📚 Historical Archive Notice
This content is from the original TvindAlert.com (2001-2022), preserved for historical and research purposes. Some images or documents may be unavailable.
USA
Consultants
Directors:
Sten Byrner
Henning Bjrnlund
A subsidary of Caribbean Farming Ltd (A Tvind company on the Cayman Islands).
from Jyllands-Posten, Denmark, 28th Oct 2001
After 22 years, the whereabouts of Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind empire, have been revealed. He is hiding on a private island off Florida among world-famous artists and multi-billionaires in a 6 million dollar flat.
FISHER ISLAND - In a four-poster off Miami, an elderly man awakes.
The morning sun breaks through the protective curtains of the bed in the penthouse, situated in a luxury Spanish-style building surrounded by palm trees swaying in the wind.
Even if the elderly man has been hiding for 22 years, he feels safe behind the massive security system of the island.
The 62-year-old man is Danish. He reaches out for his glasses lying on the bedside table and puts his feet onto the soft white carpet. One hundred and ninety eight centimetres of lean, sinewy and suntanned mystery are rising.
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
FISHER ISLAND - In a four-poster off Miami, an elderly man awakes.
The morning sun breaks through the protective curtains of the bed in the penthouse, situated in a luxury Spanish-style building surrounded by palm trees swaying in the wind.
Even if the elderly man has been hiding for 22 years, he feels safe behind the massive security system of the island.
The 62-year-old man is Danish. He reaches out for his glasses lying on the bedside table and puts his feet onto the soft white carpet. One hundred and ninety eight centimetres of lean, sinewy and suntanned mystery are rising.
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The morning sun breaks through the protective curtains of the bed in the penthouse, situated in a luxury Spanish-style building surrounded by palm trees swaying in the wind.
Even if the elderly man has been hiding for 22 years, he feels safe behind the massive security system of the island.
The 62-year-old man is Danish. He reaches out for his glasses lying on the bedside table and puts his feet onto the soft white carpet. One hundred and ninety eight centimetres of lean, sinewy and suntanned mystery are rising.
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Even if the elderly man has been hiding for 22 years, he feels safe behind the massive security system of the island.
The 62-year-old man is Danish. He reaches out for his glasses lying on the bedside table and puts his feet onto the soft white carpet. One hundred and ninety eight centimetres of lean, sinewy and suntanned mystery are rising.
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The 62-year-old man is Danish. He reaches out for his glasses lying on the bedside table and puts his feet onto the soft white carpet. One hundred and ninety eight centimetres of lean, sinewy and suntanned mystery are rising.
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen, founder of the Danish Tvind organisation known as Humana in English-speaking countries, is ready for a new day in the Fisher Island paradise. Since the late 1970s his whereabouts have been a puzzle to authorities and Danish and international media.
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Most people have heard about Amdi, but only the chosen few have seen him. The secretive teacher has been hiding on this island for 10 years, while the myths surrounding his person have flourished. From here, he has followed rumours that he be dead, mentally ill or hidden away by Tvind members having seized power.
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
He has followed reports by mentally broken defectors from the inner circles of Tvind on a magic guru by whom they had let themselves be seduced.
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
He has followed reports from Africa and Latin America on Tvind students having been left behind in life-threatening situations left to beg for food in the street.
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
In particular, he has followed the efforts of the police to unravel the Tvind empires complicated network of companies in more than 70 countries all over the world.
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Amdis 2001 photo his first photo published since 1979 is proof of how far he has come since 30 years ago he and a group of hippies went by bus to India via Afghanistan and Pakistan and founded The Necessary Teacher College (Det Ndvendige Seminarium) and The Travelling Folk High School (Den Rejsende Hjskole) in the Jutland town of Ulfborg.
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
At that time, Mogens Amdi Petersen looked like a mild, longhaired, hippie-like rebel who burst into national view for a provocative uprising against the Danish education system and his speeches on solidarity with The Third World.
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Today, his look is cold and to many of his former followers frightening.
