Public housing tenant in money-laundering scam jailed for a decade
Lawmaker calls for tougher regulation of banks after 61-year-old woman is imprisoned for laundering HK$5m a day through city accounts
A public housing tenant who laundered more than HK$6.7 billion through nine Hong Kong banks over almost four years was jailed for 10 years yesterday.
The money-laundering case is the second-biggest since the conviction of mainlander Luo Juncheng in January for a HK$13 billion scam, which led to calls for the tighter regulation of banks.
Lam Mei-ling, 61, was found guilty in the Court of First Instance on Monday of laundering an average of HK$5 million a day between May 2002 and December 2005. She funnelled cash to various accounts in Hong Kong through more than 17,000 over-the-counter bank transfers, under the instruction of a mainland woman.
The banks shut down the accounts in 2005 without approaching the police, the court heard. There were no clues as to where the money had been sent.
Lawmaker Ronny Tong Ka-wah, a senior counsel, said the incident showed that the banking regulator should tighten rules.
Despite the conviction, "we have to question whether the banks have done their duty to prevent money-laundering", Tong said.