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Word: loreans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...Agent Benedict Tisa was in his third day of hammering cross-examination by Defense Attorney Howard Weitzman, and he was beginning to get rattled. Tisa had masqueraded as a corrupt banker in the Government scam that snared Auto Magnate John Zachary De Lorean, currently on trial in Los Angeles for conspiring to distribute $24 million worth of cocaine to save his failing sports-car company. Weitzman questioned Tisa about the log he kept of the four-month investigation that culminated in De Lorean's arrest in October 1982. Some of the entries in the 28-page handwritten document were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime and Punishment | 5/7/1984 | See Source »

...opening statement, Weitzman declared that federal agents had ruthlessly taken advantage of De Lorean's financial woes to entrap him in an operation the lawyer likened to the movie The Sting. De Lorean, he claimed, had been "framed," then threatened by FBI Informant James Hoffman, a convicted cocaine dealer and admitted perjurer. "John De Lorean was sucked into this," Weitzman said over and over again. The videotapes, he said, were "produced, choreographed and directed to make De Lorean look guilty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: De Lorean vs. Almost Everybody | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

...prosecution maintained that De Lorean's "driving desire to succeed" and his auto company's desperate straits had led him into the narcotics deal. On the trial's second day, the prosecution showed a videotape of an undercover FBI agent posing as a banker explaining to De Lorean how money could be "laundered." Off camera, De Lorean eagerly interjected, "It looks like a good opportunity." De Lorean, the prosecution argued, "was caught in the act of being himself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: De Lorean vs. Almost Everybody | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

...trial opened, De Lorean's financial practices were being subjected to even closer scrutiny in Detroit, where he once worked as general manager of General Motors' Chevrolet division. A federal bankruptcy judge ruled against his claim to $975,000 in assets from his insolvent De Lorean Motor Co. A federal grand jury there is reportedly investigating allegations of criminal fraud. The charges against De Lorean stem from the creditors' claims of more than $120 million against the car company. A major charge: that the ex-automaker siphoned off $8.5 million of company money through a Swiss bank...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: De Lorean vs. Almost Everybody | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

...creditors have already tied up De Lorean's assets, including a 430-acre New Jersey estate worth $4 million and a 20-room Manhattan apartment, also worth $4 million. They sued again last week to prevent De Lorean from selling or transferring his 48-acre California estate, valued at $4 million. Without that money, said his lawyers, De Lorean was "penniless." Said Weitzman of his once extravagant client: "He has been brought to his knees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: De Lorean vs. Almost Everybody | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

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