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
According to people knowing him, it is also fascinating and with an irresistible magnetism.
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
His superior psyche and intelligence make it easy for him to dominate his surroundings. His supporters admire him, but fear him just as much.
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen himself fears the public and not only the Danish one.
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Many perceive him as dangerous. Authorities in major parts of the world took an interest in him years ago.
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
In his 10th floor penthouse, Amdi may enjoy the fruits of his labour. Money is pouring in from hard-working members of the so-called Teachers Group (Lrergruppen), his most fanatic followers that are in charge of the companies of the empire all over the world.
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Loyalty inside Tvind is impressive. The 400-500 members of The Teachers Group have pledged to give up the major part of their salaries and fortunes in the form of for instance inheritances from parents. However, there is more: They have also given the Tvind top brass power over their spare time, family life and sexual life.
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Only Amdi and a small number of loyal women belonging to the Tvind top brass know the total value of Tvinds assets. According to conservative estimates, it is several million dollars. The Tvind estates in Miami alone represent a market value of more than 12 million dollars.
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The estimated worth of Amdis domicile, the penthouse at 5302 Fisher Island Drive, is 6 million dollars. The penthouse is by far the most exclusive of the 10 Tvind properties in Miami known by Jyllands-Posten.
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The fashionable interior decorator Carol Korn, preferred by the Florida jet set, decorated the penthouse. In 1991, it cost Amdi 624,504 dollars to have her decorate it.
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen moved into the 810 square metre large penthouse with a fitness room and outdoor spa fully furnished.
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Only Amdi and his nearest are allowed entry to the 10th floor flat. A special key is needed to have the lift go all the way up.
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The entrance hall features a black lattice gate and an atrium with scores of cactuses and tropical plants in large earthenware pots.
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
There are marble floors all over the flat. There is direct access from he entrance hall to the 91 square metre sitting room with a fireplace and a bar in one corner. The room is furnished with a light-coloured sofa set, a piano and vases of flowers. Picture windows looking west allow a perfect view of the downtown Miami skyline a few miles away. At dusk the Sun Trust office building is changed into a pink neon monument rising high into the sky.
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The flats walls, furniture, ceilings and ornamentation are light-coloured. The living room has a cathedral-like vaulted ceiling to improve the monumental look. The flat is constantly cooled by a noiseless airconditioning system. Interior decorator Carol Korn still remembers her meeting in 1991 with the new residents Mogens Amdi Petersen and his girlfriend, Kirsten Larsen.
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
They wanted me to leave the interior as it was. The design is luxurious, but kept in a rather subdued, somewhat antique-like style with neutral colours to harmonise with the view of Miami. The flat has beautiful sliding doors towards the roof terraces, says Carol Korn.
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Persons having been in the flat during recent years find that the flat is exactly as when Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen moved in.
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Amdis large four-poster dominates the 40 square metre large master bedroom. At the foot of the bed is a teak chest of drawers and in one of the corners of the room a chaiselongue. The bedroom opens to a 217 square metre balcony area stretching along the entire flat.
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
All windows of the flat are covered with draped curtains, including the windows in the living room furnished with a square glass dining table and 10 leather-upholstered chairs under a chandelier.
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
There are five bathrooms in the flat, the largest situated next to Mogens Amdi Petersens bedroom, and two walk-in closets for him and her. The large bedroom has a Jacuzzi and a steam shower.
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
A fauna, which is unusually rich for the area, enhances this idyll. At the foot of Amdis penthouse, pelicans keep an eye on fish from poles on the edge of the water. The rare manatee, an endangered sea cow species weighing a ton, gently seeks the warm, stagnant water of the marina, surrounded by flitting bright-coloured coral fish. Dolphins are seen now and then.
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Since the end of the 1980s, Fisher Island has ranked as one of Miamis most fashionable addresses. The megalopolis is only a few minutes away, but the islands nature and calmness give the impression of perfect isolation. It was named One of the best places to stay in the world by the Cond Nast traveller magazine in 1998.
