Times Colonist

Chinese billionair­e indicted in metal scheme

-

LOS ANGELES — A Chinese billionair­e has been charged in Los Angeles in a complex scheme to avoid $1.8 billion US in aluminum tariffs, U.S. prosecutor­s announced Wednesday.

Zhongtian Liu, founder of China Zhongwang Holdings, and the aluminum company he previously headed, were charged with conspiracy, wire fraud and internatio­nal money laundering. The charges come as the U.S. and China try to reach a trade agreement aimed at ending a tariff war.

Liu, 55, schemed to import aluminum in the shape of pallets, which would avoid 2011 customs duties up to 400 per cent that were not imposed on finished merchandis­e, prosecutor­s said.

The pallets, however, were three to four times heavier than typical aluminum pallets, and were sold to U.S.-based companies controlled by Liu and stockpiled at Southern California warehouses. The scheme created the false impression demand was high for the company’s product and artificial­ly inflated sales volume in annual reports, prosecutor­s said.

“This indictment outlines the unscrupulo­us and anti-competitiv­e practices of a corrupt businessma­n who defrauded the United States out of $1.8 billion in tariffs due on Chinese imports,” U.S. Attorney Nick Hanna said. “Moreover, the bogus sales of hundreds of millions of dollars of aluminum artificial­ly inflated the value of a publicly traded company, putting at risk investors around the world.”

The scheme largely took place from 2011 to 2014, though it is ongoing, prosecutor­s said.

Prosecutor­s have sought to seize the warehouses where the aluminum was stored and more than 275,000 aluminum objects in the shape of pallets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada