LOS ANGELES
– A Filipino woman and her family members were indicted by a federal grand jury
today for conspiring to funnel in and out of the United States approximately
$20 million in Philippine public funds obtained through a multi-year bribery
and fraud scheme. Charged in the indictment for Conspiracy to Commit Money
Laundering, Domestic Money Laundering and International Money Laundering were:
Jannet Lim
Napoles, 54,
Jo Christine
Napoles, 34,
James
Christopher Napoles, 33,
Jeane
Catherine Napoles, 28,
Reynald Luy
Lim, 52, and
Ana Marie
Lim, 47.
Four
defendants together with approximately 20 Philippines legislators and other
government officials not charged in U.S. indictments converted to their own
benefit hundreds of millions of dollars in Philippine public funds through the
intricate scheme and then transmitted approximately $20 million from that
scheme into the United States to purchase assets, including real property and
luxury vehicles.
The
defendants fraudulently converted money from a lump-sum discretionary “Priority
Development Assistance Fund” granted to each member of the Philippines Congress
as well as other government funds designed to benefit poor Filipinos.
The money
was paid to dozens of non-governmental organizations controlled by Jannet
Napoles pursuant to contracts that required the money to be spent on
development projects. The projects were not performed. Instead, the money was
diverted to kickbacks for the legislators and other government officials, and
for the personal use of the Napoles family.
Approximately $20 million of those funds were diverted to money
remitters in the Philippines and then wired to Southern California bank
accounts where the money was used to purchase real estate, shares in two
businesses, two Porsche Boxsters, and finance the living expenses of three
family members residing in the United States: Jeane Napoles, Reynald Lim, and
Ana Lim.
The charges
handed down today pertain to events beginning in September 2012 and continuing
through August 2014. In September 2012, an audit discovered the fraud. In July
2013, the fraud and the U.S. proceeds were exposed in the Filipino press. In
August 2013, Jannet was arrested by Philippine authorities and Napoles family
bank accounts were frozen in the Philippines. Thereafter, Napoles and her
family members attempted to quietly liquidate the assets in the United States,
secretly repatriate most of the resulting funds back to the Philippines and to
other accounts in the U.S. and United Kingdom, and disburse some of the funds
to Jeane Napoles, who used the money to finance her lifestyle and open a
fashion business.
“Even after Jannet Napoles made a highly
publicized statement admitting that she had bribed Philippine legislators in
connection with these ‘ghost projects,’ the defendants attempted to convert the
proceeds of this crime to their own use,” said United States Attorney Nick
Hanna. “The efforts of the Philippine and American investigators demonstrates
that there are consequences to abusing the public trust and we hope to deter
such conduct in the future. To do this, we will work with our Philippine
counterparts to secure the extradition of the defendants to the United States.”
According to
court documents, approximately $12.5 million in Southern California real estate
has been seized by the United States Attorney’s Office and is subject to a
civil forfeiture case pending before United States District Judge James V.
Selna. If the court orders the assets forfeited, the United States will work
with Philippine officials in an attempt to return the stolen funds back to the
Philippine government.
U.S.
authorities have received ongoing cooperation and substantial assistance from
the Philippine government, including the Department of Justice, the Office of
the Ombudsman, the Anti-Money Laundering Council, and the Commission on Audit,
which responded to official requests pursuant to the Mutual Legal Assistance
Treaty between the Philippines and the United States and through the Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network.
This case is
being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Daniel O’Brien, Deputy
Chief of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section.
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