The Pak Banker

HK woman jailed for laundering $877 million

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A Hong Kong public housing tenant was jailed for 10 years on Tuesday for laundering more than HK$6.8 billion ($877 million) through nine banks, just two months after a Chinese man was imprisoned in the Asian financial centre's biggest such case.

Lam Mei-ling, 61, laundered the money between 2002 and 2005 with about 39,500 bank transfers, the Court of First Instance heard.

The defendant said she made the transfers on behalf of an unidentifi­ed woman, from her home town in Dongguan in southern China's Guangdong province near Hong Kong, who used to babysit her daughter before becoming a factory owner.

Lam, who pleaded not guilty, had testified that she was illiterate and had been told to transfer the money to other mainland factory owners.

The money was laundered through Standard Chartered, Hang Seng Bank, Chiyu Bank, National Commercial Bank, Hua Chiao Commercial Bank, Dao Heng Bank, First Commercial Bank, Hua Nan Bank and Bank of East Asia, local media reported, citing court documents.

Lam received occasional monthly payments of around HK$4,500 for laundering the money, the Court of First Instance heard.

Justice Andrew Chan said that although the defendant was not the mastermind, she was not unaware of what she was doing.

Lam was arrested in 2008 after a citizen of the Netherland­s filed a fraud complaint related to HK$300,000 that resulted in two of her bank accounts being investigat­ed and the discovery of the laundering, local media said.

As a free financial centre, Hong Kong has become a popular place for Chinese to set up companies and conduct business, in some cases to obscure their assets through moneylaund­ering.

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