
Now that the AFP is looking at 1MDB, will AUSTRAC investigate ANZ,Shayne Elliott, Gonski & Co. or will that be left to the AFP?
by Ganesh Sahathevan
http://sahathevan.blogspot.com.au/
This writer noted in August 2015:
Malaysia's 1 MDB scandal: AUSTRAC takes a "see no evil" approach even as Swiss & Singapore regulators investigate
Since then much has been added to the above,all of which is the public domain:
ANZ & MD Shayne Elliot's AMMB money laundering problem worsens: ANZ & Elliot led management accepted as genuine letter from a non-existent Saudi royal
The issue was,and remains, ANZ client and "ally" Najib Razak, not 1MDB: Another example of how ANZ and Shayne Elliot misled parliament
And now, this morning Ben Butler of The Australian has reported that the AFP is investigating the 1MDB matter and its link to Australia.
Meanwhile AUSTRAC remains resolute in its Sergeant Schultz defence.
END
AFP looks into whether 1MDB loot stashed here
The Australian 12:00AM January 9, 2017
Ben Butler
Federal police are investigating whether ill-gotten gains connected with Malaysia’s multi-billion-dollar 1MDB scandal, which has seen the country’s Prime Minister, Najib Razak, accused of funnelling $US1 billion through his bank account, have been stashed in Australia.
AFP officers are assisting at least one of the three known authorities — the Swiss, the Americans and the Singaporeans — that are investigating the fate of $US3.5bn allegedly looted from 1MDB, Malaysia’s sovereign-wealth fund.
The move will add to pressure on Mr Najib, who although domestically secure appeared to have turned towards China as an international ally after July last year, when the US unveiled its probe into the scandal as part of the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative run by its Department of Justice. Mr Najib has consistently denied doing anything wrong.
He has explained the vast sum of money that flowed through his account at AmBank, a Malaysian associate of Australia’s ANZ, as a donation from a Saudi prince.
An AFP spokeswoman said the force was “evaluating” whether any Australian citizens, residents or companies had breached proceeds-of-crime laws.
“The AFP is assisting foreign law-enforcement partners in their investigations,” she said.
“Given this matter is the subject of evaluation, it is not appropriate to comment further.”
About $1.3bn in assets has so far been frozen by the US DOJ, including the proceeds of Hollywood film Wolf of Wall Street; modern art, including a van Gogh; and luxury properties in New York, Los Angeles and London.
Most of the assets frozen by the US are linked to Mr Najib’s right-hand-man at 1MDB, the party-loving Malaysian businessman Jho Low, who is alleged to be the mastermind of the fraud.
Last month, Mr Low’s family failed in a bid to stave off the DOJ proceeding long enough for them to launch legal action enabling them to take control of trusts in the Cayman Islands and New Zealand that own some of the assets.