Blackwater Worldwide The multinational security corporation
Blackwater Worldwide was reported to have obtained over thirty dummy corporations to secure million dollar contracts from the United States government. After the backlash from Blackwater's "reckless misconduct" in
Iraq, the security corporation successfully obtained lucrative American contracts under several subsidiaries.
Compass East Corporation Walt Disney World Company's use of
Compass East Corporation, created in
Delaware in 1964, is an example of a dummy corporation established to purchase land. On September 30, 1966,
Latin-American Development and Management Corporation; Ayefour Corporation (a pun on
Interstate 4);
Tomahawk Properties, Incorporated; Reedy Creek Ranch, Incorporated; and
Bay Lake Properties, Incorporated; all Florida corporations, were merged into Compass East Corporation. These corporations collectively purchased large masses of land in
Central Florida that eventually became the
Walt Disney World Resort. The dummy corporations were established to prevent "unknowing landowners" from increasing prices of the land by disguising the true plans and owner of the purchased acres. Today, that entity is known as the
Reedy Creek Improvement District (RCID).
Glencairn, Ltd Glencairn, Ltd was an American company used by the
Sinclair Broadcast Group to operate virtual
duopolies during the 1990s when legal duopolies were not allowed by the
Federal Communications Commission. The initial capital was supplied by Carolyn Smith, wife of Sinclair founder
Julian Smith and mother of current Sinclair CEO
David Smith. Carolyn Smith also controlled 70% of Glencairn's stock, eventually reaching 97%. In 1999, the
FCC relaxed its ownership rules and allowed one company to own two stations in the same market starting in 2001. This development brought the Sinclair-Glencairn arrangement to light for the first time. At the time, Glencairn was getting ready to buy Sullivan-owned
KOKH-TV (channel 25) in
Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, where Sinclair already owned
KOCB (channel 34). When the FCC relaxed its rules, Sinclair simply replaced Glencairn as the buyer for KOKH. Glencairn then announced plans to sell five of its stations to Sinclair outright. It later emerged that Glencairn was to be paid for the proposed purchases with Sinclair stock, and that the Smiths controlled almost all of Glencairn's stock. Eventually, the FCC placed a $40,000 fine against Sinclair for illegally controlling Glencairn. Glencairn was eventually renamed under its current name
Cunningham Broadcasting in 2001, with Sinclair later launching similar sidecars with
Deerfield Media and
Howard Stirk Holdings once Sinclair began rapid expansion in 2011; the latter two companies are used where both Sinclair and Cunningham already own stations such as
Baltimore.
Japan Asia Airways (JAA) The now-defunct
Japan Asia Airways (JAA) was created in 1975 as a fully owned subsidiary company owned by
Japan Airlines (JAL) designed to specifically fly the Japan-Taiwan route. As the Chinese government threatened to eliminate Japan Airlines Co., Ltd.'s (JAL) airport traffic rights coming to and from China, JAA was a solution to help decompress the politically sensitive issue. Several other airlines used similarly named subsidiaries to fly into Taiwan without the parent company losing their rights to fly to China; such as
British Airways (
British Asia Airways),
Air France and
Air France Cargo (
Air France Asie and
Air France Cargo Asie respectively) and
Qantas (
Australia Asia Airlines).
Packet Monster, Inc. Packet Monster, Inc. was a
Singaporean company in charge of running the popular Japanese forum,
2channel, but was discovered to be a dummy corporation "existing only in name". The forum is infamous for sexually explicit content, slander, extreme
nationalism, and allegedly "facilitating drug deals". While the company was registered in an office building in central Singapore, the Singaporean Metropolitan Police Department discovered that Rikvin Pte Ltd. was the true firm working in the rented space. An employee of the firm admitted to conducting corporate secretarial work for Packet Monster, Inc., in combination of 2,000 other "companies" across the globe.
Union Pacific Railroad In 1867, the
Union Pacific Railroad set up a dummy company known as Crédit Mobilier. Union Pacific told the federal government that Crédit Mobilier will be the company constructing the eastern portion of the
First transcontinental railroad. The federal government gave Crédit Mobilier around $150 million to build the railway. Upon receiving the subsidies, Union Pacific took most of the money and
bought their own stock. These stocks were subsequently used to bribe politicians, including the
Vice President of the United States. == Government use ==