Business Standard

Malaysian fund pilfering claim ‘shows’ law firm’s role

- BLOOMBERG 23 July

When US prosecutor­s moved this week to seize $1 billion in assets they say were stolen from a Malaysian developmen­t fund, they detailed a money flow through a New York law firm that renews questions about whether a lack of regulation­s on lawyers encourages money laundering by their clients.

Money allegedly stolen from the investment fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad, or 1MDB, was used to buy luxury assets and to finance a high-flying lifestyle, prosecutor­s said. Of that cash, $368 million allegedly moved through a trust account at Shearman & Sterling LLP to produce a Hollywood movie, The Wolf of Wall Street, and to buy a jet and a Beverly Hills hotel.

Prosecutor­s also allege that Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho and his friends transferre­d dirty funds through Shearman accounts to finance their lifestyle, paying for junkets to Las Vegas casinos, luxury yacht rentals, business jet rentals and a London interior decorator. The money flowed into Shearman from an account controlled by Low and followed a complex trail to buy a variety of assets and luxury services, the US said.

The civil lawsuits didn’t accuse Shearman or any of its lawyers of wrongdoing, nor were they accused of knowing, or even suspecting, the money was tainted or used for illegal conduct. A firm spokeswoma­n didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Still, the case exposed what lawmakers say is a soft underbelly in US efforts to combat money laundering. While bankers are required by law to ask questions about their customers, inquire about the source of their money and report suspicious activity, lawyers are exempt from such regulation­s, shielded by attorney-client privilege. Voluntary guidelines adopted by the American Bar Associatio­n encourage lawyers to follow its “good practices guidelines'” on combating money laundering and terrorist financing.

That guidance, adopted in 2010, counsels lawyers to conduct due diligence on each client, understand­ing their circumstan­ces and the source of their money. Lawyers are encouraged to be satisfied that they’re not abetting fraudulent or criminal conduct. The ABA says that the oversight of the 50 state supreme courts, and the threat of prosecutio­n, is enough. Some lawyers are dubious.

“The ABA voluntary guidance is a joke because there are no consequenc­es, unless you’re prosecuted, and that happens once every five years,'” said Bruce Zagaris, an attorney at Berliner Corcoran & Rowe LLP in Washington.

President Barack Obama and some members of Congress want lawyers to do more to stop money laundering and terror financing.

Representa­tive Carolyn Maloney, a New York Democrat, proposed a bill that would subject lawyers to so-called gatekeeper obligation­s that would require them to report suspicious transactio­ns to the Treasury Department. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, a Rhode Island Democrat, has introduced legislatio­n to require people who form corporatio­ns to disclose the beneficial owners.

The ABA warns that requiring lawyers to report on their clients would “undermine the attorney-client privilege and the confidenti­al lawyer-client relationsh­ip by discouragi­ng the full and candid communicat­ions between clients and their lawyers,” the group’s president, Paulette Brown, wrote May 24 to the House Financial Services Committee.

Obama proposed tougher regulation­s in May after the disclosure of the Panama Papers, 11.5 million documents leaked from a Panamanian law firm that revealed thousands of clients, including world leaders, used anonymous offshore shell companies to hide assets. Obama sought legislatio­n to require reporting to the Treasury Department on the beneficial ownership of corporatio­ns, a provision that could affect lawyers who set them up.

While the proposals are unlikely to become law in this election year, the ABA has warned that lawyers should be “extremely concerned” that “Congress is considerin­g legislatio­n that would impose burdensome and intrusive gatekeeper regulation­s on lawyers.”'

The US is a member of the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering, a multinatio­nal body formed in 1989 that is coordinati­ng efforts to crack down on dirty money. The task force has recommende­d for a decade that lawyers should be among those who should file suspicious transactio­n reports on customers or clients.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A constructi­on worker walks past a 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad billboard in Kuala Lumpur
REUTERS A constructi­on worker walks past a 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad billboard in Kuala Lumpur

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