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The island is situated off the southern point of South Miami Beach and can be reached by a private ferry only. People not having any particular business to do on the island are refused entry by several security guards at the mainland terminal near a US Coast Guard station.
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Security guards in electric patrol cars meet people trying to reach the island in their own boat when they get to the two deep-water marinas of the island ready to send the intruders back.
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The islanders themselves pay the ferry service, operating at 15-minute intervals around the clock.
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
ID cards are checked over the radio. Visitors appearing unannounced are unwelcome. Either you live on the island or someone living there has to invite you. The only other possibility of going there is via the fashionable Fisher Island Club hotel, which specially checks its guests before their booking is accepted. A room costs between 300 dollars and 1300 dollars per night however, the price includes 50 minutes massage, free admittance to 18 grass, gravel or hard-surface tennis courts as well as a nine-hole golf course.
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
If one has been invited to the island, the security guards will phone ones host before allowing one to go on board the ferry, and also register ones name, time of the day and ID card number.
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
On board the small ferry, leaving ones car is not allowed. The residents of the island hide behind the toned windows of Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce or Ferrari cars. A sticker on the windshield signals whether the car belongs on the island.
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
On arrival, an employee will swab car windows and hubcaps to remove any salt-stains while the cars leave the ferry.
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
A security guard in an electric car will guide visitors to the correct place.
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Discretion is the key word on Fisher Island. Protecting oneself and ones fellow residents is a matter of honour and in the interest of everyone. The unwritten code of etiquette dictates that no one is to be unbecomingly curious.
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Remove that camera. Taking pictures is not allowed, said one guard to Jyllands-Postens reporters before arrival at the island.
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Fisher Island is a perfect hiding place if one wants to avoid curious people, says a female resident.
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
As a case in point, people living on the island working for local residents are ordered not to look at the latter.
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
For the majority of the 465 families on the island, the residence on Fisher Island is their fourth or fifth home. Only about 20 per cent of the residences are occupied all year round. Businessmen from the megalopolises up north New York and Chicago own many of the residences. About 30 per cent of the owners are foreigners.
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The emptiness of the island contributes towards enhancing the feeling of privacy. Very few inhabitants know each other simply because they are not on the island simultaneously.
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Even people having flats on the same stairway often know very little about each other.
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Most people here belong to the Smith & Wesson type. That simply means that you defend yourself and mind your own business, says Seth Nachman, who lives three floors below Mogens Amdi Petersen. He does not know any of the residents of the building. I did not even know that there is a 10th floor, he says.
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Security on Fisher Island is the Alpha and Omega of the status of the island as the resort of celebrities. Without it, TV star Oprah Winfrey, opera singer Luciano Pavarotti, pop icon Ricky Martin, actors Julia Roberts, Robert de Niro and Sylvester Stallone, and a large number of sports stars lead by tennis bigwigs Andr Agassi and Boris Becker and many others would never have gone there. Nor would probably the founder of Samsonite or the Bacardi rum empire heir. According to Jyllands-Postens sources, Colombian narcotics kingpins and persons involved with the Russian mafia belong to the clientele of the island.
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The position of the about one square kilometre island is perfect for its residents. Miami International Airport is only a quarter of an hour away from Fisher Island after the ferry passage.
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The island functions as an alternative tropical paradise to those who do not want to fly to for instance the Bahamas, the Cayman Islands or other islands in the Caribbean.
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
For Mogens Amdi Petersen, Fisher Island has functioned perfectly for 10 years. One of the rooms of his flat is furnished as an office with four-five desks each equipped with a computer. The room features the necessary technological equipment for running a worldwide business empire.
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Many flights daily from Miami to the rest of the world particularly the Latin-American destinations more than suit the Tvind leader. The airport offers quick access to the world, and the bosses of Tvind companies in Latin America can easily reach the island to account for their activities.
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Even if Mogens Amdi Petersen resides at one of the worlds most fashionable addresses, his official paradise is The Third World. The poorest regions of the earth have provided the ground and culture for his Travelling Folk High School and, in particular, for the principal idea behind his empire.
