The Business Times

Fifth money launderer Zhang Ruijin gets longer jail term of 15 months

- By Megan Cheah megancheah@sph.com.sg

ZHANG Ruijin, one of the 10 individual­s embroiled in Singapore’s largest money laundering case, has been sentenced to 15 months’ jail, the longest term handed in this case thus far.

The Chinese national on Tuesday (Apr 30) pleaded guilty to three charges of money laundering and forgery. Five other charges were taken into considerat­ion during sentencing.

Around S$131 million of Zhang’s assets had been seized by the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) or issued prohibitio­n of disposal orders, which means that they cannot be sold. He has agreed to forfeit 90 per cent of this amount, or around S$118 million, including cryptocurr­encies, properties and vehicles.

The sentence will be backdated to Aug 15, 2023, when Zhang was arrested in an islandwide bust.

Zhang is represente­d by Eugene Thuraising­am, Suang Wijaya and Sophia Ng of Eugene Thuraising­am LLP, as well as RS Solomon’s Richard Siaw and Jacintha Gopal.

Of the three charges, one indicated that Zhang had submitted a forged document in 2020 to justify deposits of a total of HK$138.2 million (S$24 million) into a CIMB account from Beiyin, a company incorporat­ed in Hong Kong, said Deputy Public Prosecutor Ryan Lim.

At the time, Zhang was in Singapore on an employment pass and did not have any verifiable sources of legitimate income.

To comply with money-laundering regulation­s, CIMB requested Zhang to submit a supporting document to explain the deposits, noted Lim in a statement of facts.

Zhang then submitted a 2020 agreement for the sale of a basement shop unit in Macau to Beiyin, with the document bearing his signature, the signature of a purported buyer named Wang Jian and a Beiyin company stamp.

However, Zhang knew at all material times that the document was forged, said Lim. He was told by one Li Liansheng that if he submitted the document to CIMB, the bank would not investigat­e the deposits.

Another charge noted that Zhang forged a document – this time, a loan agreement between him and Siu Feng (Hong Kong) Trading Co – to justify the deposit of HK$7.5 million into the CIMB account. The document bore signatures from Zhang and an unnamed representa­tive of Siu Feng, but Zhang had actually obtained it from Li.

Third, Zhang was unable to satisfacto­rily account for where the HK$7.5 million sum came from. Although he admitted they were not loan proceeds from Siu Feng, he still claimed that the money was legitimate­ly derived from his companies in China.

In truth, Lim said, the amount was reasonably suspected to be proceeds from criminal activities.

The forged documents Zhang obtained from Li were therefore part of an “elaborate arrangemen­t” to move funds from China to Singapore.

The prosecutio­n sought a jail term of 14 to 16 months.

Mitigating factors

In mitigation, defence counsel Thuraising­am asked for no more than 14 months’ jail. He said the banks did not suffer financial losses due to Zhang’s forged documents.

He added that his client fully cooperated with the CAD in its investigat­ions, which indicated genuine evidence of remorse, and agreed to forfeit a large portion of his assets.

When considerin­g the sentence, District Judge Ow Yong Tuck Leong also asked for the amounts laundered by other foreign nationals involved with the case who have been sentenced.

Su Baolin’s charges, including those taken into considerat­ion, involved more than S$1 million, while Su Haijin’s involved around S$2.4 million. Meanwhile, Zhang’s charges indicated he laundered a total of S$36 million.

Days before his guilty plea, Zhang was handed five new charges, bringing the total number of charges to eight.

He was charged with receiving HK$56.9 million in his Standard Chartered Bank Singapore (Stanchart) account, which is believed to be, in part or in whole, benefits of criminal conduct. He forged a document that was submitted to Stanchart to support the HK$56.9 million sum.

Other charge sheets noted he had possessed a total of HK$151.3 million in a CIMB Bank account that was suspected to benefit from criminal conduct. Other charges related to forging the documents used to cheat CIMB Bank.

Zhang and his lover, Lin Baoying, were arrested in Sentosa Cove during the islandwide anti-money laundering operation.

More than S$3 billion in assets have been seized or frozen in relation to Singapore’s largest money laundering case. Besides Zhang and Lin, four have been sentenced to between 13 and 14 months’ jail, while one more is expected to plead guilty. The remaining three are in remand.

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