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HSBC and Morgan Stanley among major banks tied to Singapore’s recent S$1.8 billion money-laundering probe

Major banks like HSBC and Morgan Stanley are potential creditors of firms tied to individuals probed in a S$1.8 billion money-laundering crackdown.

Business filings revealed Credit Suisse, HSBC, Morgan Stanley, DBS, UOB, and OCBC’s Bank of Singapore (BOS) as creditors to eight Singaporean companies linked to 24 associates identified by the Ministry of Law.

Singapore’s Monetary Authority (MAS) directed financial institutions to scrutinize transactions involving these individuals from early 2020.

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Major banks, including HSBC and Morgan Stanley, have emerged as potential creditors of companies connected to individuals under investigation in a recent money-laundering crackdown.

More connections are surfacing as the authorities expand investigations into the associates of the 10 charged in an anti-money-laundering crackdown that has grown in value to S$1.8 billion.

Business filings of Singapore-incorporated companies linked to 24 persons, identified by the authorities as associates of the charged, show at least six banks as creditors to eight entities.

The banks are Credit Suisse, HSBC, Morgan Stanley, DBS, UOB, and OCBC’s Bank of Singapore (BOS).

The 24 associates were previously identified by the Ministry of Law.

Singapore’s Monetary Authority (MAS) has issued a directive to financial institutions in the city-state, instructing them to review their relationships with individuals connected to a money laundering scandal involving over S$ 1.8 billion in assets. The directive, dated 30 August, was sent to the compliance heads of all financial firms in Singapore.

The MAS has called for a thorough examination of suspicious or unusual transactions involving these individuals, beginning from the start of 2020.

Among the 34 individuals that financial institutions are required to scrutinise, ten were arrested last month as part of a 15 August islandwide anti-money laundering probe mounted by the police, an operation described as unprecedented in size and scope.

A billion dollars worth of assets were seized – including luxury cars, houses and cash.

The ten have since been charged with various offences, with nine of them receiving fresh charges.

The MAS note states that these individuals “could be involved in illicit activities,” emphasising the need for a comprehensive review of their transactions.

In response to queries from Bloomberg News, an MAS spokesperson stated, “As a matter of policy, MAS does not comment on our dealings with financial institutions.”

This move by the regulator highlights the ongoing efforts to address the vulnerabilities exposed by the crackdown, which resulted in the seizure of assets, including gold, luxury cars, cash, and cryptocurrency.

Several banks, including DBS, Citigroup’s local unit, and Credit Suisse, have become embroiled in the scandal as the investigation continues.

Financial firms have been instructed by the MAS to take appropriate actions, including filing suspicious transaction reports as necessary, as they review the transactions.

Some of the ten suspects involved in the scandal had established ties to Singapore before 2020, according to local business filings.

The investigation has revealed that these individuals were connected to various businesses and had significant sums of money seized from their bank accounts.

The suspects are currently in remand and have not entered pleas.

MAS had previously highlighted the role of suspicious transaction reports filed by financial institutions in alerting authorities to illicit activities, citing red flags such as suspicious fund flows and questionable source-of-wealth filings.

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Singaporean fugitive faces capital charge for drug trafficking after deportation from Thailand

Benny Kee Soon Chuan, 31, was charged with capital offences in Singapore court on Friday after being deported from Thailand for alleged drug trafficking. He’s accused of conspiring to traffic 2kg of methamphetamine in December 2020, directing accomplice to collect the parcel. Kee, evading capture since 2016, was arrested in Thailand, where assets worth US$453,000 were seized.

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SINGAPORE: Benny Kee Soon Chuan, a 31-year-old Singaporean man, was handed a capital charge on Friday (20 September) after being deported from Thailand.

Kee is wanted for his alleged involvement in two drug trafficking cases.

Kee is accused of conspiring with Low En Quan Justin to traffic methamphetamine in early December 2020.

The conspiracy reportedly involved a parcel containing 12 packets of meth, weighing at least 2kg, intended for delivery to an individual named “Senthil Kumar” at a shop in Orchard Towers.