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The thought of assisting in helping the needy in Asia, Africa and Latin America is the motive of young people from all over the world, who have given up their private property rights in exchange for the Tvind culture and its promises of a new world order.
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
However, the real world is quite different. There is much to indicate that the only one coming close to something resembling paradise is Mogens Amdi Petersen himself and his women in the luxurious fuehrer bunker on Fisher Island.
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Tvinds army of rag pickers at the front lead a Spartan life, driven by the joy of a seven-day working week and blind faith in their participating in saving the world.
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
That illusion too is problematic. Jyllands-Posten among others has documented that after visiting various Tvind companies in Latin America several times.
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
One of Tvinds so-called humanitarian projects is situated 6,500 kilometres from Miami in a sparsely populated area in central Brazil. At a plantation twice the size of Isle of Man, owned by Bahia Farming, a Tvind company on Guernsey, members of The Teachers Group and 170 hired hands work hard to earn money for Tvind.
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The heat in O Serto the plateau of Central Brazil is beyond description. Malaria mosquitoes rule here, and for a large part of the year, shortage of water is a serious problem.
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
A handful of Tvind people were sent to this desolate place seven years ago to run a sawmill and a plantation called Floryl, bought by Tvind from the Shell oil company for 7 million dollars at the end of 1994.
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Quick-growing eucalyptus trees are planted in the area, and after logging, they are processed into chipboards.
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Of the purchase money, 2 million dollars derived from The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind. The means of the foundation are earmarked for humanitarian, research and environmental projects, which are tax exempt in Denmark.
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Activities at Floryl do not at all resemble charity measures. Hence, Floryl has become a pawn in the investigation by the Danish police into whether it is against the law to use tax-exempt fund means for a purpose like this.
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
For the local Brazilian population, the meeting with Tvind has been painful. There is massive anger, and the locals in the neighbourhood of Floryl have long since turned their backs on the strange, reserved newcomers. The Danes from Floryl are no longer welcome in Posse, the nearest town 50 kilometres away. The shops of the town want to see cash before handing over goods. According to a former manager of Floryl, the Danes have cheated so many times that confidence in them has gone.
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
When Jyllands-Posten visited the place, there was a hostile mood. Tvind paid staff members only part of agreed wages and held them at the plantation 30 days at a time under slave-like conditions, as described by the former chief accountant Jos Valdonio de Morais.
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
These people do not mind the law, but do what they see fit. The most glaring example of their behaviour is their throwing dismissed employees out violently, keeping their belongings, explained Otoniel Lopes Sigueira, Posses leading lawyer, who for four years represented Tvind in trials concerning the violation of workers rights laws.
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The lawyer, however, ceased co-operating with the weird Danes after not even he received his pay.
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The cheerful Brazilians do not understand the fanatic Danes and their ruthless attitude and anti-social behaviour. The Teachers Group that took part in starting Floryl number Thomas Vth, Lars Jensen, Freddy Olsen, Anne Nielsen, Maria Lindenberg and Birgitte Krohn.
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
As it was, the latter turned up again in Miami as an important pawn in the secret life of Mogens Amdi Petersen.
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
There are several flights daily from Brazil to Miami. Miami is the hub of Latin American air traffic, and American Airlines daily fly from Miami to all countries in the Caribbean, Central and South America and even the smallest nations such as the tiny Caribbean country of Belize.
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
On the map of the world and in world politics, few countries play as modest a role as Belize, which is situated next to the Caribbean between the Mexican peninsula of Yucatan, Guatemala and Honduras.
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
To Tvind, however, the small country is of immense importance. It is a goldmine, a veritable money machine.
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
In 10 years, Tvind has become Belizes largest producer of bananas in particular. In addition, the Tvind organisation produces other agricultural products in Belize such as mangoes, chilli peppers, oranges, grapefruits and limes. Furthermore, Tvind is engaged in shrimp farming and logging in the jungle.
