Kuala Lumpur (AFP) - Goldman Sachs on Tuesday accused the former Malaysian government and state fund 1MDB of lying to the bank, after Kuala Lumpur charged the Wall Street titan over a massive financial scandal.
Malaysia's
attorney-general Monday filed criminal charges against the US bank and two of
its ex-employees over the alleged looting of 1MDB.
Billions of
dollars were allegedly stolen from the fund and used to buy everything from
yachts to artwork, in an audacious fraud that involved former Malaysian leader
Najib Razak and contributed to his government's shock defeat at May elections.
Goldman has
faced mounting questions about its role as the bank helped 1MDB raise $6.5
billion through a series of bond issues.
Monday's
charges allege the bank's subsidiaries and the two ex-bankers, working with a
shadowy Malaysian financier, misappropriated $2.7 billion, bribed officials and
gave false statements as they helped 1MDB to raise the cash.
But Goldman
said in a statement that "certain members of the former Malaysian
government and 1MDB lied to Goldman Sachs, outside counsel and others about the
use of proceeds from these transactions."
"1MDB,
whose CEO and board reported directly to the prime minister at the time, also
provided written assurances to Goldman Sachs for each transaction that no
intermediaries were involved," it said.
The
Malaysian financier named in the charges, Low Taek Jho, allegedly masterminded
the fraud and had huge influence over 1MDB but held no official positions at
the fund.
He has been
hit with several rounds of charges but maintains his innocence.
The
ex-Goldman bankers named in the charges are Tim Leissner, who worked as
Southeast Asia chairman and managing director at Goldman, and Ng Chong Hwa, a
managing director at the bank.
The bank
added that it was "not afforded an opportunity to be heard prior to the
filing of these charges against certain Goldman Sachs entities, which we intend
to vigorously contest".
Malaysian
authorities are seeking fines above the $2.7 billion allegedly misappropriated
from the bond issues as well as the $600 million Goldman earned in fees, and
long jail terms for those accused.
As well as
Leissner, Ng and Low, Malaysian authorities charged former 1MDB employee
Jasmine Loo Ai Swan.
The bank's
shares fell 2.7 percent Monday after the charges were announced.
Criminally charged with looting Malaysia's 1MDB, Wall Street titan Goldman Sachs says former government and fund lied to the bankhttps://t.co/bfWW3mAnWn pic.twitter.com/gaOHyUml2c— AFP news agency (@AFP) December 18, 2018

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