New | One week after Panama Papers ... who are the true owners of these shell companies?
Dummy owners and layers and layers of papers shield the rich and powerful

A decade ago, then-US Senator Carl Levin offered a simple solution to the secrecy of shell companies: List the true owners.
But the Michigan senator retired last year without his proposed legislation reaching fruition, despite backing from authorities who crack down on dirty money.
“I think it’s very disappointing that we can’t get the Congress to respond to the request, the urgent request of the law enforcement community,” Levin, a Democrat, said in a recent interview.
As the massive leak of the Panama Papers shows, bad actors continue to operate freely under the cover of anonymity — not only abroad, but also within US borders, using shell companies in places like Wyoming, Nevada and Delaware.
An important measure of whether reform follows is whether the United States would require that companies that register shell companies keep information about true owners, known as “beneficial owners.”
“There’s no excuse for this. It’s very, very simple to add one line to the articles of incorporation to put down, ‘Who are the real owners — the so-called beneficial owners — of this corporation?’” Levin said in Detroit ahead of the publication of the Panama Papers.
