MALAYSIA’S 1MDB SCANDAL – How $1 Billion Made Its Way to the Prime Minister

By Bradley Hope, Tyler Paige, Will Welch, Maryanne Murray and Chris Canipe
Wall Street Journal
Sept. 1, 2016

Investigators say at least $3.5 billion was misappropriated from 1MDB. Here’s how they believe $1 billion ended up in the bank accounts of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Every time Malaysian government investment fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd, or 1MDB, borrowed money, large amounts of the cash were quickly misappropriated, according to investigators. The money followed a circuitous path among private banks, offshore companies and funds, bank records show, and roughly $1 billion landed in the private bank accounts of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.

That cash is part of $3.5 billion that was embezzled from 1MDB, according to a U.S. Justice department complaint. Investigators from seven countries are trying to figure out what happened to the money and the U.S. moved to seize $1 billion in property in July, including luxury real estate in New York and Beverly Hills, a private jet and art allegedly purchased with 1MDB money. Singapore has charged a banker with money laundering in relation to 1MDB and Abu Dhabi has arrested and frozen the assets of a top official who was deeply involved with the fund. The banker and the official haven’t commented.

This interactive graphic tracks the route that investigators believe the money took from the time it was raised by 1MDB until it landed in the private bank accounts of Mr. Najib at AmBank Bhd., a Malaysian bank, between 2011 and 2015.

The money was raised on three separate occasions and took three separate paths, sometimes flowing directly, while in other cases it split and took different routes, only to be reunited in the AmBank accounts according to the Justice Department complaint. The cash flowed through Singapore, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, the Seychelles, the British Virgin Islands and Curaçao. Other funds disappear, often into accounts controlled by other players in the scandal, the complaint said.

This description is based on bank-transfer documents, investigative files from two countries, people familiar with transactions and the 136-page Justice Department complaint, which is seeking to seize assets bought with funds misappropriated from 1MDB.

Mr. Najib hasn’t acknowledged all of the transfers into his accounts, but he said that $681 million was a legal donation from the royal family of Saudi Arabia and the Malaysian attorney general agreed with that explanation, clearing him of any wrongdoing. Mr. Najib said he returned most of the funds to the Saudi Arabian donor. 1MDB has denied wrongdoing and said it would cooperate with any lawful international investigation.

According to the Justice Department, the money went back to the offshore company that originally sent it to Mr. Najib’s accounts, and from there it was used to fuel other investments and spending by a Malaysian financier allegedly at the center of the scheme named Jho Low. A lawyer for Mr. Low declined to comment.

A portion of the money from 1MDB passed through Saudi Arabia on its way to Mr. Najib’s accounts and $80 million appears to have been transferred by the Ministry of Finance in Saudi Arabia. The origin of the rest of the Saudi money is still under investigation.

TRANSACTION 1
THE SAUDI ARABIAN OIL-VENTURE MONEY

HOW THE MONEY WAS RAISED

1MDB borrowed about $1.8 billion for a joint venture with Saudi oil company PetroSaudi International Ltd.

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY

About $1 billion of the cash went to a Seychelles company called Good Star Ltd.

HOW THE MONEY GOT TO MR. NAJIB’S BANK ACCOUNTS

A co-founder of PetroSaudi, Prince Turki bin Abdullah, received $24.5 million from Good Star before transferring $20 million to Mr. Najib via an intermediary, according to the Justice Department and a person familiar with the U.S. investigation into 1MDB. The same intermediary sent other funds into Mr. Najib’s accounts, bank transfer documents show, but the origin of the funds is still under investigation. PetroSaudi, Prince Turki and Prince Faisal did not respond to requests for comment.

TRANSACTION 2
THE POWER-PLANT MONEY


HOW THE MONEY WAS RAISED

Two bonds worth a total of $3.5 billion were sold for 1MDB by Goldman Sachs to fund the purchase of power plants.

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY

After paying a substantial fee to Goldman, 1MDB was supposed to pay money for a guarantee on the bonds to a unit of Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Company called Aabar Investments PJS. Instead, the funds went to the similarly named Aabar Investments PJS Ltd., a British Virgin Islands registered company that IPIC says isn’t part of its corporate structure, which received billions of dollars from 1MDB entities over the years. The money was then distributed to beneficiaries of the alleged fraud, according to the Justice Department.

