TRADE WARS
Five on trial linked to $7.6 billion China 'Ponzi scheme'
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Nov 25, 2016


Five people linked to a collapsed Chinese peer-to-peer lender have gone on trial for gold smuggling, state media said Friday, the first court case in a scandal that allegedly bilked investors of $7.6 billion.

The five smuggled a total of 1,239 gold bars weighing 125 kilograms from China's southwestern province of Yunnan to neighbouring Myanmar, state broadcaster CCTV reported.

The five acted at the behest of the chairman of Yucheng Group, the parent firm of P2P lender Ezubao, it said, and organised Yucheng employees to cross the border illegally many times last year.

At current world market prices the gold is worth around $4.8 million, a tiny fraction of the $7.6 billion Ezubao is said to have defrauded from 900,000 investors.

Police previously told state media that Ezubao concocted fake projects to attract investment and pocketed funds instead of passing them to borrowers to generate returns.

As part of Yucheng's overseas expansion, the firm set up a bank in Myanmar's Wa State, the Beijing News previously reported.

In a televised confession shown in February after suspects were arrested, the group's president Zhang Min said Ezubao was "a typical Ponzi scheme".

The case, said to be China's biggest-ever Ponzi scheme, has sparked protests from investors and is one among several dubious investment projects which have come to light this year.

Police charged 26 people, including Yucheng's chairman Ding Ning and president Zhang Min, with fraud and illegal fundraising in August.

Authorities have frozen more than 10 billion yuan of funds and seized 300 million yuan worth of cash, as well as assets from properties to helicopters, the official Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday.


Comment on this article using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

.


Related Links
Global Trade News






Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
TRADE WARS
Chinese Coca-Cola workers strike over asset sale
Beijing (AFP) Nov 24, 2016
Coca-Cola workers in three Chinese cities have gone on strike after the US soft drinks giant announced it was selling its bottling interests in the country. Strikes and other labour protests have surged in recent years in China, where growth is slowing and parts of the economy are moribund. The beverage giant announced last week it was selling all its bottling assets in mainland China t ... read more


TRADE WARS
Mexican boy designs bullet-proof backpack

China power plant collapse kills 67: media

Pentagon softens rules on carrying of firearms in US

Scientists model mass gatherings, identify the risks of large crowds

TRADE WARS
For platinum catalysts, tiny squeeze gives big boost in performance

Ames Laboratory scientists create first intermetallic double salt with platinum

Scientists trace 'poisoning' in chemical reactions to the atomic scale

Destruction Junction-What's Your Function?

TRADE WARS
Weather the storm: Improving Great Lakes modeling

Ocean acidification study offers warnings for marine life, habitats

Answering a longstanding question: Why is the surface of ice wet?

Kelp forests globally resilient, but may need local solutions to environmental threats

TRADE WARS
Most meltwater in Greenland fjords likely comes from icebergs, not glaciers

NASA Nears Finish Line of Annual Study of Changing Antarctic Ice

Enhanced nitrous oxide emissions found in Arctic

West Antarctic glacier began retreat in the 1940s

TRADE WARS
Rice farming used as 'summer crop' by early Indus civilization

Watching how plants make oxygen

Riders on the waves: China's jellyfish-hauling mules a dying breed

Soybean plants with fewer leaves yield more

TRADE WARS
Hurricane, quake hit Central America

Heavy rain triggers floods in northern Italy

Costa Rica, Nicaragua brace for deadly Hurricane Otto

Hurricane Otto heads toward Central America, kills 3

TRADE WARS
US seeks UN arms embargo against South Sudan

Uganda nabs suspect in $120 mn fake arms deal

Africa waits and wonders on Trump's foreign policy

Mali coup leader readies for trial over massacre

TRADE WARS
The role of physical environment in the 'broken windows' theory

Scientist uses 'dinosaur crater' rocks, prehistoric teeth to track ancient humans

Genes for speech may not be limited to humans

Traumatic stress shapes the brains of boys and girls in different ways