Jamaica Gleaner

Malaysia files criminal charges against Goldman Sachs

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MALAYSIA FILED criminal charges against Goldman Sachs and two former executives on Monday for their role in the alleged multibilli­on-dollar ransacking of state investment fund 1MDB.

Attorney General Tommy Thomas said that the government is seeking several billion dollars in fines from Goldman Sachs for breaches of securities laws that involved it making false and misleading statements to investors.

He said that his office would seek prison sentences of up to 10 years for the former Goldman executives, Roger Ng Chong Hwa and Tim Leissner, who is married to model Kimora Lee Simmons.

Malaysian and United States prosecutor­s allege that bond sales organised by Goldman Sachs for 1MDB provided one of the means for associates of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to steal billions over several years from a fund that was ostensibly set up to accelerate Malaysia’s economic developmen­t.

The scandal, first reported by Sarawak Report and the Wall Street Journal, resulted in Najib and his ruling coalition losing power in a historic election defeat earlier this year.

Najib himself is facing corruption charges. He has said that more than US$700 million that moved through his bank account was a political donation from the Saudi royal family, but US prosecutor­s say it came from 1MDB, of which Najib was the top official.

US legal filings that are part of a Justice Department civil case to recover assets bought with 1MDB funds allege that the money was used to finance Hollywood films and was spent on luxuries such as diamond jewellery for Najib’s wife, a yacht, artworks, and high-end properties.

Goldman Sachs denied any wrongdoing in response to Malaysia’s criminal charges.

“We believe these charges are misdirecte­d, and we will vigorously defend them and look forward to the opportunit­y to present our case,” bank spokesman Edward Naylor said in a statement. “The firm continues to cooperate with all authoritie­s investigat­ing these matters.”

Thomas, the Malaysian attorney general, said that US$2.7 billion was stolen from three bond sales organised by subsidiari­es of Goldman Sachs. The investment bank, he said, received US$600 million in fees for organising the bond deals, which was several times higher than industry norms.

Leissner and Ng conspired with Najib associate Low Taek Jho, a key architect of the entire 1MDB fraud, to bribe Malaysian government officials to use Goldman Sachs as the arranger of the bond deals, according to Thomas. They and Goldman Sachs knew that the money would be stolen, he said.

“Having held themselves out as the preeminent global adviser/arranger for bonds, the highest standards are expected of Goldman Sachs,” the attorney general’s statement said. “They have fallen far short of any standard. In consequenc­e, they have to be held accountabl­e.”

Prosecutor­s plan to seek fines “well in excess” of the amount allegedly stolen because of the severity of the violations of Malaysia’s laws, Thomas said.

Leissner, who headed Goldman’s operations in Southeast Asia, pleaded guilty in the US last month to money laundering conspiracy and conspiring to violate foreign bribery laws after the Justice Department charged him, Ng, and Low in relation to the 1MDB scandal.

Ng was arrested in Malaysia in early November, and Low, also known as Jho Low, remains at large. He has previously maintained his innocence in statements via a lawyer.

Malaysian police said in July that Low had fled Macau to an unknown destinatio­n.

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