Malaysia says no talks with Goldman Sachs on recovering funds lost in 1MDB scandal
- Malaysia’s Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng says legal processes continue, after the country filed criminal charges against Goldman Sachs last year
- Billions of dollars of state funds were lost in the 1MDB scandal
Malaysia filed criminal charges last year against Goldman Sachs over its role as underwriter and arranger of three bond sales that raised US$6.5 billion for the now-defunct state investment fund.
1MDB scandal: Malaysia seeks to move Goldman case to higher court
The US Department of Justice is investigating the bank for its role in the sales which involved fees higher than market rates.
It also estimated $4.5 billion was misappropriated from 1MDB by fund officials and associates from 2009 through 2014.
Top Mahathir adviser to recover US$2 billion from Chinese firm over axed pipelines
“There are no discussions with Goldman Sachs but we will continue with the legal process conducted by the attorney general,” Malaysian Minister of Finance Lim Guan Eng was quoted as saying by news portal Malaysiakini.
A ministry official confirmed the comment to Reuters.
In January, Lim said the government would be ready to drop criminal charges against Goldman Sachs if the bank paid US$7.5 billion in reparations.
Malaysian prosecutors then filed criminal charges in August against 17 current and former directors at Goldman Sachs subsidiaries.
Goldman Sachs has denied wrongdoing, saying individuals at 1MDB and in Malaysia’s former government lied to the bank, outside counsel and others about the use of the bond sale proceeds.