Fugitive businessman Jho Low, accused of orchestrating a multibillion-dollar fraud of a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund, has agreed to forfeit over $100 million worth of luxury real estate as part of a wide-ranging settlement with U.S. prosecutors.
That includes two posh London apartments, two New York City condos—one on the city’s famed Billionaire’s Row—and a contemporary mansion in Los Angeles, all of which U.S. prosecutors accused Mr. Low of buying with stolen money from a multibillion-dollar heist, known as the 1MDB scandal, the U.S. Department of Justice announced on Wednesday.
The collection of lavish properties are only a slice of some $700 million in assets, including a private jet, fine art and diamond jewelry, that Mr. Low has agreed to give up, according to court documents filed this week.
Mr. Low, 37, has denied all charges against him. He said in a statement that the settlement did “not constitute an admission of guilt, liability or any form of wrongdoing by me.”
The three U.S. homes were already headed to the market as part of prior agreements between Mr. Low and federal prosecutors, Mansion Global has previously reported.
One of them, a lavish penthouse atop the Mandarin Oriental Residences by Central Park South, a stretch of Midtown Manhattan referred to as Billionaire’s Row for its superlatively expensive apartments, is already in contract, according to listing records on StreetEasy.
The three U.S. homes were already headed to the market as part of prior agreements between Mr. Low and federal prosecutors, Mansion Global has previously reported.
One of them, a lavish penthouse atop the Mandarin Oriental Residences by Central Park South, a stretch of Midtown Manhattan referred to as Billionaire’s Row for its superlatively expensive apartments, is already in contract, according to listing records on StreetEasy.
A forfeited four-bedroom Manhattan penthouse of fugitive financier Jho Low is already in contract with a buyer
Agents for Mr. Low are expected to help the U.S. government manage and dispose of the assets, including his five homes, the Justice Department said.
But the intermediaries are likely to face an uphill task selling off the properties for figures close to what Mr. Low originally paid, as both New York City and London are in the midst of a downturn in their prime housing markets.
For example, Mr. Low’s other New York City property is located on the second floor of a historic pre-war building in Manhattan’s trendy SoHo neighborhood. The apartment, which features 14-foot ceilings, decorative interior columns and built-in bookshelves, is asking $9.2 million—several million less than the $13.8 million Mr. Low purchased it for back in 2014, according to a listing for the property and court documents.
A historic SoHo apartment Mr. Low purchased for $13.8 million in 2014 is now listed for $9.2 million.
For instance, the sprawling Los Angeles mansion, set on 1.2 acres off the city’s Sunset Strip, “will need full restoration,” according to a listing for the property with Ernie Carswell and Christopher Pickett, both of Douglas Elliman. The brokerage has declined to comment on the property.
The Los Angeles house, which prosecutors said Mr. Low purchased with embezzled funds, is on the market for $24 million—less than two-thirds of the $39 million the businessman paid in 2012, according to property records and court documents.
Meanwhile, the sale of Mr. Low’s London properties face a similarly daunting market, as higher transfer taxes in the U.K. paired with a rancorous political environment ahead of Brexit have combined to depress home values in the city’s center since 2014.
It’s not clear how much Mr. Low paid for the two London apartments, which include a 12,000-square-foot penthouse and a nearby flat, both in the city’s posh Mayfair neighborhood. Federal prosecutors claim he wired at least £35 million to a U.K. bank account for the purchase of the penthouse atop Stratton House in 2010, according to court documents.
But the developer of the building, Grafton Advisors, claims the lavish aerie set a record nine years ago at over £4,000 per square foot, according to Grafton’s website. That would mean a final sale price at the time of over £48 million. At the moment, there are no publicly listed apartments priced that high in London.
Mr. Low, who is reportedly in self-imposed exile in China, is accused of orchestrating the theft of $4.5 billion from the 1Malaysia Development Berhad, known as 1MDB. U.S. prosecutors maintain that he laundered the ill-gotten gains through banks around the world and used the funds to run a lavish lifestyle.
