AMBank insiders can be rewarded millions for information about Goldman Sachs-More on what can be done to recover 1MDB money
In 2016 this writer noted that the promise of a RM 120 million reward from the US SEC makes AMBank and ANZ boards vulnerable to whistle blowers, with regards transactions involving 1MDB, AMBank and Goldman Sachs.
Given the potential reward AMBank insiders might be interested in the reward earned by an insider in Brazil:
A former Brazilian surgeon who blew the whistle on a medical device company that allegedly bribed doctors to win business will get a $4.5 million award from U.S. regulators, according to his lawyers.
The surgeon will get the money for playing a crucial role in helping the Securities and Exchange Commission uncover a bribery scandal at Biomet Inc. that spanned the globe, his attorneys Christopher Connors and Andy Rickman said in a Friday statement that didn’t identify the doctor by name.
“Today’s award will spur many would-be foreign whistleblowers to come forward now that they know that the SEC is committed to rewarding whistleblowers” for tips tied to violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act anti-bribery law, said Connors and Rickman.
Biomet, which has paid tens of millions of dollars to the U.S. government to settle charges of Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violations, is now named Zimmer Biomet.
The company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The SEC separately issued a statement Friday that said it was granting more than $4.5 million to a whistleblower who reported “significant wrongdoing” to the regulator after filing an anonymous tip internally to a company. SEC rules prevent the agency from naming whistleblowers or even identifying the specific enforcement actions that trigger awards.
The Dodd-Frank Act required the SEC to start a whistleblower program. The agency can give tipsters as much as 30% of any fine for cases that lead to sanctions exceeding $1 million. The regulator says it has awarded more than $380 million since 2012.
PM Mahathir need only look to AMMB and ANZ in his quest to recover all monies stolen by Jho Low-More on what else Malaysia should do, but is not ….
by Ganesh Sahathevan
This writer reported recently that it does not look like PM Mahathir’s government is interested in doing anything on its own to help the effort, which to date has been driven by the US Department Of Justice, of recovering the money that PM Mahathir says Jho Low stole from 1MDB.
That story was concerned primarily with some USD 1 Billion held in Singapore,which came out of KWAP.
Meanwhile, it does not appear as if the Malaysian Government and
its agencies have done anything to secure the evidence of AMMB Holdings Bhd’s investment banking division’s collaboration with Jho Low which netted him some USD 126 Million.Bloomberg reported on 24 January 2019:
Authorities are probing a 5 billion ringgit ($1.2 billion) bond sale in 2009 by Terengganu Investment Authority, or TIA, a sovereign wealth fund that later became 1MDB, according to people familiar with the matter. Investigators believe that $126 million of illicit funds — which Low and his associate Eric Tan have been charged with receiving — came from the deal arranged by AMMB Holdings Bhd., known as AmBank, and involving companies in Thailand and Singapore, said one of the people.
The above investigation should have led to a long overdue raid of AMBank, and seizure of all relevant records.It should have also led to an equally overdue investigation into ANZ Banking Group Ltd’s part in the 1MDB theft. The inaction does not reflect well on all involved in the 1MDB investigation, and charged with the recovery of the stolen assets.
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