of Mar flores, Spanish actress and former model.[237]
  • Fernando Maria Masaveu, businessman and member of the richest asturian family.[238]
  • Jesús Ger, owner of , which built a large complex of luxury hotels in .[239]
  • José Antonio Corrales, lawyer and president of the YMCA Spanish branch.[240]

 Taiwan

  • Tsai Ying-yang, older brother of president of Taiwan Tsai Ing-wen[132]
 United Kingdom
 United States of America
  • Sanford I. Weill, when he was CEO of Citigroup, set up an offshore company for his yacht[167]
  • John E. Akridge III, a Washington real estate developer[167]
  • Harald Joachim von der Goltz, founder of Boston Capital Ventures[167]
  • Kjell Gunnar Finstad, Texas resident with an offshore oil business[167]
  • Igor Olenicoff, American billionaire[247]
  • Benjamin Wey, Chinese American financier, and president of New York Global Group[247]
  • Marianna Olszewski, American financial author and life coach[253]
  • Nakash family members[254]
  • Evan Kevin Martin, American sales consultant[7]
  • Candice Roa, Former Secretary of the American College Board up until late 2017
 Venezuela
  • Javier Bertucci, evangelical pastor, businessman and presidential candidate.[255]

Other countries

  • China Ng Lap Seng, Macau-based real estate businessman[76]
  • The Bahamas Solomon Humes, Bahamian bishop of the Church of God of Prophecy[256][257]
  • Bangladesh , owners of Summit Group, the largest business family in Bangladesh[citation needed]
  • Saudi Arabia Omar Aggad, Saudi businessman and former director of Arab Palestinian Investment Company (APIC), and his son Tarek Aggad, current chairman, CEO and owner of 27% of the company[53]
  • Morocco Richard Attias, Moroccan businessman and husband of Cecilia Attias, former wife of French president Nicolas Sarkozy[189]
  • Colombia Ramón Navarro Pereira, Colombian executive of Canal de Isabel II[258]
  • Colombia Hollman Carranza, son of Colombian emerald mogul Víctor Carranza[259]
  • Nigeria Ronald Chagoury, CEO of Nigerian construction company Chagoury Group.[76]
  • Lebanon Monaco David Nahmad, Lebanese-Monegasque retired art dealer[260]
  • Switzerland Glencore, Swiss company of formerly fugitive multinational hedge fund manager Marc Rich[76]
  • Greece , Greek family with an important art collection[261]
  • Andorra Joan Pau Miquel i Prats, Andorran former CEO and current counselor of Banca Privada d'Andorra[226]
  • Germany United Kingdom Ronald Grierson, German-born British banker[262]
  • Netherlands Bert Meerstadt, board member of ABN-AMRO bank and former head of Dutch Railways[263][264]
  • Sweden Anders Wall, Swedish financier and former chairman of Volvo[265]
  • Serbia Roksanda Ilincic, Serbian fashion designer[189]
  • Uzbekistan Patokh Chodiev, Uzbek billionaire, oligarch; and two of his relatives, Alexander Machkevitch and Alijan Ibragimov[266]
  • Romania Australia Frank Timiș, Romanian-born Australian businessman[267]
  • Australia , Australian businessman[268]
  • Belarus Olga Makarova, wife of Vladimir Peftiev, Belarusian businessman and rich oligarch.[269]
  • Peru Marcela Dworzak Ibarcena, wife of Antonio Ibarcena Amico, former admiral of the Peruvian navy who was convicted of corruption and embezzlement for his role in military arms deals during the Alberto Fujimori regime.[270][271]
Non-governmental organizations
  • Chile Gonzalo Delaveau, head of global corruption watchdog Transparency International's Chile branch (resigned 4 April 2016)[272]

Organized crime[]

  • Guatemala Marllory Chacón Rossell, Guatemalan drug trafficker[273][274]
  • Colombia Jorge Milton Cifuentes-Villa, Colombian drug trafficker, head of the Cifuentes-Villa Drug Trafficking Organization and partner of Chapo Guzmán[273]
  • Mexico Rafael Caro Quintero, Mexican drug trafficker and one of the founders of the now-disintegrated Guadalajara Cartel[273]
  • India Iqbal Mirchi, right-hand man of India's most wanted criminal, Dawood Ibrahim[275]
  • United Kingdom Gordon Parry, property dealer who was laundering money from the Brink's-Mat robbery through a company called Feberion[276]
  • Mexico Gerardo González Valencia, suspected Mexican drug lord and money launderer; former member of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).[277]
  • Mexico Abigael González Valencia, suspected Mexican drug lord and money launderer; former leader of the CJNG.[277]
  • Mexico Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, suspected Mexican drug lord and leader of the CJNG.[277]

See also[]

  • List of people and organisations named in the Paradise Papers

References[]

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  132. ^ Jump up to: a b "Taiwan president-elect's brother named in Panama Papers, but did no wrong - lawyer". Reuters. April 6, 2016. Archived from the original on November 3, 2020. Retrieved May 27, 2020 – via uk.reuters.com.
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  137. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Group of death: FIFA officials' financial secrets exposed in new Wikileaks-style trove". Fusion. April 3, 2016. Archived from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved April 3, 2016.
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  146. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k "La Real Sociedad abrió firmas offshore a sus jugadores extranjeros para pagarles. Noticias de Papeles Panamá" [Real Sociedad opened offshore accounts to pay their foreign players. Panama Papers News]. El Confidencial (in Spanish). April 4, 2016. Archived from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
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