Business Standard

1MDB prosecutor­s said to eye ex-Goldman banker’s money moves

- GREG FARRELL , ANDREA TAN & KERI GEIGER 29 April

US prosecutor­s investigat­ing Goldman Sachs Group’s role in raising almost $6 billion for Malaysia’s 1MDB investment fund are asking questions about money flowing through accounts linked to Tim Leissner, the lead banker behind the transactio­ns, according to people familiar with the matter.

Officials from the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and Justice Department have been interviewi­ng bankers familiar with 1Malaysia Developmen­t Bhd about Leissner’s network of relationsh­ips with politicall­y connected Malaysians, said the people, who asked not to be named because the queries aren’t public.

In interviews as recent as last month, the people said, the US officials asked about the associatio­n between Leissner, who left Goldman Sachs in February 2016, and Low Taek Jho, who the Justice Department said in July was at the centre of a scheme that siphoned more than $3 billion dollars from 1MDB. US investigat­ors are asking in particular whether money was sent from a Leissner-linked account to an entity controlled by someone tied to the Malaysian government, one of the people said. Leissner’s attorney, Marc Harris, declined to comment. An official who answered the phone at Low’s Hong Kong-based company Jynwel Capital said he wasn’t available.

It’s not the first time US officials have scrutinise­d personal transactio­ns of Goldman’s lead banker for troubled 1MDB. US authoritie­s said last year in court filings that several million dollars from 1MDB ended up in an account belonging to 1MDB’s top lawyer Jasmine Loo. She later transferre­d several thousand dollars to Leissner, people familiar with the matter have said. Attempts to reach Loo weren’t successful.

The US look into 1MDB money flows is part of a globespann­ing effort. Switzerlan­d, Singapore, Hong Kong, Luxembourg and other countries are also investigat­ing the roles banks and individual­s may have played in plowing cash from the fund into luxury real estate, art, lavish parties and even movie production­s.

Goldman Sachs and the Justice Department also declined to comment. No official role Investigat­ors also asked about Leissner’s interactio­ns with Roger Ng, a former Goldman colleague who worked on the 1MDB funding, the person said. Ng, a Malaysian national, was head of Goldman’s Southeast Asian sales and trading business at the time of his resignatio­n in April 2014. Ng, who has not been publicly charged with any crimes, declined to comment when contacted by phone.

The US look into 1MDB money flows is part of a globespann­ing effort

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