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
All Tvind activities in Belize are managed by a discreet foreigner known to most people as Mr Sorensen alias Sren Srensen, a Dane and long-time member of The Teachers Group.
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
During the past 12 months, he has bought three more banana plantations and is now the largest producer in the country. Financially, it is an unconditional success story.
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Every week trucks transport 35,000 crates of bananas from Mr Sorensens plantations to banana boats in the port of Big Creek, corresponding to 40 per cent of Belizes total production.
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The locals are paying the price for the success of Tvind: Poor conditions of employment, wages often below minimum level, and problems being paid.
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
SPEAR, the human rights organisation, has prepared a report on the banana industry in Belize. Particularly banana plantations managed by Mr Sorensen were criticised in the report. BGA, the association of banana growers, blamed the dominating Mr Sorensen in the wake of the criticism launched.
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The Danes are getting frighteningly large in Belize. It may become a problem to Belize in the long run, says Alvyn Henderson, a consultant in BGA and the former manager of some of the plantations of Tvind.
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Tvind is thriving on opposition. Since its founding, Amdis creation has proved that external difficulties strengthen internal solidarity.
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
In Belize, 2000 banana workers are growing increasingly resentful of the Dane and his staff of fanatic Scandinavians, six in all.
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The locals wonder why there is never any money. However, they have heard a tale: At a meeting in a shack belonging to a banana worker family, four of them told Jyllands-Postens reporters what they had heard:
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The plantations do not belong to him. They belong to his father, a very tough man. All the money earned by Mr Sorensen is sent to his father. That is why he never has any money for wages.
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
There are no shacks on Fisher Island. The path round the island is paved with dodecagonal, red flagstones placed in neat symmetry. It winds its way along the water and makes a perfect jogging track. The tall, grey-haired man sometimes brings his two Leonbergers when jogging. The large dogs come up to his hip. He takes the lift down and turns left round the building.
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
To his right he can see another worldwide Danish company. The Maersk shipping company dominates the freight port of Miami, and container vessels frequently call at the port right in front of Amdis windows. A few minutes later Amdi and his dogs pass the marina with hundred-million-dollar yachts and the slow sea cows. A bit further ahead stands the clubhouse of the Fisher Island Golf Club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen runs along the first hole par 4 of the golf course lying to his left. To his right is the marina. He returns to the path along the water and now has the ocean to his right. Trotting heavily, he nears the historic domicile of William Vanderbilt, the famous industrialist. Today, it makes out the main building of the hotel with coral portals and parrots chattering at guests.
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Outside the hotel Amdi passes the hotel marina with the luxury yacht Grey Mist III. Often a Rolls Royce with light leather upholstery is parked on the quay. He runs past the beach with imported sand from the Bahamas and proceeds to the stretch of the most fashionable addresses, which, in contrast to Amdis penthouse, is overlooking the ocean. Here, residents use their front porches for exhibitions of art collections and sculptures. A flat has Chinese vases from floor to ceiling; another a black, carved fertility figure of a woman with her legs spread and her hands gathered for prayer in front of her forehead.
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen passes the golf club again.
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Here, acquaintance made of Mr Petersen is extremely positive.
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
He is one of our best customers in the pro shop. He buys a lot of golf clubs, says a former coach at the club.
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mr Petersen is known for being extremely discreet and secretive. He never uses his name and is not registered anywhere as resident or owner. Except for one place.
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
In connection with the purchase of the penthouse, Mogens Amdi Petersen was forced to become a member of the Fisher Island Club, which is responsible for all facilities on the island the hotel, the golf and tennis clubs, an internationally renowned spa etc., etc. The membership fee is 98,479 dollars.
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The membership number of Mogens Amdi Petersen is E0070. He shares his membership with Anne Hansen, his longstanding, faithful supporter and mistress. The information given by Amdi is very sparse. M. Petersen is the name. However, he has given the correct date of birth, 9 January 1939.
