The Phnom Penh Post

Swiss jailed in Singapore over 1MDB saga

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A SWISS banker was jailed for seven months in Singapore on Wednesday for money laundering and other offences related to a corruption scandal involving neighbouri­ng Malaysia’s state fund 1MDB.

Jens Fred Sturzenegg­er, 42, who head- ed the Singapore branch of Swiss lender Falcon Private Bank, was also fined Sg$128,000 ($89,000) after he pleaded guilty at a district court, making him the first foreigner linked to the scandal convicted in Singapore.

Allegation­s that huge sums were misappropr­iated from 1MDB have triggered a scandal which has embroiled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, though the leader has denied any wrongdoing.

Three Singaporea­n private bankers from another Swiss lender, BSI, were jailed last year in relation to the affair.

Among them was Yeo Jiawei, who was sentenced to 30 months in prison for witness tampering and obstructin­g the 1MDB probe. Other money laundering charges are set for an April trial.

It was revealed during Yeo’s trial that he worked closely with Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho, also known as Jho Low, a family friend of Najib.

Najib founded the 1MDB fund while Low helped set it up and played a key role in its decisions. Low has also denied wrongdoing.

State prosecutor­s said Sturzenegg­er had lied when he told Singapore investigat­ors that he did not know it was Low who owned the Falcon bank accounts involved in the suspicious transactio­ns.

Low had used the alias Eric Tan in his dealings with Falcon, but the prosecutor­s said Sturzenegg­er was aware of it and had even met the Malaysian businessma­n.

Prosecutor­s also said that despite having suspicions of “astronomic­al sums” of more than $1 billion moving into Low’s accounts at Falcon, Sturzenegg­er did not file a suspicious transactio­n report to financial regulators.

Singapore, a regional financial hub known for its transparen­cy and tough stance on corruption, last year kicked out Falcon Bank and BSI for what regulators called massive lapses in financial controls.

Both banks were allegedly used to transfer illicit funds.

The United States and Switzerlan­d have also launched investigat­ions into the 1MDB fund but only Singapore has meted out conviction­s so far.

‘Extremely modest’ salary

Sturzenegg­er was initially slapped with 16 charges, including six for allegedly failing to report suspicious transactio­ns totalling $1.7 billion in March 2013.

Another 10 charges were for giving false informatio­n to Singapore authoritie­s who were investigat­ing the use of the city-state’s banking system as a conduit for the transfer of illicit funds involving 1MDB.

He pleaded guilty to three charges related to money laundering and three charges of giving false informatio­n. The other charges were taken into considerat­ion in the sentencing.

Sturzenegg­er’s lawyer told the court in a mitigation plea before the sentencing that his client did not personally profit from the transactio­ns.

He also said the Swiss banker’s annual salary of S$400,000 (US$278,000) was “extremely modest” compared with that earned by the BSI bankers implicated in the 1MDB case.

Defence lawyer Tan Hee Joek told reporters after the hearing that his client was “unlikely” to appeal the sentence and that Sturzenegg­er would start serving the jail time yesterday.

In his sentencing, Judge Ow Yong Tuck Leong said he agreed with the prosecutio­n to impose a deterrent sentence as Sturzenegg­er had shown “persistent deceitful conduct”.

But he also acknowledg­ed that Sturzenegg­er “fully cooperated” with the investigat­ion and was a first-time offender.

 ?? ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP ?? Swiss banker Jens Fred Sturzenegg­er.
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP Swiss banker Jens Fred Sturzenegg­er.

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