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Philippines Can Recover Big Chunk of Stolen Bangladesh Millions: MP

Almost half of the $81 million that hackers stole from Bangladesh and funneled into Philippine casinos can still be recovered, a senior Filipino lawmaker investigating the audacious cyber heist said Thursday.

Almost half of the $81 million that hackers stole from Bangladesh and funneled into Philippine casinos can still be recovered, a senior Filipino lawmaker investigating the audacious cyber heist said Thursday.

As much as $34 million remained in two casinos and a foreign exchange brokerage, senator Ralph Recto said, citing testimonies from a marathon hearing on Tuesday.

“Our law enforcement agencies must act swiftly to recover any portion of the loot that is still within Philippine soil,” Recto said in a statement.

“It is very important to recover as much of the money and return it to Bangladesh. The money was stolen from a poor country,” he added.

On February 5, unidentified hackers shifted $81 million from the Bangladesh central bank’s account with the US Federal Reserve to a nondescript bank in Manila and then to the casinos, where the trail went cold.

The brazen heist highlighted how the Philippine’s banking loopholes and anti-money laundering laws have made the impoverished and corruption-weary Southeast Asian nation a dirty money destination.

Philippine law exempts casino transactions from scrutiny by the country’s anti-money laundering council without a case filed in court.

A casino junket operator, Kim Wong, testified in the Senate on Tuesday that two high-rollers from Beijing and Macau shifted the $81 million to dollar accounts in Manila’s Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC).

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Wong said he did not know that the money was stolen from Bangladesh and that he merely helped the two men — who are also his casino clients — open bank accounts.

He offered to return $4.3 million of the money, which he said remained in his account in Solaire, one of the Philippine capital’s gleaming billion-dollar casinos.

But by Recto’s own calculations, far more can be recovered including $17 million that Wong claimed was still with exchange brokerage Philrem, $10 million from a destitute casino in the north, $5.5 million that Wong picked up from the house of Philrem’s owner and a further $2.3 million in the Solaire casino account of the Macau man who allegedly brought the $81 million to the Philippines.

Solaire has pledged to return the money.

The senate is scheduled to resume its investigation next week.

Related: Chinese High Rollers Moved Stolen Bangladesh Millions to Philippines

Written By

AFP 2023

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