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former Silverado S&L CEO 'jumps' to death in Florida

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 1:20 pm
by Jeff
Banker linked to 1980s S&L scandal dies after jumping off Tampa International Airport garage

TAMPA — One of the leading figures of the savings and loan scandal of the 1980s jumped to his death from a parking garage at Tampa International Airport last week.

Michael Wise, 64, leaped from the ninth floor of the garage in the early afternoon of April 8. The Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Office ruled the death an apparent suicide. It's unclear why Wise jumped.

Wise came to St. Petersburg earlier this decade to get a fresh start in the mortgage business.

Wise was a former Kansas clothing salesman who became best known as the chairman of Silverado Banking in Denver, where Neil Bush (brother of former President George W. Bush and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush) was one of the directors and former Tampa Palms developer Kenneth Good was a major borrower. The institution's collapse in 1988 cost taxpayers $1 billion.

As a result, Wise was barred from the banking industry for life even though he was acquitted of charges that he used a $500,000 Silverado loan for personal expenses.

He moved on to Aspen, where he was accused of stealing $8.7 million from investors in a mortgage business, Cornerstone Private Capital. He pleaded guilty in 1999 and was sentenced to three years in federal prison in Leavenworth, Kan.

After being released, Wise went to work for Nations Holding Co., a Kansas company that owns CFIC Home Mortgage.

The St. Petersburg-headquartered mortgage company where Wise landed lost its right to do business in Georgia and was investigated in Florida. One of its problems: employment of felons, which some states don't allow.

He declined to discuss what he was doing at CFIC or how he ended up in St. Petersburg.

"I have nothing to say," Wise told the Times in 2007. "I have no reason to talk with you."

Georgia regulators revoked the company's license in March, without public explanation.

The company paid a $193,000 fine. The company confirmed the problem was employment of felons, which broke Georgia law.

Its response was to fire employees with felony records who worked in some other states.

The medical examiner released the body to A Life Tributes funeral home in St. Petersburg.

http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/article992277.ece

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 3:58 pm
by ninakat
Hmmmm.... a man who knew too much?

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 4:50 pm
by chiggerbit
The St. Petersburg-headquartered mortgage company where Wise landed


~ahem~

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 10:05 pm
by freemason9
ninakat wrote:Hmmmm.... a man who knew too much?
One of my former professors was on the board of Silverado. He used to rant on and on about how everyone else took the bullets for Neil Bush.

PostPosted: Wed Apr 15, 2009 10:08 pm
by Nordic
He stole money from rich clients, he hired felons (and probably ripped them off), and as he's trying to leave town, someone follows him, confronts him, and tosses him out of the parking garage.

Pretty clear.

Oh, yeah, and he was involved with the Bush Crime Family.


:roll:

Another tragic "suicide".

Reminds me of the old SNL skit, with the "ex-cops" murdering pot users. "Another pot-related death!"

BTW, Aspen used to be a huge cocaine town. The airport was, ahem, popular. There were plenty of murders there back in the day related to the coke trade.