IPCO office was 'admin centre' for penny stock scandal, witness reveals
SINGAPORE (Oct 10): A
witness in the trial of John Soh Chee Wen and Quah Su-Ling – the alleged
masterminds of the 2013 penny stock crash – has revealed that the office of
IPCO International appeared to be a sort of “administration centre” for the
movement of funds in the scheme.
Najib Mohamed Najib
Abdul Rashid, who was IPCO’s company driver, told the court on Oct 10 that he
would cash out cheques made to his name from either Goh Hin Calm or Chiam May
Ling (pictured above).
Goh is the former
interim CEO of IPCO, while Chiam was the company’s human resource officer.
One such cheque, dated
October 2, 2012, was for $140,000 for which Najib was the cheque payee.
“I was the cheque
payee and the cheque was not crossed. The cheque was issued from a UOB bank
account belonging to [Goh Hin Calm]. I recall receiving such cheques, that is,
cheques issued to me which were not crossed, on a few rare occasions,” Najib
said in his conditional statement.
From time to time,
Najib would take over the duties of his colleague Jumaat Adam. In these
instances, he would make cash payments to several brokerages on behalf of Quah
or Goh.
Najib clarified that
he was never told whose accounts those payments were for, only the name of the
brokerage employee he was supposed to pass the money to. These employees
include Jack Ng Kit Kiat from OCBC Securities, Alex Chew Keng Chiow and Gabriel
Gan from DMG, and one ‘Candy’ from Philips Securities. Ng, Chew and Gan are all
also prosecution witnesses in the trial.
The court also heard
from Chiam, who revealed that IPCO kept cheque books belonging to, among
others, Lee Chai Huat, former Innopac Holdings CEO Wong Chin Yong, Richard Chan
and James Hong. Chiam said she recalled that Chan and Hong were top management
of Blumont Group or Magnus Energy Group.
A spreadsheet of all
the bank account holders’ details and the cheques issued, along with the cheque
books, were kept in a safe in IPCO’s office.
Chiam added that she and Goh maintained and updated whenever cheques
were issued from these accounts.
“I have also issued
cheques where no invoices are involved. I would only prepare and issue such
cheques on [Goh Hin Calm’s] instructions. These cheques would either be handed
to me by Goh, or he would tell me which cheque book in the IPCO safe to issue
the cheque from,” she said. “I do not know how the cheque books came to be in
IPCO's safe, [or] why these persons allowed their cheque books to be used.”
Goh, who was sentenced
to three years in jail on March 20 for aiding and abetting Soh and Quah, had
acted as the “treasurer” in the scheme.
Chiam also said she
did not recall if those cheques were pre-signed. But upon examination-in-chief
by deputy public prosecutor Loh Hui Min, she clarified that at least some of
the cheques were pre-signed.
Soh, a bankrupt
businessman, is facing 189 charges for alleged stock manipulation, cheating and
witness tampering in relation to the October 2013 penny stock crash. The sage
saw shares in three companies – Blumont Group, LionGold Corp and Asiasons
Capital, now known as Attilan Group – rise sharply before crashing
spectacularly in a matter of months.
Quah, as his alleged co-conspirator, faces 178
charges of stock manipulation and cheating.
Pauline Wong
The Edge
The Edge
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