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Showing posts with label real estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label real estate. Show all posts

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Corruption is Everywhere > Tycoon sentenced to Death, hundreds prosecuted or fired in Viet Nam

 

Vietnam tycoon receives death sentence

in fraud case

Business woman Truong My Lan attends a trial in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on Thursday, April 11, 2024. Thanh Tung/VnExpress via AP

A court in Vietnam handed the death sentence on Thursday to real estate tycoon Truong My Lan for her role in a 304-trillion-dong (US$12.5-billion) financial fraud, the country’s biggest on record, state media said.

Her trial, begun on March 5 and ending earlier than planned, was one dramatic result of a campaign against corruption that the leader of the ruling Communist Party, Nguyen Phu Trong, has pledged for years to stamp out.

Lan, the chairwoman of real estate developer Van Thinh Phat Holdings Group, was found guilty of embezzlement, bribery and violations of banking rules at the end of a trial in the business hub of Ho Chi Minh City, state media said.

“We will keep fighting to see what we can do,” a family member told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity. Before the verdict he had said Lan would appeal against the sentence.

Lan had pleaded not-guilty to the embezzlement and bribery charges, Nguyen Huy Thiep, one of Lan’s lawyers told Reuters.

Click to play video: 'Money Tips  Monday: Protecting yourself against scams and frauds'
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Money Tips Monday: Protecting yourself against scams and frauds

“Of course she will appeal the verdict,” he added noting she was sentenced to death for the embezzlement charge and to 20 years each for the other two charges of bribery and violations of banking regulations.

Vietnam imposes the death penalty mostly over violent offenses but also for economic crimes. Human rights groups say it has executed hundreds of convicts in recent years, mainly by lethal injection.

The Thanh Nien newspaper said 84 defendants in the case received sentences ranging from probation for three years to life imprisonment. Among them are Lan’s husband, Eric Chu, a businessman from Hong Kong, who was sentenced to nine years in jail, and her niece who got 17 years.

From perfumes to high finance

Lan started as a cosmetics trader at the central market in Ho Chi Minh City, helping out her mother, she told judges during the trial, according to state media.

She later founded her real estate company Van Thinh Phat in 1992, the same year when she got married, according to state media.

She was found guilty, with her accomplices of siphoning off more than 304 trillion dong from Saigon Joint Stock Commercial Bank (SCB), which she effectively controlled through dozens of proxies despite rules strictly limiting large shareholding in lenders, according to investigators.

From early 2018 through October 2022, when the state bailed out SCB after a run on its deposits triggered by Lan’s arrest, she appropriated large sums by arranging unlawful loans to shell companies, investigators said.

“The defendant’s actions not only violate the property management rights of individuals and organizations but also put SCB under scrutiny, eroding people’s trust in the leadership of the Party and State,” state newspaper VnExpress cited the jury as saying.

Click to play video: 'FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried sentenced to 25 years in prison in crypto fraud case'
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FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried sentenced to 25 years in prison in crypto fraud case

The bank is currently propped up by the central bank and faces a complex restructuring under which authorities are trying to establish the legal status of hundreds of assets which were used as collateral for loans and bonds issued by VTP. The bonds alone are worth US$1.2 billion.

Some of the assets are high-end properties but many others are unfinished projects.

Before her fall from grace, she had played a key role in Vietnam’s financial world, getting involved in the previous rescue of troubled SCB more than a decade before she contributed to the bank’s new crisis.

She was found guilty of having bribed officials to persuade the authorities to look away, including paying $5.2 million to a senior central bank inspector, Do Thi Nhan, who was sentenced to life in prison.

Vietnam’s graft crackdown, dubbed “Blazing Furnace”, has seen hundreds of senior state officials and high-profile business executives prosecuted or forced to step down.

Corruption is so widespread that in some provinces many people say they pay bribes just to obtain medical services in public hospitals, according to a recent survey by the U.N. Development Programme and other organisations.

–Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Peter Graff



Monday, April 8, 2019

Corruption is Everywhere - British Columbia is Infamous for Money Laundering, and Yet...

No RCMP officers dedicated to money laundering cases in B.C., report reveals

CBC News 

Former RCMP deputy commissioner Peter German speaks to reporters about his latest findings on
money laundering in B.C. as Attorney General David Eby looks on. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

British Columbia doesn't have a single federal RCMP officer dedicated to investigating money laundering, according to the latest provincial report on the issue.

Former Mountie Peter German was asked to look into why so few money laundering cases have been prosecuted in B.C., despite allegations that the practice is widespread in the province.

German says the only RCMP resources dedicated to money laundering in B.C. are provincially funded or operating under the provincial policing agreement.

The revelation was made public Monday morning, as Attorney General David Eby made an initial, partial release of German's latest report on money laundering.

At a news conference, Eby described the findings as "incredibly disturbing" and said it was important for British Columbians to have this information right away.

"We have accelerated the release of this portion of the report so that the federal government and the public are aware of what is happening to police the international crime groups laundering money through our provincial economy," Eby said.

"What is happening is nothing."

Only 5 of 26 positions filled

Eby's federal counterpart, Border Security and Organized Crime Reduction Minister Bill Blair, acknowledged there have been significant cuts to RCMP resources in previous years.

"We made very significant announcements in Budget 2019, restoring the RCMP's capacity and making significant new investments in intelligence gathering and furthering steps that will facilitate successful investigation and prosecution of money laundering offences," Blair told reporters in Ottawa. 

According to German, the RCMP's money laundering team is more than three-quarters unstaffed. Of the 26 positions on the Federal Serious Organized Crime branch, only five are filled. All five officers are assigned to refer potential criminal cases to B.C.'s Civil Forfeiture Office.