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Kirsten Larsen, his girlfriend, has also acquired membership of the club. Her membership number is E9006. E stands for Equity Member, which means that both Petersen and Larsen are co-owners of the club.
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen seldom shows up in the club bar or The Snooker Club reserved for club owners.
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
However, during one of his rare visits to the bar about five years ago, he met Oscar Carucci a fitness trainer whose clientele belong to Miamis upper class. Amdi hired Carucci to train him and Kirsten Larsen personally in the fitness room of the penthouse.
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Oscar Carucci quickly fell for Amdis charisma and convincing nature. Amdi was very reserved, according to Carucci. He seldom spoke of himself. However, he was good at giving advice, and the fitness trainer felt comfortable in the company of Amdi and Kirsten Larsen.
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mr Petersen is first-class, says Oscar Carucci.
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
We had many, really fine conversations.
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Oscar Carucci is not keen on talking about his client. That is not something normally done in these circles. He says, however, that the Tvind leader offered him much advice as to how he might realise himself and fulfil his plans.
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
It was always very inspiring to be with Mr Petersen. He motivated me. I felt strengthened after having enjoyed his company. He would always say to me: If you have a dream, follow it.
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
According to Oscar Carucci, Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen treated him well. He remembers them telling him about their travels and about their farm in Zimbabwe where they had giraffes and zebras.
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
However, on thinking back he realises that they really never told him much about themselves. The African farm, though, is something important. He was under the impression that they were particularly fond of it. They always told him when they had bought more wild animals for it.
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The relationship between the two Tvind bosses and Carucci became so close that at a certain time Carucci was allowed to borrow Amdis special exercise bike while he was away from Fisher Island.
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Amdi and Kirsten Larsen complained to their fitness trainer about the difficulty of transporting their two permanent companions the Leonbergers between Africa and the US.
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The dogs, by the way, represented a small problem that had to be solved. According to club rules on Fisher Island, only one dog is allowed per flat. And it does not matter whether there are 810 square metres in which to gambol around.
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The problem was solved a year ago on 13 October 2000. Tvind bought the flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive for 792,640 dollars. The flat is situated five floors below Amdis penthouse. Birgitte Krohn, Amdis loyal esquire, handled the deal.
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The purchase of the second flat makes it possible for the Tvind people to move between the two flats without having to leave the building. And the formalities concerning the two dogs were solved.
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Mogens Amdi Petersen has also made sure that he can leave the penthouse and Fisher Island without being observed. From the 10th floor, he takes the lift to the underground car park in the basement where two Mercedes ML55 4WDs with 342 HP, 8-cylinder engines are at his disposal. The numbers of their Florida registration plates are T77 MHZ and T28 GIU. Both cars have toned windows, preventing a person from seeing from the outside who sits in the car.
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Amdi never drives himself the simple reason being that he does not have a drivers licence. Kirsten Larsen is always behind the steering wheel, according to people in the building.
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The behaviour of Mogens Amdi Petersen on Fisher Island includes all the features that have characterised him since the 1970s and that have made it possible for him to avoid the public and the authorities for 22 years.
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
He does not have any official position in the Tvind empire controlled by him. All positions are filled with long-standing loyal members of The Teachers Group. Mogens Amdi Petersen is formally described as an adviser or consultant, but no one doubts that he has total power. His unofficial control makes sure that he never needs to sign a document, be registered as an owner or give his name in any way.
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Neither he nor Kirsten Larsen has a fixed-telephone number on Fisher Island. According to Oscar Carucci, Amdi always contacted him by a mobile, when the Tvind leader wanted some exercise. Amdi never gave his phone number even if Carucci was his personal trainer for four years.
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Formally, Mogens Amdi Petersen has nothing to do with the penthouse. J. F. Parson, a Tvind company in Tampa, Florida, bought it on 18 December 1991. The purchase price was 4.3 million dollars. The people behind the deal were Danish Sten Byrner and Dutch Joop Nagel, two of Amdis assistants. Sten Byrner signed the cheque for 422,600 dollars issued in connection with the purchase. As security Joop Nagel presented a statement from his accountant certifying that he had personal assets totalling 15 million dollars.
