We're learning more about the tax avoidance schemes of the uber-rich courtesy of the Pandora Papers, published Sunday by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, which are putting Jordan's King Abdullah II in a particularly bad light. The longest-serving monarch in the Arab world, who's ruled Jordan since the death of his father in 1999, owned at least three dozen front companies in secretive tax havens, used to purchase 14 homes worth more than $106 million from 2003 to 2017, amid widespread economic hardships in Jordan, per the AP. More on the revelations and backlash:
- The purchases: King Abdullah II secretly owned three companies in the British Virgin Islands that separately purchased three side-by-side clifftop mansions in Malibu, Calif., for a total of $68 million, from 2014 to 2017, reports the BBC. It adds the king's identity remained secret even after the passage of a 2017 law that required the owners of all BVI companies be identified on an internal government register.