While traveling on a U.S. State Department-funded tour of the
United Arab Emirates (UAE), Imam Feisal Abdul
Rauf, the man who backs the Cordoba Initiative, which
would fund the construction of a mosque near the site of the World
Trade Center 9/11 terrorist attacks, met with potential financial
backers of the project, including current and former investors in a
firm that formerly had close ties to New York gubernatorial
candidate Andrew Cuomo.
While in Dubai, according to State Department sources,
Rauf met with financiers behind Emirates National Securitization
Corporation (ENSeC). ENSeC is Dubai’s version of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, which has developed a secondary mortgage system that
is assisting in capitalizing residential and commercial properties
that are collateralized by UAE based mortgages.xq
ENSeC was the brainchild of Andrew Cuomo more than a
decade ago, when, as a senior executive of Island Capital Group LLC
in Manhattan, he was credited with working with the UAE to create
the secondary mortgage entity. Andrew Farkas is
the chairman of Island Capital, and currently a co-finance chair
for the Cuomo for Governor campaign; for many years he served as
vice chairman of ENSeC before selling his interest to the Dubai
government sometime between 2008 and 2009. Farkas also has had
extensive dealings with Dubai World, and his relationship with
Cuomo is a complicated and controversial one.
Between 2004 and 2006 Cuomo reportedly earned as much as
$2 million from his time with Island Capital, which followed failed
political campaigns in New York and his scandal-ridden time as
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Clinton
administration. Cuomo’s time at HUD included a sexual harassment
case and abuse-of-office charges after he, according to the
agency’s inspector general, attempted to have the agency target
African-American mayors in investigations of potential housing
fraud.
During Cuomo’s time at HUD, he also authorized an
investigation of Insignia Financial Services, a firm owned by …
Andrew Farkas. In the civil suit that Cuomo authorized in
1997, federal prosecutors accused the Farkas firm of paying $7.6
million in kickbacks to the owners of 17 federally subsidized
projects that Insignia managed.
Farkas has no ties to the mosque controversy, nor does
ENSeC. Cuomo — currently the New York State attorney general —
claimed he would look into who was financing the so-called Ground
Zero mosque.