Double standards
We need more journalism like this:
Several times a year, Teodoro Nguema Obiang arrives at the doorstep of the United States from his home in Equatorial Guinea, on his way to his $35 million estate in Malibu, Calif., his fleet of luxury cars, his speedboats and private jet. And he is always let into the country.
The nation’s doors are open to Mr. Obiang, the forest and agriculture minister of Equatorial Guinea and the son of its president, even though federal law enforcement officials believe that “most if not all” of his wealth comes from corruption related to the extensive oil and gas reserves discovered more than a decade and a half ago off the coast of his tiny West African country, according to internal Justice Department and Immigration and Customs Enforcement documents
The reason Obiang gets a free pass on immigration laws is because Equatorial Guinea has oil. But there are other warlords and tyrants who breeze through borders and freely bank internationally, despite their activities being well known to intelligence services. When borders should count most of all, they can be at their weakest.