Eby said civil prosecution is an important tool for dealing with money laundering, but it's "only one leg of the table."

German, a former RCMP deputy commissioner, has focused on potential links between criminal enterprises and the real estate, horse racing and luxury car industries in his latest report.

He delivered the full report to the provincial government on March 31, and it's currently under review to determine how much can be made public.

German was asked to look at these sectors after he concluded his review last June on money laundering in Lower Mainland casinos.

Last year, German's first report said B.C. casinos "unwittingly served as laundromats" for the proceeds of crime.

I'm absolutely sure it was totally 'unwittingly"! Pfft!

As part of the review, German put forward 48 recommendations to fix the problem — which he says was apparent to officials as far back as 2011.

The province has said work continues on addressing all remaining recommendations from German's first report, including analyzing options to create dedicated policing resources for gambling and money laundering, creating a model for an independent regulator and clarifying the roles of the regulator and the B.C. Lottery Corporation.

I think they better get moving on this, because right now there is a big "Open for Business" sign on B.C. for all global money launderers to see.


Friday, June 17, 2016

Ex-Guatemalan President, VP Among 70 Charged with Corruption

Corruption is rampant in 3rd world countries and many industrialized countries. It is a major contributor to poverty. I applaud Guatamalan
lawmakers for not allowing it to continue.

Prosecutors say that during one trip to the United States,
former Vice President Roxana Baldetti spent nearly
$30,000 in taxpayer money on clothing and shoes

By Doug G. Ware


Former Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina shakes hands with President Barack Obama during a meeting at the White House in 2014. Molina and his vice president, Roxana Baldetti, were forced to resign last year amid a corruption scandal. On Thursday, they were also charged with misappropriating millions in government funds. File Photo by Alex Wong/Pool/UPI | License Photo

GUATEMALA CITY, June 17 (UPI) -- The former president and vice president of Guatemala have been charged, along with 68 others, with embezzlement, accused of stealing millions in government funds.

Disgraced former President Otto Perez Molina and his deputy, Roxana Baldetti, face numerous criminal counts in a scheme that investigators say misappropriated public money after the pair took office in 2012.

Prosecutor Julio Prado said the officials illegally used the money, in various ways, for personal benefit.

"That money was used to buy goods and services for you and Baldetti, including real estate and luxury vehicles, as well as $4.3 million in gifts," he told Molina, 65, in court Thursday.

They face charges of embezzlement and money-laundering, officials said.

Prado said the president and vice president went to great lengths to conceal their financial crimes -- including even setting up bogus "shell" companies to hide the cash.

Baldetti, 54, prosecutors say, received nearly $40 million in unlawful bribes in awarding government contracts. They say during one trip to South Florida, she spent nearly $30,000 in taxpayers' money on clothing and shoes.

The pair's spending first attracted attention in 2013 when a Guatemalan newspaper published investigative reports into Baldetti's unexplained wealth, which the paper reported had allowed her to buy several multimillion-dollar homes and even a private helicopter.

Molina and Baldetti, who formed Guatemala's neoliberal Patriotic Party, have denied the accusations. Dozens of other government and banking executives have also been charged in the investigation.

The president and vice president were forced to resign last year over an unrelated scandal involving an alleged customs corruption ring, called La Linea, in which government officials accepted graft from importers in exchange for discounted or waived tariffs.

Baldetti resigned in May 2015, and Molina in September after the Guatemalan Congress voted 132-0 to strip him of immunity from prosecution. Vice President Alejandro Maldonado Aguirre, who replaced Baldetti, served as interim president for the remainder of Molina's term, which ended in January.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

House for Sale, Comes With Wife

In a story that brings to mind the joke about the old man who advertised in a paper, "Looking for wife with a boat. Send picture of boat!" comes this fascinating story from Indonesia. I can't decide if she is using herself to sell the house, or the house to find a husband.

Realty ad says terms and conditions apply, and notes the offer is “for serious buyers and non-negotiable”

AFPPublished: 14:14 March 11, 2015Gulf News

The single mother’s only want, now is to meet her soulmate,
according to an ad posted online. Image Credit: Wina Lia
Sleman, Indonesia: An advert for a house in Indonesia has gone viral online after the woman selling it offered to throw in an unusual extra feature for free — her hand in marriage.

The internet ad reads for the most part like a regular house listing, saying that the single-storey property has two bedrooms, two bathrooms, a parking space and a fish pond.

But it also proposes to buyers a “rare offer” - “when you buy this house, you can ask the owner to marry you”, alongside a picture of Wina Lia, a 40-year-old widow and beauty salon owner, leaning against a car in front of the house.

The ad said that terms and conditions apply, and notes the offer is “for serious buyers and non-negotiable”. The house in Sleman, on the island of Java, is on the market for 999 million rupiah (about $76,000 USD).

News of the offer quickly spread among internet users in social media-crazy Indonesia.

Boldies99, a user on popular online forum Kaskus, said Lia was “quite smart — even though the house will be sold, she will remain the owner.”

Lia said she was “shocked at the reaction”, as she had been overwhelmed by journalists coming to interview her, and even the police in the conservative, Muslim-majority country had been asking questions.

The police “came to verify the news as they consider it as an improper advertisement. But I explained to them that it was not my idea,” she said.

The mother of two explained that she had asked a friend who was a property agent to help her find a buyer — and in the process a husband — but she had expected him to pass on the news to a limited number of people, not put an ad online.

“I told a friend of mine who also works as property agent that if there is a buyer who is a single man or a widower who wants to buy a house, and at the same time look for a wife, he can let me know as I’m also a widow,” she said.

She added that there was only one potential buyer, who had visited on Wednesday, but refused to give further details.

So delightful that she has the sense of humour to roll with it rather than bursting a gut. I expect she will get offers from all over the planet now.