HOW THE MONEY GOT TO MR. NAJIB’S ACCOUNTS

From Aabar BVI, about $637 million went to a company called Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners in the British Virgin Islands, where it was pooled with other funds. Blackstone has no connection to the Blackstone Group, the New York private-equity firm.

Another $463 million went from Aabar BVI to two mutual funds in the Caribbean island of Curaçao and then onto Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners, which transferred a total of $170 million to Mr. Najib’s bank accounts in multiple transactions during 2012, bank transfer documents show.

TRANSACTION 3
THE ABU DHABI REAL-ESTATE MONEY

HOW THE MONEY WAS RAISED

1MDB sold $3 billion in bonds via Goldman Sachs to fund a real-estate joint venture with Abu Dhabi.

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY

Immediately after paying Goldman Sachs its substantial fees, 1MDB transferred nearly half of the cash to a series of funds, shell companies and other intermediaries located in the British Virgin Islands and Curaçao. Eventually $1.27 billion ended up in a British Virgin Islands company called Tanore Finance Corp.

HOW THE MONEY GOT TO MR. NAJIB’S ACCOUNTS

Tanore transferred $680 million to Mr. Najib’s accounts. A few months later, $620 million was returned to Tanore before disappearing back into a maze of offshore companies, according to the Justice Department and investigative documents reviewed by the Journal.

THE LAST STEP
THE FOUR PATHS INTO THE PRIME MINISTER’S BANK ACCOUNTS

HOW IT GOT TO MR. NAJIB’S ACCOUNTS

Of the $1.05 billion Mr. Najib received in his accounts, only $80 million appears to clearly originate with Saudi Arabia, via its Finance Ministry, though the details of that transfer are still unknown. Another $120 million that came via an intermediary based in Saudi Arabia are still under investigation, according to a person familiar with the U.S. investigation. At least $20 million of that $120 million has been traced clearly back to 1MDB by investigators. The remaining $850 million came via Tanore Finance and Blackstone Asia, and has been traced back to 1MDB by investigators, according to people familiar with the probe.

WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY

Mr. Najib used the money in his AmBank accounts for personal and political spending, according to investigative documents reviewed by the Journal that detail more than 500 transactions. He wrote checks to politicians in his political party and also paid millions of dollars for personal expenses, including $130,625 at a Chanel store in Hawaii and €750,000 at a jewelry store in Switzerland.

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4 Replies to “MALAYSIA’S 1MDB SCANDAL – How $1 Billion Made Its Way to the Prime Minister”

  1. People in west malaysia may understand what you are writing but those in east malaysia just don’t care. All they know that their votes is for their local political party representatives. How the local party collaborates with UMNO is not voters business. Even if they get a few new zinc to replace long house leaking roofs is a favorable bargain for the votes. All they know that they didn’t contribute any hard cash from their pockets that 1MDB got stolen to be angry about. However, if any body tries to steal their hard earned physical money or hard cash, mind your head please for it may get rolling. But, if their hard cash already saved in the bank and the bank or government goes burst again that’s not their problem or to get it corrected as they were never educated to hold such high positions. For them the savings book and the figures are intact that is as good for it’s value worth. Honestly speaking, they are just too naive to understand the whole truth. That is why each election BN scores majority win in Sabah & Sarawak that enables UMNO to rule this country.

  2. So the DOJ only managed to track USD3.5b whereas according to Sarawak Report, our own AG estimated USD7b is missing..The thing is if its USD7/USD3.5b and we know of USD1b in Najib’s account at Ambank, most of it was transfered out still in Najib’s control, where did the rest go and more importantly how much of it is still around? What are they doing with the funds?

  3. Firstly, if a minister says Najib is MO1, then both the AG and IGP should be fired and maybe even prosecuted for covering up for Najib.

    But the fact we a senior UMNO leader confirm we have a broken system of governance where power rules not the law and hence a runaway train wreck of a country.

  4. Thanks for telling us again, how he stole the money. Will some of you geniuses tell us how to bring this message of theft to the rural folks, and make it into a bread and butter issue, please? We need to convince the rural folks that he has stolen their money and affected their lives. The rural folks still think that he is God send to them.

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