Ex-Goldman banker Ng, convicted in 1MDB case, sues ex-boss Leissner for $130 mln
Roger Ng, the former Goldman Sachs GS.N banker convicted for
helping loot Malaysia's 1MDB sovereign wealth fund, on Friday sued the
government's star witness Tim Leissner for more than $130 million, alleging
fraud.
In a complaint filed in a New York state court in Manhattan,
Ng accused his former boss of repeatedly lying in order to steal his
investments in energy drink maker Celsius Holdings CELH.O and artificial
intelligence company Sentient Technologies.
The complaint said Leissner, a former Goldman partner, stole
Ng's money to cover his own defense costs in a related criminal case where he
pleaded guilty in 2018, while depriving Ng of funds to defend himself and
appeal his conviction.
"Ng is in the unimaginable position of having to defend
himself against allegations made by the person who defrauded him and who stole
the money that plaintiff Ng needs to defend against those same
allegations," the complaint said.
Leissner's lawyers did not immediately respond to requests
for comment.
Ng, the former head of investment banking for Goldman Sachs
Malaysia, said Leissner's thefts included a $1.25 million Celsius stake now
worth more than $130 million, plus $1 million intended to buy half of
Leissner's interest in Sentient.
He said it wasn't until May 2021 when Leissner and his wife,
the model and entrepreneur Kimora Lee Simmons, were sued by Simmons' former
husband, record executive Russell Simmons, that he learned Leissner had
diverted the Celsius investment.
In October 2020, Goldman agreed to pay $2.9 billion and its
Malaysian unit pleaded guilty to a corruption charge, to settle probes into the
looting of billions of dollars from 1MDB and payment of bribes to win business
for the Wall Street bank.
A federal jury in Brooklyn convicted Ng in April of
conspiring to violate an anti-bribery law and commit money laundering.
Ng faces up to 30 years in prison. He and Leissner are
scheduled to be sentenced in mid-February.
Jho Low, a Malaysian financier and suspected mastermind of
the looting, was also indicted in Brooklyn and remains at large.
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