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Malaysia 1MDB scandal
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Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak speaks at the opening of a conference as the US launches civil suits to recover over US$1 billion from scandal-plagued 1MDB. Photo: Reuters

Update | US maps Malaysia’s 1MDB fraud trail from Kuala Lumpur to Hollywood

Money funded Leonardo DiCaprio’s ‘Wolf of Wall Street’, Monet paintings and gambling sprees in Las Vegas

More than US$3.5 billion travelled a trail of fraud from Malaysia through a web of shell companies, fueling a spending binge on Monet paintings and luxury real estate in the US and Britain, with at least $700 million flowing back into accounts controlled by Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Along the way, some of the money was handled by international banks including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Standard Chartered Plc and Deutsche Bank AG.

Some of the money funded a Hollywood blockbuster, “The Wolf of Wall Street.” The stepson of Malaysia’s prime minister and associates sent more than $13 million to a Las Vegas casino for three days of gambling for a group that included an unidentified film actor whose description matches that of the film’s star, Leonardo DiCaprio.

This is all laid out in a dozen filings Wednesday by US prosecutors who detailed an alleged scheme of international money laundering and misappropriation from 2009 to 2015.

The Justice Department is seeking to seize more than $1 billion worth of assets it says went through US banks from Malaysian development fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad, known as 1MDB, and was ultimately used to illegally acquire assets.

The US complaints step gingerly into wrongdoing centred in a country that is a longtime ally on issues including counterterrorism and trade. They refer anonymously to a top Malaysian official who controlled accounts that received hundreds of millions of dollars and whose description matches that of Razak, who until a few months ago served as the chairman of 1MDB’s advisory board.

Prosecutors sought to recover assets they linked to Najib’s stepson, Riza Aziz, and other associates.

“Unfortunately and tragically, a number of corrupt officials treated this public trust as a personal bank account,” Attorney General Loretta Lynch said at a news conference in Washington. The investigation of the fund should “send a signal that the Department of Justice is determined to prevent the American financial system to be used as a conduit for corruption,” Lynch said.

Lynch declined to comment on the identity of the unnamed top Malaysian official.

The prime minister didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. He has consistently denied wrongdoing.

1MDB said in a statement that it will fully cooperate with investigators and had not been contacted by the Justice Department. It said it “is not a party to the civil suit, does not have any assets in the United States of America, nor has it benefited from the various transactions described in the civil suit.”

“Unfortunately and tragically, a number of corrupt officials treated this public trust as a personal bank account”
Attorney General Loretta Lynch

Also on Wednesday, Swiss authorities said US prosecutors had sent them a request in May for information about bank accounts that might have been used to move money from the fund.

The US complaints also lay out how a handful of global banks, while not accused of wrongdoing, were ensnared. Money was pilfered from the government fund based on false representations made by 1MDB officials and shell companies, prosecutors said. Even when bank officials raised questions about the beneficiaries of various accounts, compliance departments were unable to detect or halt the alleged fraud.

The diverted cash was used to purchase a breathtaking catalogue of loot that prosecutors moved on Wednesday to seize. There’s a stake in the Viceroy L’Ermitage Beverly Hills Hotel as well as homes, condos and penthouses from Los Angeles and Beverly Hills to Manhattan’s Central Park South to London’s Belgravia.

There’s a $35 million Bombardier jet, as well as more than $200 million worth of art -- a pen-and-ink drawing by Vincent Van Gogh (“La Maison de Vincent a Arles”) and two Claude Monet paintings, a pastel study of water lilies, “Nympheas Avec Reflets de Hautes Herbes.”

And in a twist worthy of Hollywood, the US is also laying claim to profits and royalties from a movie about wealthy abandon: It says that more than $100 million in funds from 1MDB went to finance 2013’s “The Wolf of Wall Street,” by Red Granite Pictures Inc. -- a production company co-founded by Najib’s stepson, Riza.

1MDB in April said it had “never invested in nor transferred funds to Red Granite Pictures, whether directly or via intermediaries,” and has denied wrongdoing more broadly over its finances. Red Granite said in May that all money it received had been proper and from a variety of sources including top-tier US commercial and investment banks.

Goldman Sachs, which enjoyed a lucrative relationship with 1MDB, did the bidding for its officials even as many Goldman employees questioned whether Low was involved, prosecutors said. The bank also circulated misleading offering statements when raising money for 1MDB, though the complaint doesn’t indicate that Goldman employees were aware of whether the statements were misleading.

Goldman Sachs said in a statement: “We helped raise money for a sovereign wealth fund that was designed to invest in Malaysia. We had no visibility into whether some of those funds may have been subsequently diverted to other purposes.”

E-mails and recorded phone calls between 1MDB and several banks show how billions of dollars were siphoned out of 1MDB accounts under false pretences, according to the complaints, underscoring the weaknesses of bank compliance systems.

A handful of global banks were used to shift money improperly without confirming who the recipients were, other than information provided by 1MDB, according to the complaint. At times, when compliance officers raised questions, they were brushed aside and the transfers were eventually approved.

In one phone call cited in the documents, prosecutors say a 1MDB employee pressed a Deutsche Bank employee to approve transfers into Swiss accounts. The employee complained he was “under tremendous pressure” to get the deal done. The banker responded that the compliance on it would be “sticky” and they would have to “convince my compliance person.” The transaction went through.

Deutsche Bank declined to comment as did JPMorgan, which was also mentioned in the documents. Standard Chartered said it is cooperating with all relevant investigations and declined to comment further.

The US also alleges that a small coterie of Malaysians led by a Malaysian financier named Low Taek Jho diverted money from 1MDB into personal accounts disguised to look like legitimate businesses, and kicked back some of those funds to officials.

Low, who has been linked socially with Paris Hilton and is a close friend of Riza, has said he provided consulting to 1MDB that didn’t break any laws. Singapore said in May that it is closing Swiss bank BSI SA’s unit in the city-state, and Switzerland began criminal proceedings against the firm as investigations into 1MDB reverberate throughout the private bank’s international operations.

Low and Riza were at the centre of a gambling spree in Las Vegas in July 2012, using money that had come through 1MDB, according to prosecutors. A few weeks after Riza wired $41 million from a Red Granite account to one controlled by an associate, Eric Tan, the two of them went to Vegas, where over several days they wired $13 million into an account maintained by Las Vegas Sands, the parent of the Venetian Casino.

The two of them -- joined by Low and a producer of the “Wolf of Wall Street” -- gambled at the Venetian for three days. They were joined on July 15 by what the complaint identifies as a lead actor in the film, who it noted ultimately won a Golden Globe award for his performance.

That actor is DiCaprio, who isn’t accused of wrongdoing. His publicist, Shawn Sachs, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

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