Legal
Malaysia Declines Bail For Accused Ex-Goldmans Banker - Report

Officials continue their actions against individuals allegedly implicated in the massive Malaysia-based scandal.
A Malaysian court yesterday declined to grant bail to former
Goldman Sachs
banker Roger Ng, pending his extradition to the US where he faces
charges related to suspected money laundering of funds siphoned
off from state fund 1MDB,
according to the Straits Times (of
Singapore).
Ng has been held in Kuala Lumpur since 1 November last year after
the US Department of Justice announced charges against him,
another
Goldman Sachs official Tim Leissner, and Malaysian financier
Low Taek Jho over the alleged theft of billions of dollars from
1Malaysia Development Berhad. The scandal has affected financial
centres around the world, including Singapore, Switzerland and
the US.
Leissner, a former partner for Goldman Sachs in Asia, pleaded
guilty to conspiring to launder money and violate the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act, while Low has denied wrongdoing and
remains at large. Malaysian prosecutors have filed separate
criminal charges against the three, as well as making an
application to extradite Ng to the US.
The Straits Times report said that defence lawyer Tan
Hock Chuan had requested Ng's release for medical reasons,
pending the extradition proceedings. However, Judge Edwin
Paramjothy Michael Muniandy, dismissed the request, citing
insufficient evidence to prove that Ng was too unfit to remain in
custody.