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Immediately upon the purchase, and in line with Tvind business methods - Markham Corporation, another Tvind company, bought the flat. Markham is registered in the British Virgin Island for tax purposes, and Kirsten Larsen and Birgitte Krohn, the loyal esquire, are on the board among others.
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The same method was chosen in connection with the purchase of the dog flat at 5352 Fisher Island Drive last year.
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
That time Markham Corporation was the official buyer, but shortly after the deal had been closed, Xoreux Limited, another Tvind company, took over the flat.
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The two flats are expensive investments. Beside the required fee of 98,479 dollars for membership of the Fisher Island Club, Tvind must pay an annual tax of four per cent of the value of the property. In addition, the organisation must share common expenses connected with living on Fisher Island.
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
To give an example: Mogens Amdi Petersen must contribute 102,000 dollars a year to the extensive service and maintenance scheme on Fisher Island. A similar amount is paid in the form of property tax to the state of Florida.
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The dog flat costs 33,600 dollars a year in the form of taxes and club fees.
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
As a result, Mogens Amdi Petersen & Co. pay 21,617 dollars a month to live on Fisher Island after payment of rates and club membership fees. He partakes in paying the wages of 550 employees on the island 50 of whom are involved in security, 50 take care of lawns and plants, 50 runs the ferry and the rest work in the club or at the hotel.
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Amdis many companies, thousands of bank accounts all over the world and his superficial connection with the official power structure of the Tvind empire are among the difficulties troubling for instance the Danish police. A year ago the Danish police launched an investigation into the Tvind organisation, but not until April of this year did the police department of Holstebro in Northern Jutland and the serious fraud squad achieve a breakthrough. The police sequestered two dozen computers while searching Tvinds Danish headquarters at Ulfborg near Holstebro, and after a few months the police succeeded in breaking the computer codes.
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The many million documents found on the harddisks of the computers in question combine to give a picture of business methods in the Tvind empire, according to information obtained by Jyllands-Posten. The police feels sure that it will be able to prove that Mogens Amdi Petersen and Kirsten Larsen are involved in gross tax fraud and breach of trust to an amount of 9 million dollars with relation to The Humanitarian Foundation of Tvind despite the fact that several years ago Amdi learned the members of The Teachers Group never to mention him by name. He feared that the Danish intelligence agency might tap phones and rooms within the Tvind organisation. Instead, they were to use the synonym KLAP a combination of the abbreviations of Kirsten Larsen and Amdi Petersen.
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Despite progress by the police and hundreds of articles, reports and books on the subject, Amdi is still an enigma as was the case 10, 20 or 30 years ago.
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Anyway, the rebel group of youngsters, led by Mogens Amdi Petersen, who set out on a world tour in the 1970s and todays Tvind empire are miles apart. Many of the original Tvind followers have left. The souls of some have been wounded seriously. All have lost their money, family life and private property rights.
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
One can only guess whichever plans Amdi may concoct in his four-poster on Fisher Island. However, the Tvind movement has conquered the US, the worlds largest market, and has set up in the global finance centre of New York at 82 Wall Street. Tvind is described as the fastest-growing cult in the US in a lengthy article in the Boston Magazine and is compared to the Moon Movement.
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
Jay Cheshes, Boston Magazine reporter, has interviewed a number of US Tvind students. He particularly notes Amdis psychological dominance of his followers and wonders why Tvind is able to make its members give up everything for an unclear purpose.
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
The enigma still exists. Once Amdi watched the world from the lower layers of society and identified himself with them on the road towards an unknown goal. Today, the goal remains unknown. Amdi, however, has moved secretly with a helping hand from the Danish taxpayers and hundreds of supporters and loyalists.
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
He now watches the world from a penthouse on 10th floor, as one of the
richest persons in the world.
http://www.jp.dk/dbp/internetavisen/indland/artikel&art_id=3494836
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Wayback snapshot 2008-07-20
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