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  • Malaysia reached a $3.9 billion settlement with Goldman Sachs Friday over the Wall Street titan's role in the 1MDB scandal in exchange for the country ending all criminal proceedings against the bank. Billions of dollars were looted from sovereign wealth fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad in a fraud that allegedly involved former leader Najib Razak and his cronies. Goldman's role came under scrutiny over bond issues totalling $6.5 billion it helped arranged for the fund, with Malaysia claiming large amounts were misappropriated during the process. Malaysia and the bank had been locked in long-running talks, and the country's finance ministry announced a breakthrough had finally been achieved. The settlement comprises a cash payment of $2.5 billion and a guarantee that at least $1.4 billion in assets acquired with misappropriated funds would be recovered, it said. "This settlement represents assets that rightfully belong to the Malaysian people," Finance Minister Tengku Zafrul Abdul Aziz said. "We are confident that we are securing more money from Goldman Sachs compared to previous attempts, which were far below expectations." Malaysia had charged Goldman and several of its former and current employees over the scandal, claiming the bank made misleading statements to investors. But in a statement, Goldman said the agreement resolves "all the criminal and regulatory proceedings in Malaysia involving the firm". "Today's settlement is an important step towards putting the 1MDB matter behind us and will help enable the Malaysian government to move forward with additional recovery efforts," it said. A former Goldman partner, Tim Leissner, has previously pleaded guilty in the US over his part in the controversy. A Malaysian former managing director at the bank, Ng Chong Hwa, has also been charged in the US and Malaysia over the scandal. The US Department of Justice, which is investigating the fraud as huge sums were allegedly laundered through the US financial system, says that about $4.5 billion was looted from 1MDB. The money was used to fund a global spending spree, with cash spent on everything from a super-yacht to high-end real estate. Anger at the scandal played a large part in Najib's long-ruling coalition losing power at elections in 2018, after which he was arrested and hit with dozens of charges. Najib is currently facing three, 1MDB-linked trials, and the verdict in the first is due to be handed down Tuesday. bur-sr/je
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  • Malaysia in $3.9 bn settlement with Goldman over 1MDB
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