Authorities allege that Kee directed Low to collect the parcel, which Low picked up on 2 December 2020.

Low, now 21, has already faced legal consequences for his role in the case. He pleaded guilty to attempting to traffic at least 249.99g of meth and was sentenced to 22-and-a-half years in prison, along with 15 strokes of the cane.

In addition to the December case, Kee is also linked to another drug trafficking incident from November 2022, according to the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB).

A 29-year-old man involved in that case received an eight-year sentence with seven strokes of the cane.

Despite the charges, Kee evaded capture for several years, having left Singapore in April 2016.

The CNB coordinated with international authorities to locate him.

On 17 September, he was arrested in Samut Prakan province, Thailand, where he was reportedly living in luxury.

Thai authorities acted on a tip-off from the CNB, leading to Kee’s apprehension and subsequent deportation to Singapore.

Upon his return on 19 September, Kee was taken into custody by the CNB.

Reports indicate that during the arrest, assets worth 15 million baht (S$585,000) were seized, including luxury items like Rolex watches, gold jewelry, and cash in various currencies.

Kee was remanded by a Singapore court on Friday, with permission granted for further investigations.

He is scheduled to appear in court again on 26 September.

If convicted of conspiring to traffic a Class A controlled drug, Kee could face the death penalty.

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S$3b money laundering convicts and Alice Guo charged with human trafficking in Philippines

Zhang Ruijin and Lin Baoying, convicted in Singapore’s S$3 billion money laundering case, have been charged in the Philippines for human trafficking, along with former mayor Alice Guo. The group is accused of operating a scam centre involving hundreds of workers in Tarlac province.

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MANILA, PHILIPPINES: Two Fujian-born individuals previously convicted in Singapore’s S$3 billion money laundering case, Zhang Ruijin and Lin Baoying, have been named among 14 people charged with human trafficking in the Philippines.

The charges were filed by the Department of Justice on 17 September, involving a major scam operation in Tarlac province.

Zhang and Lin, along with former Bamban mayor Alice Guo, are accused of forcing hundreds of people from various nationalities into working for a scam centre located in Bamban, Tarlac.

The site was raided in March 2024, leading to the discovery of 432 Chinese nationals, 371 Filipinos, and other individuals from Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Rwanda.

Guo, who was stripped of her mayorship in August, was arrested in Indonesia in September following her escape from the Philippines in July during an investigation into her alleged involvement in Chinese criminal syndicates.

The scam operation was run on land owned by Baofu Land Development, a company founded in 2019 by Guo, Zhang, Lin, Cypriot national Huang Zhiyang, and Philippine national Rachel Joan Malonzo Carreon.

All five individuals are among those facing charges of “qualified human trafficking,” a non-bailable offence which typically carries a penalty of life imprisonment.

Qualified trafficking, as defined under Philippine law, involves cases where syndicates, slavery, or forced labour are present.

Zhang and Lin were sentenced to 15 months in prison in Singapore after pleading guilty to money laundering and forgery charges.

They were deported to Cambodia in June after completing their sentences.

Guo, who had evaded Philippine authorities by hiding in Singapore for a month, was extradited back to the Philippines on 9 September and is now facing additional charges, including graft-related offences, tax fraud, and laundering criminal proceeds amounting to 100 million pesos (S$2.3 million).

Guo, whose birth name is allegedly Guo Hua Ping, is also under investigation for fabricating her nationality to qualify for public office, a role restricted to Philippine citizens.

She is accused of falsifying her birth records to conceal her Chinese nationality.

The case has drawn further attention due to the involvement of Huang Zhiyang, reported to be the head of illegal Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (Pogos), which have been linked to human trafficking and scam operations.

Pogos, while licensed by the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation (PAGCOR), have been criticized for exploiting workers and being a front for criminal activities.

In 2022, Pogos contributed 53.1 billion pesos (S$1.3 billion) to the Philippine economy, but lawmakers continue to express concerns about their operations.

Zhang and Lin’s current whereabouts remain unclear following their deportation.

Cambodian authorities reported Zhang was deported again on 16 July, but the destination country was not disclosed.

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