Legal
Former Falcon Private Bank Manager Jailed, Fined Amid 1MDB Scandal

At the trial, the prosecution team reportedly sought a sentence of 30 to 32 weeks' imprisonment and fines totalling $104,311.
A former branch manager of Falcon Private
Bank was handed a 28-week jail sentence and a fine of $88,999
after pleading guilty to six counts in relation to his connection
with the 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal.
Jens Sturzenegger, a 42-year-old Swiss national, was
charged on 5 January with 16 counts, including failing to
report suspicious transactions tied to inflows of around $1.3
billion into two accounts in March 2013.
During the trial, the prosecution team was reportedly seeking a
sentence of 30 to 32 weeks' imprisonment and fines totalling
$104,311.
Sturzenegger is the fifth person to be charged in relation
to the 1MDB fund, which is currently the subject of money
laundering probes in at least six countries, including Singapore,
the US and Switzerland. He was also accused of lying to police
and the Monetary
Authority of Singapore about his ties to tycoon Low Taek Jho,
who is accused by authorities worldwide of being at the centre of
alleged money laundering linked to Malaysia's state-owned
fund. It has been suggested that hundreds of millions of
dollars have been transferred from accounts at Falcon Private
Bank to Low and his associates.
Last year,
Falcon Private Bank and BSI were both forced to shut shop in
Singapore amid the city-state's biggest crackdown on money
laundering connected to the 1MDB fund. Falcon Private Bank was
accused of “a persistent and severe lack of understanding” of the
MAS's anti-money laundering regulations and was consequently
fined $3 million.
In recent developments,
the Malaysian government was reported to be making preparations
to close the scandal-hit fund, which has seen multiple
indictments and jail sentences handed to former affiliated
bankers. The Malaysian prime minister, Najib Razak – who was
accused of funnelling $1 billion through his bank account - has
repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and said his country will
cooperate with international investigations into the fund, the
current debt load of which is estimated at $4.8 billion.