Ahmad
Zahid Hamidi tries to get a major gambling kingpin off the hook in a US trial
Malaysia’s Justice Minister has dealt his
floundering government coalition a new blow by attempting to convince the US
Federal Bureau of Investigation that a notorious high-stakes bookie on trial in
Las Vegas for running an illegal gambling ring was not an organized crime
figure.
The episode
has raised inevitable questions about top members of the government leadership
and their connections to international gaming and other interests who can move
money offshore without questions being asked.
In his signed Dec. 18
letter to Mark Guiliano, the assistant director of the FBI, Ahmad Zahid
Hamidi, Malaysia's top law enforcement official, wrote that Paul
Phua Wei Seng, on trial for illegal transmission of betting information and
operating an illegal gambling business, was not a member of the famed 14K
Triad, a Chinese organized crime gang with tentacles into most of the Chinese
communities across Asia, and that a 2008 Royal Malaysia Police report on
Phua was erroneous.
Intriguingly, Zahid, who
has been mentioned as a future prime minister, wrote that Phua had “on numerous
occasions, assisted the government of Malaysia on projects affecting our
national security.”
Opposition figures have
seized on the episode to demand what Zahid knew and when he knew it, and how
Phua was assisting doing what, insisting that Zahid answer questions in
parliament.
“Mr Zahid writing the
letter comes across as very shocking not only because the letter attempts to
exonerate Paul Phua, who clearly has a checkered past, but also because Zahid
claims that Phua has assisted with ‘projects of national security,’” Fahmi
Fadzil, communications director of the opposition People’s Justice Party, told
the media Sunday.
Since the letter became
public in a South China Morning Post news story last Friday, Zahid and other
members of the United Malays National Organization have asked that it be
withdrawn from the case and have been fumbling for answers as to why the
justice minister was defending, on official Ministry stationery, a man who
according to a 2008 report in the Royal Malaysian Police’s own files, was in
organized crime up to his ears and saying “as such, we are eager for him to
return to Malaysia.”
It is clear that the
letter, copied to lawyer Muhammad Shafee Abdulah, UMNO's top fireman and most
prominent and ubiquitous lawyer, was never meant to see the light of day. It
also raised questions why Shafee was interceding for a gangster of Phua's
stature. Speculation in Kuala Lumpur centered on the possibility that Phua was
a central figure in laundering money out of Malaysia for top political figures.
Shafee issued a confused
explanation on Sunday, saying Zahid was asked by US lawyers for Phua to provide
the information or he would be compelled to do it in court. He added that the
2008 report to the FBI identifying Phua as a member of the local 14K was wrong.
However, asked to explain the discrepancy between the 2008 report and Zahid’s
2014 letter, the Inspector-General of Police Khalid Abu Bakar declined comment,
refusing to back up his boss.
There is voluminous
information from the FBI in the US besides the Malaysian police report that
Phua was indeed deeply involved in organized crime, raising questions why Zahid
felt he needed to personally weigh in to the FBI instead of allowing Khalid Abu
Bakar to provide the information and possibly correct its own mistake, if there
was one. Phua’s arrest in Macau last year uncovered what was said to be
the biggest gaming racket in the city’s history. In Las Vegas, according to the
police report, Phua’s illegal sports betting operation ran into the tens of
millions of US dollars.
The episode also raises
questions why Phua’s lawyers chose Shafee, UMNO’s top legal figure, to ask
Zahuid for help instead of himself going to the police. Zahid could have
simply said the government had no information to connect Phua to the 14K,
feigning ignorance of the 2008 report. But instead, in what looks like a
bizarre attempt to convince the FBI , he says Phua has been involved in
projects affecting Malaysia’s national security – unless Phua was stressing
through his lawyers that he had information that he could use against the
government if they didn’t make the effort to help.
John Malott, the former US
ambassador to Malaysia and a critic of the current government, said in an email
to Asia Sentinel that he had become interested in the case and researched it
after the SCMP report.
"Zahid's defense of someone
who was arrested in both Macau and Las Vegas for allegedly running some of the
biggest illegal on-line sporting bets operations in history is simply
mind-boggling," Malott said. “Zahid has a lot to answer for. Why is he
going out of his way to defend someone like Phua? Why did he say that this man,
who is on trial in Macau and the US for criminal activity, is essential to
Malaysia's national security?"
Some Las Vegas gambling
news websites say Phua’s attorneys are trying to get the case thrown out on
civil liberties grounds. The other five people arrested in Vegas all confessed
and cooperated with law enforcement. There is no doubt that the crimes took
place; they were witnessed by the FBI, they also found evidence on the laptops
and cell phones that were seized, and five people confessed, meaning the only
way Phua can escape jail is via procedural mistakes.
Phua’s attorneys say the
search and later the arrest warrant were not valid because the FBI had entered
Phua’s operations without a search warrant. The FBI purposely disabled the
internet connection to Phua’s suites where the illegal sports gambling
operation was being conducted, then posed as internet repairmen and secretly
witnessed and filmed what was going on. They confiscated laptops and cellphones.
Because there was no search
warrant, Phua’s lawyers argue, the search and therefore the knowledge that
illegal activity was in fact taking place was itself illegal. Under US law, if
the search is illegal, all evidence and confessions obtained thereafter are
illegal.
The US attorney is expected
to argue, however, that there was reasonable suspicion to believe illegal
activity was taking place, given the fact that Phua had just been arrested in
Macau for illegal sports gambling before he came to Las Vegas and because he
had requested an inordinate amount of internet connection equipment for the
hotel suites.
According to various Las
Vegas news websites, Phua’s attorneys say that the judge issued the arrest
warrant for Phua only because the FBI (1) hid the fact that there was no search
warrant and (2) because they told the judge that according to the FBI’s
information from the Malaysian police, Phua was a known member of the 14K
triad. The defense says that in doing this, the FBI poisoned the judge’s
mind and led him to issue the arrest warrant.
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