Misappropriated 1MDB funds
helped finance $2.2 billion energy firm deal - U.S.
lawsuit
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[June 13, 2017]
By Rozanna Latiff and Nathan Layne
KUALA
LUMPUR (Reuters) - Money misappropriated from a Malaysian state fund was
used to partly finance the $2.2 billion acquisition of Houston-based
Coastal Energy in 2014, the U.S. government alleged in a lawsuit filed
last week.
Proceeds from the Coastal Energy deal were then used to buy a property
in London's glitzy Mayfair district, according to the lawsuit dated June
7. The United States is seeking to seize the London property, along with
two others, the document showed.
The lawsuit was filed as part of a U.S. Justice Department effort to
seize about $1 billion worth of assets linked to funds it says were
siphoned from 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), a Malaysian state
fund under investigation in at least six countries for money-laundering.
The justice department filed civil lawsuits last July alleging that
about $3.5 billion had been misappropriated from 1MDB and used instead
to buy assets, including luxury property and artwork in the U.S. and
abroad.
The latest lawsuit shows that Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho, a
central figure in the scandal, allegedly used 1MDB money to fund the
Coastal Energy acquisition.
Jho Low, as he is known, partnered with Compañía Española de Petróleos
SAU (Cepsa) to buy Coastal Energy for a total purchase price of $2.2
billion. Cepsa is the Spanish unit of Abu Dhabi's state investor,
International Petroleum Investment Company.
Goldman Sachs acted as financial advisor to Cepsa in the acquisition,
according to a news release announcing the deal in November 2013.
600 PERCENT RETURN
Low invested about $50 million in the acquisition through a company
called Strategic Resources (Global) Ltd, with Cespa funding the
remainder of the $2.2 billion, according to the lawsuit.
Shortly afterward, Cepsa transferred $350 million to Low's Strategic
Resources, buying Strategic Resources' stake in the joint venture used
to buy Coastal Energy, the lawsuit says.
"The commercial basis for this nearly immediate 600 percent return on
investment is not immediately apparent," the Justice Department said.
Low's contribution was traceable to misappropriated proceeds of a $3
billion bond raised by Goldman for 1MDB in 2013, the lawsuit says.
Goldman helped 1MDB, which was founded by Malaysian Prime Minister Najib
Razak in 2009, raise $6.5 billion in three bond sales in 2012 and 2013
to invest in energy projects and real estate to boost the Malaysian
economy.
[to top of second column] |
A construction worker talks on the phone in front of a 1Malaysia
Development Berhad (1MDB) billboard at the Tun Razak Exchange
development in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, February 3, 2016.
REUTERS/Olivia Harris/File Photo
Goldman was not immediately available for comment.
The
Wall Street Journal first reported on Tuesday the allegations in the latest
lawsuit.
Goldman told the Journal that prior to the U.S. lawsuit it was not aware, nor
was it involved in, any transaction in which Strategic Resources sold its stake
in a joint venture back to Cepsa.
Jho Low, whose whereabouts are uncertain, could not be reached for comment. He
has denied any wrongdoing in the past.
IPIC, Cepsa and 1MDB did not respond to requests for comment.
LONDON PROPERTIES
Proceeds from the Coastal Energy deal were used by Low to buy the Stratton
Office in London for 42 million pounds ($53.15 million), according to the June 7
lawsuit.
The justice department lawsuit says two other Mayfair properties -- a penthouse
and a flat -- were also bought with misappropriated 1MDB funds.
Low paid 35 million pounds ($44.29 million) in 2010 for the penthouse and the
flat, part of a building known as Stratton House.
The funds for those purchases were transferred from an account belonging to a
company called Good Star. Low was the sole owner and beneficiary of Seycehlles-registered
Good Star, a Reuters examination found.
U.S. prosecutors have said more than $700 million of misappropriated funds from
1MDB flowed into the accounts of "Malaysian Official 1", who U.S. and Malaysian
officials have identified as Najib.
Najib has denied any wrongdoing and was cleared of any wrongdoing by Malaysia's
attorney general.
($1 = 0.7903 pounds)
(Nathan Layne reported from WASHINGTON; Editing by A. Ananthalakshmi and Bill
Tarrant)
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