“Thanks to this settlement, one of the men allegedly at the center of this massive scheme will lose all access to hundreds of millions of dollars,” said U.S. Attorney Nicola T. Hanna of the Central District of California in a statement on Wednesday. “This settlement agreement forces Low and his family to relinquish hundreds of millions of dollars in ill-gotten gains that were intended to be used for the benefit of the Malaysian people, and it sends a signal that the United States will not be a safe haven for the proceeds of corruption.
link: https://www.mansionglobal.com/articles/
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Grocery tycoon WU files for bankruptcy in the US
Jeffrey Wu has filed for bankruptcy in the US where he runs a vast wholesale food and supermarket business.
Grocery tycoon Jeffrey Wu made an application at the US Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York on Wednesday, reporting to owe nearly US$50 million in debt, according to the filing.
The 56-year-old, also known as Myint J. Kyaw, owns Mon Chong Loong Trading Corp, one of the largest oriental dry food wholesaler and distributors in the US, as well as a major Chinese grocery store, the Hong Kong Supermarket, with branches in the northeast and California.
Wu is filing for personal bankruptcy with debts of US$48.5 million, Wu also applied to put three of his companies " property developers owing US$15.3 million between them " into administration, according to documents filed to the US court.
Wu's supermarkets were reportedly hit hard by the coronavirus outbreak, with shoppers confined to their homes for several months; Hong Kong Supermarket was among three shops in New York to be fined for excessively inflating prices to cash in on the health crisis. The Department of Consumer and Worker Protection fined the store US$69,500 for overcharging for supplies including face masks, gloves and tissues.
There are a number of individual creditors on Wu's personal bankruptcy filing, including Bank of America, Chang & Son Enterprises, Haymarket Capital and Bluestone Group.
Among them, Bank of America alone held loans worth more than US$20 million.
The Burma-born business mogul holds a huge property portfolio in New York. The three companies for which he declared bankruptcy are developers in the retail, office, residential and industrial sectors.
Apartments at one of Wu's projects, the 99-unit Victoria Towers built in 2014 in the Queens district of New York, change hands for up to US$1 million a piece, according to local property portal StreetEasy.
The properties covered by the unpaid loans include a 100,000 square-foot office and retail building, 50 remaining units in Victoria Tower, a 28,000 square-foot commercial property and a 184,000 square-foot industrial complex, all in New York.
Wu's lenders filed their notices of creditors' interests in his properties in January 2018, according to the court documents. He received a US$109 million refinancing loan from investment company Bluestone Group in 2018.
Wu moved to the US from Myanmar when he was nine and founded the Hong Kong Supermarket in 1981. In 1996, he married former Hong Kong actress and singer Veronica Yip. WU invested in retails, commercial and banking sectors in NY.
Pearl Liu pearl/July 9, 2020
越南女首富被捕「3高層離奇猝逝」 女助理死因最離奇![周刊王CTWANT]
越南女首富張美蘭(Truong My Lan)去年10月7日因涉嫌違法發行債券、挪用價值上億台幣資金遭到逮捕,震驚越南商界。未料,有3名關係企業高層在她被捕前後離奇身亡,其中又以同天被捕的女助理身亡,最引發外界猜想。
綜合外媒報導,現年66歲的萬盛發集團創辦人兼主席張美蘭,婚後打造出跨越房地產、酒店及餐飲的事業王國,其香港籍夫婿朱立基,更持有高達159億港元(約新台幣615億)資產,並曾在2010年捲入轟動一時的香港「天匯撻訂案」。
這次張美蘭與旗下公司共4人被捕不只驚動越南商界,也在民眾間引爆討論,因為竟有3名相關企業高層,在她被捕前後幾天離世,38歲女助理阮芳紅(Nguyen Phuong Hong)被捕隔天暴斃、萬盛發集團副總經理宋氏清黃(Tong Thi Thanh Hoang)丈夫阮進清(Nguyen Tien Thanh)在10月6日因未公開原因離世、萬盛發子公司董事長范盛柏(Van Thinh Phat)於10月14日自殺身亡。三人離奇死亡引發外界無盡猜想。
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