ADVERTISEMENT

Jho Low's Yacht Likely Headed for U.S. Despite Indonesia Ruling

Jho Low's Yacht Likely Headed for U.S. Despite Indonesia Ruling

(Bloomberg) -- Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho will probably be ordered to turn over his $250 million yacht to U.S. officials, who claim he bought it with money siphoned from the 1Malaysia Development Bhd sovereign wealth fund.

A federal judge in Los Angeles said Monday that she will issue an order shortly on the Justice Department’s request to get custody of the “Equanimity,” which is currently in Indonesia. U.S. District Judge Dale Fischer initially ruled in April that the ship could be sailed to the U.S. from Bali, but a court in Jakarta later found that the police hadn’t followed proper procedures and ordered the yacht returned.

Jho Low's Yacht Likely Headed for U.S. Despite Indonesia Ruling

Fischer wasn’t persuaded by the argument that her ruling would override orders of a foreign court. She said lawyers for Low and the trusts that hold title to the 300-foot (91-meter) yacht may want get their “mandamus papers” ready, referring to their threat to appeal her ruling.

The boat was seized by Indonesian authorities in February at the request of the U.S. The “Equanimity” is among more than $1.5 billion in real estate and other assets that the U.S. alleges Low and his accomplishes bought with stolen 1MDB funds.

Jeremy Matz, a lawyer for the trusts that own the yacht for Low’s benefit, said after the hearing that his clients will comply with a final and binding court order to turn over the yacht. Matz reiterated that he will appeal a ruling against his clients.

Jho Low's Yacht Likely Headed for U.S. Despite Indonesia Ruling

Newly elected Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said Saturday, three days after he secured a shocking win, that predecessor Najib Razak was barred from leaving the country. Mahathir also said he’d reopen a graft probe targeting the wealth fund and said he was replacing the attorney general who cleared Najib and instructed the auditor-general to declassify a 1MDB report that was protected by the Official Secrets Act.

Mahathir, who was prime minister from 1981 to 2003 and defected to the opposition in order to stand as their candidate for premier, repeatedly called Najib a “thief” on the campaign trail and pledged to revisit the 1MDB issue.

Riza Aziz, a friend of Low and one of the individuals the U.S. alleges was involved in looting the 1MDB fund, is a stepson of Najib. His movie production company Red Granite Pictures agreed to pay $60 million to settle a forfeiture lawsuit by the U.S., alleging he financed the “Wolf of Wall Street” with stolen money.

The U.S. and Low’s lawyers are negotiating a sale of the “Equanimity” while the forfeiture lawsuit is unresolved, but are deeply divided on whether the transaction should take place in the U.S. or in the Mediterranean, which the trusts argue is a superior market for “super yachts.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Edvard Pettersson in Los Angeles at epettersson@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Elizabeth Wollman at ewollman@bloomberg.net, Peter Blumberg

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.